
Ex-Liverpool star Thiago's wife steals show as she goes braless in revealing dress at Laureus Awards
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EX-LIVERPOOL star Thiago Alcantara and his wife Julia Vigas stole the show at the Laureus Awards.
The sport award ceremony took place in Madrid and there were some familiar winners on show.
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Thiago Alcantara and his wife Julia Vigas stunned on the red carpet
Credit: Getty
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The couple attended the Laureus Awards
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Fans heaped praise on the glamorous pair
Credit: Getty
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Julia dazzled in a long black dress
Credit: Getty
High jumper Mondo Duplantis and Simone Biles scooped the top prizes of Sportsman and Sportswoman of the Year.
While Lamine Yamal was named the breakthrough star and Team GB's Tom Pidcock won Action Sportsperson of the Year after claiming gold in the Mountain Bike at the Paris Olympics.
Rafael Nadal was named Laureus Sporting Icon and there were several stars in the audience to see his victory speech.
Former Liverpool star Thiago watched on alongside his wife Julia, who stunned on the red carpet.
The Spaniard wore a long black dress with silver heels and walked hand in hand with her husband.
Fans loved the look and heaped praise on Julia.
One reacted saying: "Pure class 😍👌🏻"
Another added: "How beautiful."
A third wrote: "Glam and beautiful."
And another commented: "Stunning Couple!!"
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He also started to get encouragement with the project from organizations such as the Orwell Society and especially Kevin Carter, who sourced many foreign language editions. These gave Clausen a sense of the varied book styles and cover art that were out there. The cover illustrations caught his artistic imagination, especially some of the more abstract prints used on some of the 1960s editions. Hans Clausen by Murdo Macleod The missing typewriter The first setting for the library was an obvious one; the Isle of Jura. This was where Orwell, dying of pulmonary tuberculosis, bashed out much of the text on a Remington Home Portable typewriter. The same model is part of the library, allowing visitors to type their own thoughts, enjoying the very tactile experience of using a typewriter. As many visitors have noted, composition on a typewriter is always a forward process. You are not, as you would be with a computer, given the opportunity to constantly shift from section to section. 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He's very keen for more donations, particularly of interesting editions and those copies with a story to tell (many who have donated have added little notes, reflecting on the significance of the book for them and the provenance of the copy). Ongoing interest I gave Clausen a copy of Bernard Crick's biography of Orwell, the 1st major life of Orwell. First published in 1980, it was written with full access to the Orwell Archive. Crick spent his final years in Edinburgh. Crick, a substantial academic figure within British political studies, emphasised Orwell's significance as a political thinker and essayist, on top of his novel-writing. He used some of the money from sales of the book to help set up the Orwell Prize for political writing, now run by the Orwell Foundation. That several more substantial biographies have been published since Crick's (including two by D. J. Taylor) is further evidence of the ongoing interest in Orwell. These include works on overlooked aspects of Orwell's life, such as Rebecca Solnit's Orwell's Roses which looks at Orwell's love of gardening and veg growing. New generations of admirers Clausen has been much heartened by the way that school pupils have embraced his project. He's worked with groups from Portobello High, Firhill, and James Gillespie's. The project has given the pupils a richer experience of the novel than simply studying it as part of the English literature curriculum (in Scotland at least, pupils these days seem to look at Animal Farm, not 1984). Clausen highlighted several of the reflections on the novel by these pupils, touched by the way the book has affected them. This echoed his own initial engagement with the novel. Again, this suggests that 1984 will continue to engage and speak to new generations. Like the way the contents of the the shelves will 'evolve', this reflects the satisfying circularity of the project. Hence Clausen's desire to see its journey start and end on Jura. The Winston Smith Library of Victory and Truth will be at Out of The Blue, Dalmeny Street, until Saturday August 23rd. Like this: Like Related