
I hope my Voice mentor Rita Ora will share a wine with me at Scottish gig, says singer
CHEERS TO THAT I hope my Voice mentor Rita Ora will share a wine with me at Scottish gig, says singer
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
A VOICE Australia star has swapped the showbiz stage for jamming in the backroom of a Scots boozer ahead of a homecoming gig - and is hoping to have a VIP guest.
Glasgow girl Nyree Huyser, 40, was mentored by global megastar Rita Ora, 34, on the hit show down under after impressing the telly judge with her unique spin on Demi Lovato hit Stone Cold.
Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter
Sign up
4
Nyree Huyser has returned to Scotland to delight fans
Credit: Tom Farmer
4
Nyree was mentored by Rita Ora on The Voice Australia
But now Nyree is back in Scotland, after living in New Zealand for the last 10 years, to entertain crowds on her home turf.
And she's saving a seat for Anywhere hitmaker Rita at her upcoming gig.
Nyree, from Clarkson, said: 'She's more than welcome to come along and we can share a glass of wine or two'.
The talented Scot made The Voice Australia judge Rita's top three, but narrowly missed out on a spot in the final.
Following the 2023 blind audition, mentor Rita said: 'I'm shaking. I felt like you were singing like it was your last chance.
'You really did not disappoint. Your story is what's going to potentially make you win this competition.'
The show wasn't Nyree's first bid for stardom. The bubbly musician applied for noughties talent hunt Pop Idol and years later on UK primetime hit Britain's Got Talent.
She also tried out for Popstars: The Rivals - a 2002 singing contest fronted by Pete Waterman, Louis Walsh and Geri Halliwell.
Nyree later emigrated to New Zealand with cricket coach hubby Carl - who batted balls in Pollok, Glasgow.
The mum-of-three put her stardom bid on ice as she juggled dreams of fame with raising Hayden, eight, Charlotte, six, and Ollie, three.
Rita Ora looks incredible as she strips off to thong bikini to enjoy an ice lolly by the pool
She said: 'You kind of lose a bit of yourself when you have kids because you've got new priorities. You don't think about yourself any more.
'I never lost the passion, but I stopped doing things for myself and just focused on them.
'I thought, 'well, that's it then, maybe I've had my day'.'
In a last-ditch attempt to pursue her dream, Nyree replied to a casting call for the Australian version of The Voice.
She said: 'I got a lot of doors closed in my face, but I kept plodding on.
'If somebody tells me I can't do something, I'm going to try and do it.
'Being on the show is the most nervous I've ever been in my life - I was shaking. It was like my feet were glued to the ground and then the doors opened.
'I walked out onto The Voice stage and you could hear a pin drop. I just started singing, it was frightening, but all four judges turned around for me.'
4
Nyree is saving a seat for Rita at her show
4
Nyree put her stardom bid on ice as she juggled dreams of fame with raising her kids
Credit: Supplied
Nyree was left 'conflicted' after bagging an incredible 'four-chair turn' and was forced to select a mentor.
But she went with superstar Rita who joined the star-studded panel which also includes R&B legend Jason Derulo and respective Australian Idol stars Jessica Mauboy and Guy Sebastian.
She gushed: 'I picked Rita because she's just so inspiring.
'I definitely made the right decision and I've made memories that I'll just cherish forever.
'I didn't even see the first three judges turn around and then when the fourth chair turned, I was like, 'I can't believe it, I've got all four chairs'.'
The talent show hopeful added: 'Rita was lovely and approachable.
'I thought I'd be really intimidated by her but she's really friendly and down to earth.
'She was always there to answer my questions and offer up advice.'
Homecoming show
Nyree will bring her The Power of Celine show to Glasgow's Eastwood Park Theatre later this month.
The singer admits it will be a full circle moment for her and can't wait to get in front of the Scottish crowd.
She said: 'I wanted to come back and see the family and thought that it would be great to put on a gig.
'It's a bit of a homecoming to show the world what I've been doing over in New Zealand.
'I'm excited to be back because you can't get enough of Scotland.
'This was my local theatre and I remember performing in musicals here when I was growing up.
'Now I get to headline. It's going to be an emotional homecoming, I can tell.'
She added: 'My childhood pal James Grant will be joining me alongside a few local dancers.
'I asked James to join me as we go way back - we used to perform in competitions back in the day.
'There will be lots of surprises in there too - the audience is in for a treat.'
And as she rehearses from the backroom of Doherty's Bar in Hamilton, Nyree hopes that pubs across the country will belt out her next batch of songs.
She said: 'I'd love to release some more music.
'I'm focusing on my second album, which will be inspired by Celine and Adele.
'And of course, I'd love to do more shows, I just want to keep on performing.'
- Log onto ercultureandleisure.org for tickets for the June 27 show

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
39 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh Fringe theatre reviews: Kanpur: 1857
Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... THEATRE Kanpur: 1857 ★★★★☆ Pleasance Courtyard (Venue 33) until 24 August Monstering the Rocketman ★★★★☆ Pleasance Dome (Venue 23) until 24 August NORTH INDIA, 1857; and in the aftermath of the rebellion against British rule that imperial history calls the Indian Mutiny, a man stands strapped to the mouth of a cannon, awaiting the horrible and mutilating death prescribed by the British as punishment for rebels and their allies. The British officer in charge of the public execution sees himself as a civilised man, though, perhaps willing to free his prisoner, if he will give up information about rebel leaders; and so he probes and interrogates, demanding that the prisoner both inform and entertain, in the face of death. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Kanpur: 1857 by Niall Moorjani | Contributed This is the situation around which Scottish-Indian writer Niall Moorjani builds the powerful new one-hour play Kanpur: 1857, winner of this year's Pleasance Theatre Charlie Hartill Award. With a little light-touch historical information projected behind the action, and powerful live accompaniment from brilliant Scottish tabla musician Sodhi, the show emerges as a fascinating hour of reflection on the psychology of colonialism, and the related politics of gender. The prisoner, it emerges, is a peaceful storyteller who rests being defined as a 'man', and is deeply in love with a famous hijra or non-binary courtier turned rebel leader; and the storyteller questions not only the rigid sexual intolerance increasingly imposed by the British in India, but also the mentality of empire which responds to one angry and horribly violent act of rebellion, costing the lives of dozens of British women and children, with a vast war of retribution, killing hundreds of thousands. Moorjani's play is beautifully written, full of a lyrical sense of the beauty of India and its culture, and of those moments when Indian and British cultures can share their poetry and music; both Moorjani himself, as the prisoner, and co-director Jonathan Oldfield, as the all-too-charming officer, deliver richly complicated performances. And when, in the end, the prisoner asks 'How many Indian lives can one British life be worth?', the question echoes down the ages to the present tragedy in Gaza; in what seems like one of the most important political dramas on this year's Edinburgh Fringe, and one with strong and challenging Scottish resonances. Growing homophobia and sexual intolerance is also the theme of Henry Naylor's latest play Monstering the Rocketman, a brilliantly entertaining and rivetingly well-told monologue about The Sun newspaper of the early 1980s, and its vicious campaign of vilification against gay rock star Elton John, whom it accused – on very slender evidence – of a series of hideously exploitative relationships with young boys. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Henry Naylor in Monstering the Rocketman | Contributed Against a projected backdrop of shrieking 1980s headlines, Naylor tells the story of Sun editor Kelvin MacKenzie's campaign in tremendous style, focusing on the figure of a naive but ambitious young reporter recently recruited by The Sun, but never hesitating to sketch the monstrous characters who dominated 1980s newsrooms in the vivid detail that also pervades the whole narrative, brilliantly evoking the atmosphere of that era in London and the UK. It's an ugly story, but one that, exhilaratingly, ends on a far more hopeful note than many at the time expected. It stands as both a vital historical record and a warning, as new waves of intolerance begin to target groups even more vulnerable than gay men were, back in those days of Section 28, and the early years of the Aids epidemic. JOYCE MCMILLAN THEATRE Luke Wright: Pub Grub Pleasance Dome (Venue 23) until 12 August ★★★☆☆ Performance poet Luke Wright loves words, every bit of them: the letters they start with, the vowels in the middle, the taste of them on your tongue. Despite its title, his latest show (in his 27th year as a writer/performer) is not specifically about food, though Jay Rayner does take a knock in his opening paean to pub grub, which celebrates the comfort of beige nosh. Words are all the sweeter to Wright, as he bounces back from six months of writer's block last year. Pub Grub – dig that assonance – is brought to you by the letters 'D', 'O' and 'A' with separate odes restricted to one vowel. These are more than literary exercises, they are proper witty snapshots. Turns out there is a whole world of obscenities unlocked by the letter 'O'. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Family is a recurring theme – mum, childhood friends and his son are all in his thoughts. Some of his connecting material doesn't quite land, even as a thread to keep picking. Wright's favourite pub joke is just OK but, retold throughout the show in different styles, it becomes another linguistic comfort blanket and certainly makes a jolly good punk sonnet to end on. FIONA SHEPHERD THEATRE Dropped Easter Road Stadium (Venue 518) until 10 August ★★★☆☆ There's a bruising authenticity to this monologue from debut writer-actor Alfie Cain that sets it apart from other plays dealing with the beautiful game. Cain was a trainee at Chelsea's football academy until he was unceremoniously dropped by the age of 18. Alfie took the opportunity to retrain as an actor but the rejection he suffered clearly still stings and while autobiographical to an extent this play presents a fictionalised account that documents the pressures faced by young players. Although informed by a love of the game — at least initially — this quickly becomes a cautionary tale. Academy players have a one in thousands chance of going on to enjoy a professional career. Cain's young footballer ploughs on against the odds, desperate for affirmation from his father and success in the face of verbal and physical abuse — both on and off the pitch. It offers some insight into how toxic masculinity takes root and looks at the fallout of filling young boys with unrealistic dreams. While necessarily bleak, Cain's powerful performance holds your attention and it's to Hibs' credit that they would host such an unflinching look at the challenges facing young players — for whom it should be required viewing. RORY FORD Make sure you keep up to date with Arts and Culture news from across Scotland by signing up to our free newsletter here. THEATRE Some Masterchef Sh*t Greenside @ George Street (Venue 236) until 9 August ★★★☆☆ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Proving the well-known truism that any sensational news story can provide inspiration for a show in Edinburgh, here's a comedy with echoes of that unforgettably gruesome true tale from 2003 about strangers meeting on the internet and one allowing the other to kill and eat him. It's an even more shocking backdrop than the current scandal surrounding the TV show in the title, to which it bears no connection. Playwright Luke High's script plays it cagey at first, laying out his pair of characters' first coffee shop meeting through an internet advertisement, as though this were a story of two men looking for love or at least a quick hook-up. Married vascular surgeon Adam is professional and uptight, while Luke, a waiter at a well-known Italian restaurant chain, is an easy-going waster. The dance around what they're planning to get up to – and Adam has a very particular cut of meat in mind – is delivered in a skilful and just about believable way, with the characters' nerves and heightened self-awareness coming together in some rich dark comedy, which is well sold by the actors. There's a stated homoerotic edge which takes the play into queer comedy territory, although once it delves deeper into the pair's very different but somehow compatible motivations it becomes inevitably more serious and over-described, and a bit less fun. DAVID POLLOCK THEATRE Becoming Maverick theSpace @ Surgeons Hall (Venue 53) until 9 August ★★★☆☆ Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad In Daphne du Maurier's novel Rebecca, the housekeeper Mrs Danvers is a formidable enemy for Maximillian de Winter's new wife. This one-woman play, written and performed by Heather Alexander, purports to tell Mrs Danvers' story: a orphan abandoned in a trunk on the quay at Southampton, raised in a cruel orphanage where she learns that she must 'do what she must' to survive. It's a colourful story vividly told, even if the language is sometimes over-elaborate. It says much about Alexander's delivery that the rhyming structure is not more intrusive. When a tragedy in the orphanage causes her to run away, she musters all her wits to land on her feet and talk her way into a job as tutor and companion to the precocious young Rebecca. Together, as partners in crime, they plan seductions for Rebecca's lovers and execute revenge on her abusive father. But, as twist follows twist, it turns out that Alexander has a bigger point to make about childhood trauma. The daring final surprise, which forces the audience to re-evaluate everything we've heard so far, will be a step too far for some.


Scotsman
an hour ago
- Scotsman
My Festival: Dawn Steele
The Scottish actor tells us all about her new play, Skye: A Thriller, her love of the Fringe's unpredictable energy, and being woken up by sausage dogs at 5am. Sign up to our Arts and Culture newsletter, get the latest news and reviews from our specialist arts writers Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... There are thousands of shows in Edinburgh this month. Please tell us why we should come and see yours. I loved the play as soon as I read it. Skye: a Thriller is a brand new piece of writing from Ellie Keel and directed by Matthew Illiffe, about memories, love, loss, Skye and ghosts. It felt magical to me and I hope myself and James Robinson leave you feeling this as you walk out of Summerhall after. I have not been on the stage for a long time so I can't wait to bring this story to life! Who or what was the biggest inspiration for your show? You'll need to ask our brilliant writer Ellie Keel! Who or what are you most excited about seeing this year? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad I come to the festival every year but this year my teenage daughter is coming up so I have booked loads of things that I think she will like, for example Shamilton! I'm excited about seeing all my pals' shows too - Hannah Donaldson in Make it Happen, Johnny McKnight in She's Behind You and Bob Daws - who I did Blackbird with many moons ago - in Wodehouse in Wonderland. I've also booked Police Cops: The Original which looks fab. There are too many comedians to catch too, like Michelle Brazier who I loved last year. Who do you most like spending time with in Edinburgh? We have a little group we come up with every year and we stay at my best friend Michael's flat. We cram everything into three days, including a Mother India visit. What I do love about the festival though is the random, brilliant, funny unexpected nights you have seeing stuff you wouldn't normally see, then off to the Traverse, meeting friends old and new, and the inevitable ending at the Pleasance Courtyard. Tell us something about you that would surprise people. I'm up at 5am and in bed at 8.30pm, unless I'm at the Fringe of course! What are the best and worst things that have happened to you at a festival? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The worst - but also completely standard at the Fringe - is missing shows, ending up at wrong venues and a few bad hangovers. The best is just the amazing shows I have seen over the years. Bryony Kimmings I'm a Phoenix Bitch, Mawaan Rizwan was a highlight too. I just love the energy of the Fringe - there really is nowhere like it. I can't wait! What's the first thing you do in the morning and the last thing you do at night? I am woken by our two sausage dogs at 5am, at the minute that's fine as I do about two hours of line learning before I get to rehearsals. The last thing I do is read. I'm out like a light. Thanks for the interview! We'd like to buy you a drink. Where are we going and what are we drinking? Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Oh, a frozen margarita for me please from the Summerhall courtyard at 4pm after our show! Skye: a Thriller, Summerhall, 3pm, until 25 August


Daily Record
2 hours ago
- Daily Record
Outlander's Sam Heughan details season 8's 'very emotional' final scene
The Jamie Fraser star opened up about the end of Outlander Outlander actor Sam Heughan has reflected on the final-ever take on the Starz series, not long after announcing an exciting new role and teasing "loss" in the last outing. Speaking in a recent interview, the 45-year-old Scottish actor was asked about his final day filming on Outlander, with the star teasing the last scene he shot with co-star and fellow executive producer Caitríona Balfe. Heughan said: 'There were a lot of goodbyes over a long period of time, but the very last day, myself and my co-star [Balfe] had a scene that was very long and we had to shoot this. 'And they had invited all the crew from the building to come and watch the last take. There were about several hundred people watching, which also adds pressure. 'It was very emotional. Caitríona, I think, was fair to say… I was watching her on her close up and her lip was quivering the whole time. She couldn't control it and I think shut down a bit. 'I think I was like, 'I have to get through this' and then obviously at the end it all came out but wonderful. 'What an amazing journey to go on, and I am really very thankful,' he added on The Travel Diaries with Holly Rubenstein podcast. However, Heughan didn't divulge any details from the scene. Given television is rarely shot chronologically, it may not have been the last scene of Outlander. Nonetheless, speculation is rife that Outlander's final moment will feature a scene between Jamie's ghost and Claire in 1940s Inverness before she goes through the stones. Outlander's author Diana Gabaldon has previously said she will be ending her novel series with this scene and promised fans would be left in tears. On the flip side, the TV series has hugely diverged from Gabaldon's books after it was confirmed in season seven that the show would take a different path to the source material. So, those familiar with the books might find plenty of twists and turns in the show that weren't in the novels. Heughan's words come after Starz confirmed Outlander eighth and final season would be hitting screens in early 2026 at San Diego Comic-Com and dropping a first look teaser. Although there's something of a wait, Outlander fans are in for a treat with prequel series Outlander: Blood of My Blood premiering this week with a double-bill special. The show follows Jamie and Claire's parents and their respective love stories. Unlike the parent series, Blood of My Blood simply uses the Outlander novels as a jumping off point and charts new terrain without any source material for guidance. Starz has already renewed Blood of My Blood ahead of the season one premiere, showing the network's commitment and confidence in the series. This also means that once Outlander wraps up, fans still have more to sink their teeth into from the same universe. Outlander: Blood of My Blood premieres on Starz on August 8 and on Prime Video via MGM+ on August 9 The Travel Diaries with Holly Rubenstein podcast is available now wherever you get your podcasts