G’DAY NIKKI WEBSTER

‘Strawberry Kisses’ is the poptatsic debut single from teenage Aussie singer Nikki Webster and you can watch the video in full above.

Nikki reaches the grand old age of 15 today (April 30) so happy birthday. Her fruity single (out on May 20) has already been a hit down under (one of four Top 20 hits there) and she performed in front of the world at the Sydney Olympics opening ceremony in 2000.

It would appear that Australia isn’t content with dominating the UK pop. With Kylie currently entertaining audiences on her UK arena tour and Holly Valance looking set for the No.1 slot next week, Nikki is the latest pop prodigy from the Land of Oz.

Watch out for a video interview with Nikki coming to dotmusic next week.

Source: dotmusic.com

MOST POWERFUL PEOPLE

Scott Ellis puts it all on the line with his guide to the rich and not-so-famous in entertainment.

COMPILING lists of movers and shakers in any industry is tricky. In the entertainment world, where the players come and go almost daily, egos are rampant and personal opinion plays a huge part in who makes the cut, it’s almost impossible.

Put someone in, or leave someone out, and there are howls of horror.

So that’s why to steal every action hero’s line this time, it’s personal. If you impressed us in 2001, you’re here. If you’re likely to impress us in 2002, you’re here and, most importantly, you’re here if we like you.

Nicole Kidman, for example, tops this list because she’s making millions, her movies are great and she is, above all, “our Nic”.

Power players be warned: no correspondence will be entered into and the judges’ (ie, our) decisions are final.
Continue reading MOST POWERFUL PEOPLE

Acting Up!

The theatre is Nikki Webster’s second home and she’s returning to the stage over summer in The Wizard of Oz. Nikki invited Smash Hits down to rehearsal to see how the show is coming together…

What’s the first thing you do when you get the script?
Basically I just read through it and highlight all my lines.

How do you learn your lines?
I read it a couple of times and then the night before I came in to rehearsals I asked my Mum to read the other parts for me.

What’s your standard day at rehearsal?
When we first came in, we just started blocking, which is getting told where to stand and what actions to do, when to run and when to not run. Then we started running scenes together to see how it flows through and then we did a full run through.

Things were still being changed in rehearsal today. It looks like it’s an ongoing process?
Definitely. Things are always chopping and changing. They still might change when we get into the theatre depending on how it looks from above and below.

How do you get into character when you’re rehearsing out of costume?
It’s quite easy, you just snap into it. You just have to get into the character and play the character the way you think it should be played.

What do you normally do in the five minutes before you go onstage?
I’m standing by the stage ready to go and getting into character. I’ll think about my first lines and what’s going to happen onstage – going through it all really quickly in my brain.

Have you ever forgotten a line in a show and what happens if you do?
No I haven’t…touchwood. When you’re working with other people, there’s always someone who’ll jump in to help you out and improvise.

How does stage acting compare to screen acting?
Well, you just have to give it a lot more because you’re trying to get it across all the levels where people are sitting. You just have to act it as big as you can. And you have to go straight through, too.

Is each performance different?
It definitely is. As you get into the run of the show, you get to know everybody better and you bounce off each other. Also, you get different reactions from the audience. Some things that you might not think are funny, they laugh at. Also, having performances at different times of the day means different types of people come to each show.

What’s the first thing you do after you come off stage?
I unzip my costume coz I’ll be really hot, and take my mic off. Then I take my make-up off and have a drink of water.

What sort of things do you have in your dressing room?
Up until now I’ve always shared a dressing room because I’ve been with a lot of other kids. I don’t think I’ll be sharing this time so I don’t know what I’ll have in there. I’ll probably put up some fun stuff – maybe have a lolly jar, a CD player. A few bits and pieces.

Do you remember the first time you saw The Wizard Of Oz?
I don’t remember the first time I watched it but I never really understood that the Lion, the Tin Man and the Scarecrow were the men who worked on Dorothy’s farm. I thought it was actually happening and it was new things happening to her as she went along.

Were you a fan of the film when you were younger?
I was very into Dorothy. I had the ruby slippers and I had the dress made up as well.

Who is your favourite character?
I like them all because they’re all different in their own way – and with the actors playing the parts now, they do it so well, it’s like they’re the first ones to do it.

What’s your favourite song from the show?
Definitely Somewhere Over The Rainbow but I like a lot of the character songs like We’re Off To See The Wizard with the Munchkins – that’s a lot of fun.

What’s your favourite part of the show?
Oh gee, that’s hard because I love it all. I can’t wait to see what everybody looks like in their costumes in Munchkinland. They’re going to have such bright costumes and lots of colours. I think when Dorothy’s house lands in Oz, that’s going to be a great scene.

Is the play going to be exactly the same as the movie?
It’s the same storyline as the movie but there are so many new bits and so many exciting bits that are going to happen, and a few secrets! There’s quite a few funny bits with the Lion, the Tin Man and the Scarecrow – well we think they’re funny anyway. I can’t wait to get the audience into the theatre.

Is it hard to work with a dog?
Oh, they’re very good and have a trainer who helps me as well. They started rehearsals when we did and sometimes I think “They’re better than me! They know what they’re doing.” I have to be aware of them, that they don’t get stepped on by the cast, but I’m learning to control them and stop them from jumping up.

Source: Smash Hits magazine
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Nikki’s Best Day

When Nikki Webster flew to a beautiful Aussie island to film her latest video for “The Best Days”, she invited Big Hit along for the ride …

What was the best thing about filming the video?
Basically my last two videos have been in a studio, so being on location in Stradbroke Island in Queensland was such a fantastic time! You know, having all my friends around and actually sleeping over somewhere and just having such a great big party!

Your friends are also your dancers which you’ve used in all your videos, right?
Yeah that’s right. Most of them were there, although there were all new friends too, so that was great. There was Hayley, Melissa, Simone, Rainer, David, Shannon and Mitchell.

All up, how long did it take to film the video?
We were there for three days but we could have stayed there all week! (laughs) We actually had the night times off, which is when I suppose we all started to party! (laughs) We just went into each other’s rooms and watched TV, had lolly fights, stuff like that.

Lolly fights?
Well, not lolly fights … um, let’s just say that we ate lots of lollies!

OK. Describe the video?
With “Best Days” I just thought you have to say you are having the best days. So we thought about a beach and I really wanted to go somewhere other than a normal Sydney Beach. I wanted jet skiing and you know, just things that look like we’re having fun, like sand dunes. My mum found Stradbroke and when we got there it was just fantastic

Descibe your best day?
Just spending time with friends and family and having a life, basically. You can never ever not have fun if you’re having a life.

What’s your favourite line in the song?
Um … I probably remember all the good and bad times we had. There’s always going to be good and bad times in your life no matter what, you have just got to make sure the good ones come out really strong, and you remember them forever!

In the video, your brother Scott drives you around on the jet ski. Was he safe?
He was fine. There were a couple of my friends who got bogged down on a sand dune. We were riding around warning everyone, “Hey there is a sand dune there” and what did they do? Run straight into it! (laughs)

Were there any other scary moments during the filming?
When we were on top of the boat. It was a beautiful day, but on top of the boat it was quite windy, so everyone was being blown everywhere! Their hair is in the wrong place, but it was lots of fun. When we were going down the big sand dunes – that was fun!

Finally, was there anything bad about doing this video?
I don’t think so … Oh yeah, probably getting up early for the sunrise shot. But that was OK.

INTERVIEW: SANTI PINTADO

Source: Big Hit
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Nikki Follows Yellow Brick Road

WITH a career that’s flown over the rainbow in a little more than 12 months, teenage star Nikki Webster needs no wistful refrain like Dorothy’s to guide her future.

The 14-year-old has leapt from her centre-stage performance at last year’s Olympics to the starring role in a stage version of The Wizard of Oz, which reaches Melbourne next year.

Webster will be in good company as she follows the yellow brick road, with the likes of Bert Newton, Pamela Rabe and Philip Gould to guide her to the Land of Oz and back.

The mammoth $6 million show opens at the Regent Theatre in June, when Melbourne dog lovers can flinch at the Wicked Witch of the West’s vows to get Dorothy – and her little dog, too.

Source: Herald Sun

Small Poppy

Nikki Webster aims to silence her critics with The Wizard of Oz

Nikki Webster is being swept off her feet. Two weeks into rehearsals of The Wizard of Oz, choreographer Kelly Aykers is nutting out a complicated dance number that sees the pocket-size Dorothy spun from partner to partner when one’s hands slip and Webster is flung into the air. She’s caught just before hitting the deck, but everyone gets a fright. “Be very careful with that young girl, please,” shouts Aykers over the piano that plays on in the rehearsal rooms at Gala studios in Sydney. “She’s very precious.” In fact, that this production is opening at all is due solely to the star power of this 14-year-old schoolgirl. “If she had said no, we wouldn’t have done it,” says Oz co-producer John Frost of the $6 million show, which opens on Nov 24 in Sydney before touring Melbourne and Brisbane early next year. “It has been done especially for her.”

Such high praise is fuel for the growing band of knockers who delight in making her the butt of public jibes – The Chaser satirical team has even included a Nikki Webster dartboard in The Chaser Annual. “Those of us who saw [the Olympic Opening Ceremony] will never forget her saccharine-sweet delivery, annoyingly precocious poise and overall utter vomituosness,” says co-editor Julian Morrow. But Webster isn’t letting it get to her. “I never thought my dream would come true so early,” marvels the polite and polished performer, who soared to fame as the “Hero Girl” of the Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the Sydney 2000 Olympics. “If there’s pressure there, she’s not showing it,” says Frost, 49. “She’s a real pro.”

Continue reading Small Poppy

Stars outshine the magic along the way

The Wizard of Oz reviewed by Bryce Hallett

“We’re off to see the Wizard” will be a familiar catch-cry this holiday season whether it’s the Yellow Brick Road quest of Dorothy on stage or the magical adventures of Harry on film.

This latest stage incarnation of L.Frank Baum’s musical faithfully adapts the movie featuring Harold Arlen and E. Harburg’s fine score and such catchy tunes as The Wicked Witch, Merry Old Land of Oz and, of course, Over the Rainbow the show starter and stopper.

The colourful production designed by Roger Kirk could do with a few more marvels to propel it more spectacularly along, especially in the second act, but the energetic cast make the most of the big musical moments they are given.

Nikki Webster, who shot to fame in the Olympic Games opening ceremony, travels down the immortal Yellow Brick Road and takes her own distinctive, confident and irrepressible route. She receives top billing, her profile and drawing power among young people good reason to present the much-loved work, especially for a new generation.
Continue reading Stars outshine the magic along the way

Friends of Dorothy

A brain, courage, heart: it has taken the lot to stage The Wizard of Oz, as John Shand discovered during the rehearsals.

Week one
“We’re not in Kansas anymore, Portia, I mean, Toto…”

The real Wizard of Oz is not the mighty necromancer who bestows courage on gutless lions or gives brains to straw-headed scarecrows. It’s not even the vaguely Bert Newton-like chap who can transport a little girl lost back to Kansas. No, the real Wizard of Oz is Nancye Hayes. It is Hayes, the show’s director, who establishes the mood on day one of the five-week rehearsal period. Always softly spoken, she introduces a calming resolve, good humour and clarity of intent to go with her non dictatorial style.

It’s a late October morning and, inside a spartan Glebe rehearsal studio, a slightly nervous Hayes gives a welcoming speech that charms the company and – like the Good Witch she played in a Melbourne production of The Wizard of Oz a decade ago – casts a spell of contagious optimism.

By contrast, straight-talking choreographer Kelly Aykers lays down the law about fitness. “It’s professional theatre,” she tells me later. “These guys should all be trained in singing, acting and dancing. They know that if they’re going to be dancing, their fitness level has to be up.”

Finally, dog-trainer Lindy Coote decrees that only Nikki Webster (Dorothy) – around whom the production was conceived – is allowed contact with Spirit and Portia, the two cairn terriers that will share the role of Toto. Coote says it is vital that the dogs be able to pick Webster out on a stage crowded with Munchkins or monkeys. “If everyone else ignores them, they don’t ever think, ‘Hey, you gave me a piece of your ham sandwich the other day. You might do it again.’”

Continue reading Friends of Dorothy

Olympic singer Nikki Webster

R. Atkin of Wellesley, Mass., asks ‘Whatever happened to…?’

Olympic singer Nikki Webster

The spritely 13-year-old who floated 80 feet above Sydney’s Olympic Stadium in the opening ceremonies of the Olympics a year ago is now an Australian superstar.

Winsome Nikki Webster thrilled crowds with her poise and charm. An estimated 3.5 billion viewers worldwide watched her sing and soar. Not since Olivia Newton-John and Kylie Minogue has an Australian girl garnered so much attention.

Since the Olympics, Webster has been generating a buzz. She has her own website, a part in a movie (“Vanilla Gorilla”) that will be shot in South Africa, and, most recently, the lead role of Dorothy in a traveling theatrical production of “The Wizard of Oz.”

Her single “Strawberry Kisses” (released in June) hit No. 2 on the Australian music charts. Her new album “Depend on Me” was released in September.

While fame is nothing new to her (she has appeared in TV commercials and theater productions for 10 years), fame of this magnitude is.

Webster’s mother, who works at a child-care center, and her father, an electrician, make sure Nikki keeps a proper perspective.

“She’s never wanted money,” her mother, Tina, told the Sydney Morning Herald. “Whatever she needs comes out of Mum’s purse…. We don’t even take one cent out of her account….”

Do you suddenly wonder, hey – ‘Whatever happened to… ?’

Wonder no more! Write and tell us who or what you’d like to catch up with. Send ideas to: One Norway St., Boston, MA 02115 or e-mail: whatever@csmonitor.com

By Lane Hartill

Source: The Christian Science Monitor (www.CSMonitor.com).

Shopping with Nikki W

Australia’s teen queen Nikki Webster is a young woman on the move yet still finds time to make Christmas special, Danielle Teutsch reports.

NIKKI Webster is one of the few people who could be forgiven for doing their Christmas shopping at the last minute.

The young star of last year’s Olympic Opening Ceremony has released a top-selling album, toured shopping centres, won awards and become the face of a cosmetics range.

She is also filming a movie, Vanilla Gorilla, and starring in The Wizard Of Oz at the Lyric Theatre. Somewhere in this highly packed schedule, the 14-year-old has to squeeze in some school work.

But Nikki makes sure she can find the time to choose gifts for family and friends carefully – even if she does blow the budget occasionally.

“I always try to find some time to do it every year,” she said. “I choose with my heart. I like catching up with people at Christmas and giving presents to them.”
Continue reading Shopping with Nikki W