Nikki Webster gets married

Once upon a time there was a little strawberry blonde girl who captured the hearts of the nation as she performed at the 2000 Olympics opening ceremony.

Twelve years later, that little girl — also known as Nikki Webster — is a dance-teacher and at 25-years-old, has just married her long-term boyfriend, Matthew McMah.

The singer and dancer wed her 32-year-old partner in Annandale, in Sydney’s Inner West, in front of 100 family members and friends.

But despite having performed for crowds numbering in the thousands Nikki still suffered wedding day nerves. “Put me in front of 1000 people to perform, and I’m fine. Make me say vows and a speech and I’m a wreck,” Nikki told Woman’s Day.

Webster designed her wedding gown herself, and could not have been happier with the result, “I felt beautiful in the dress … Like a princess. I couldn’t wait for Matt to see me in it.”

Fittingly for a little girl who was Australia’s darling following the 2000 Olympics, Nikki reportedly met her now husband on a blind date on Australia Day in 2010.

Webster went on from her starring Olympic role to enjoy success as a performer with her song Strawberry Kisses reaching No. 2 on the Australian singles charts in 2001 and holding the position for 7 weeks. Her debut album Follow Your Heart also went platinum.

Source: The Hype Yahoo!7

Nikki has new tune

EIGHT years since the release of her last album, Nikki Webster says she is finally ready to return to music.

Famous for her involvement in the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics, Webster, 25, says she’s struggled to find her way.

She’s tried country, dance and even rock music, and her new single Long Hot Summer is pop.

Her biggest hit was bubblegum pop song Strawberry Kisses in 2001.

“It’s taken people a while to realise that I don’t live in a time capsule, I’m not going to be 13 forever. I had to work out the right way to move forward and find out who I am and I’ve tried everything,” she says.

At 18, she controversially posed for men’s mag FHM to try to change her image.

Most recently, she’s kept a low profile by opening up Dance@NikkiWebster schools in Sydney’s west and on the Central Coast. “I didn’t know if people would accept me again,” she says. Webster is engaged to flight attendant Matthew McMah.

Source: Daily Telegraph

Nikki’s ceremony

TenLateNewsJul25_007
HERMIONE KITSON: Well, just days away from the Olympics opening ceremony, it might be hard to believe that twelve years have already passed since Sydney was the focus of the world’s attention, and at the center of it all was a tiny girl, Nikki Webster, who drew thunderous applause playing a crucial role in a ceremony that people are still talking about.

[footage plays]

Our introduction to Nikki Webster came as a surprise and was watched by billions of people. At just 13, she was barely a speck as she flew through the skies above Sydney Olympic Stadium and into a nation’s heart.

NIKKI WEBSTER: No-one knew that I was gonna fly up, so it was like a total… amazing for the whole audience.

It launched a career as a bubblegum pop star. And that tiny schoolgirl grew before our eyes. Sometimes a little too quickly. But for Nikki Webster, what started with an Olympics has led to a life doing what she dreamed of at age five: performing.

[footage ends]

HERMIONE: And Nikki joins us now on the desk. Welcome, Nikki.

NIKKI: Thank-you.

HERMIONE: How do you feel when you see that opening ceremony vision now?

NIKKI: It just brings back amazing memories. I mean it was such an incredible fantasy to be a part of, to play that Hero Girl that connected the whole opening ceremony and to hold that role, was incredible and it was memories that I’ll never forget. I was so blessed to be working with such an incredible team in Australia. And just the whole atmosphere on the night was electric and I’m so excited to see London’s opening ceremony.

BRAD McEWAN: Nikki that was 12 years ago though, do you still get recognized, you know in the supermarket people look at you and go, “Was that you or wasn’t that you?”

NIKKI: Yeah, I still get… A lot of people go, “You look like Nikki Webster,” and I say, “That’s ’cause I am,” and they go, “No you’re not!” And then I never know how to answer. But I definitely, depending on how I look on the day, if I’m looking really scraggly I get away with it but if I actually have make-up on then I do get recognized.

ANGELA BISHOP: It led to so many other career opportunities for you of course. You had an absolutely fantastic pop career and today, with all of the Jackson family in the news today, it’s a good time to remember you actually performed a duet with Michael Jackson…

NIKKI: I did!

ANGELA: And then went back to his room.

NIKKI: I did, I went back to his room that he gave to me.

BRAD: Really?!

NIKKI: That was before the Olympics!

ANGELA: Nothing sinister.

BRAD: No, no, no, but really?

NIKKI: Yeah! We had M&M fights in his hotel room and I was lucky enough to sing Heal The World with him on his last HIStory Tour in Australia, on stage. So I’ve got wonderful memories. I’ve been so lucky. I’ve traveled around the world with my music and performing, performed with such Australian icons as well, so I’m very lucky.

HERMIONE: The focus now for you is your dancing schools, you’ve got two different ones.

NIKKI: That’s right, I have. Two dance studios, Dance @ Nikki Webster – one in Sydney and now we’ve just opened one on the Central Coast. So I’m teaching kids, I’m seeing such inspirational children and it’s really, I guess rekindled my love of performing to see them and teach them what I can along the way.

BRAD: Let’s get back to Sydney. You must have the most wonderful memories and have met so many special people being out there.

NIKKI: I have met the most incredible people. But I’m kind of sitting here thinking, do I recognize you Hermione? Were you…?

ANGELA: Aaah, yes! [laughs]

HERMIONE: No, no, no.

NIKKI: Were you a part of the opening ceremony in anything?

HERMIONE: I was, I was a part of the Eternity section.

NIKKI: The Eternity!

HERMIONE: With the Tap Dogs, tapping in the old boots.

ANGELA: I think co-stars is the term we’re looking for, here.

HERMIONE: I was just one of the very many others dancing around Nikki.

NIKKI: It wouldn’t have happened without you, that’s for sure. It was everybody, it was teamwork!

HERMIONE: But I agree with you, the atmosphere was absolutely amazing. And just to be a part of what was going to be a huge Games, and yeah it was fantastic.

NIKKI: Yeah, it certainly was and I have these memories for life and I just, you know, I can’t wait to tell everybody throughout my life about the opportunities I had and the people I met from around the world that came to be a part of the opening ceremony.

BRAD: What about after the Games? You had a single that I remember…

NIKKI: I did! I did Strawberry Kisses.

BRAD: I remember it! Strawberry Kisses!

NIKKI: Yeah that little song Strawberry Kisses. That was my biggest hit, probably one of my funnest tracks. And then I did four albums, um, I did Wizard of Oz.

ANGELA: Wizard of Oz, with Bert Newton.

NIKKI: With the amazing Bert. I did tours, I had a clothing range in Kmart, which was the highest-selling girls range, so the Olympics really started and launched such a wonderful career for me, and a journey. It was all, you know, every step of the way was something new and fun.

ANGELA: What advice would you have to any young person who gets that kind of stardom? You know, you’ve grown up, you’re a role model, you haven’t fallen to pieces, you know. What advice would you give?

NIKKI: Family’s always there for you, you know, never forget that, and enjoy the journey. There are gonna be people that wanna take a piece of you, but really kind of work out… if your gut instinct is telling you no, then I would say that that’s something to really follow. And enjoy it! It happens once, enjoy it and see where it takes you.

BRAD: Wonderful.

HERMIONE: Nikki thank you so much for taking a trip down memory lane with us, we really appreciate it!

NIKKI: Oh, it’s wonderful! It’s such an electric time of the year and I wish all the athletes the best of luck.

Source: Ten Late News
Video: YouTube
Screencaps: Gallery

Various mentions: Sydney 2000 Olympics

Inside the Maracana Stadium during the Rio Olympic opening ceremonynews.com.au, August 7, 2016

Some of the dancers and acrobats were worth watching too but I found myself tuning out a bit when the young boy filling the Nikki Webster role started wandering around in a maze of mirrors.


Rio Olympics opening ceremony highlights: Gisele Bundchen, goon bags, teen rapper and oily Tonganfoxsports.com.au, August 6, 2016

THE KID

TWELVE year old Brazilian rapper MC Soffia went from viral sensation to performing in front of a global audience of millions.

The Sao Paulo youngster’s songs about black pride and female empowerment have struck a chord with fellow youngsters. Her instant ascension into the world spotlight mirrored that of Sydney 13-year-old Nikki Webster, who played a significant role in the Sydney opening ceremony 16 years ago.


Here’s What You Missed From The Rio Opening Ceremonyjunkee.com, August 6, 2016

Recent opening ceremonies have become increasingly extravagant affairs. Who could forget the Queen of England throwing herself out of a helicopter, or the sight of thousands of Chinese performers moving in perfect harmony like their lives literally depended on it? Not to mention Sydney, where we had Nikki Webster and an Olympic cauldron that got stuck halfway up a waterfall. So yeah, good luck topping that.


7 Craziest Moments From Past Olympic Opening Ceremoniescbs8.com, August 5, 2016

4. Sydney 2000 — Deep Sea Adventure

Australia put on a quite a show for the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, wowing the masses with its deep sea dreaming segment — and confusing everyone when a young Nikki Webster conked out in the middle of the stadium to start the performance.


Brazil’s party beats our party piesSMH.com.au, July 5, 2014

For our part, Qatar has a date with destiny in 2022 that should rightfully have been Australia’s. But even as we settle for the 2015 Asian Cup, I still wonder if we would really do justice to the madness of the biggest festival in “football”.

We would probably draw up boring mascots, make an aged Nikki Webster fly again and get the Australian Youth Orchestra to sing Midnight Oil or something like that. Thrilling. But it would not involve the displacement of thousands upon thousands of homeless people (well, maybe a few), protests in the street or infrastructure collapsing. We are a bit boring like that.


SCG farewells baseball and welcomes ghosts of the pastSMH.com.au, March 24, 2014

According to NSW Minister for Sport and Recreation Gabrielle Upton, the arrival of ”the Big Show” was the “biggest” thing to happen to Sydney since Nikki Webster magically glided through the air at the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics in 2000.


Philip Barker: Sochi 2014 produced Opening Ceremony to give you goosebumpsInside the Games, February 8, 2014

It was precisely 20:14 hours when it all began.The sound of Borodin’s haunting Polovtsian Dances accompanied the ascent of a little girl called Luvov, played by 11-year-old Liza Temnikova from Krasnodar, a would be Olympic gymnast. Her flight on the high wire recalled the performance of Australian youngster Nikki Webster, who also flew through the air at the Sydney 2000 Summer Games.

“What mattered most was to have a little girl, not a woman,” said artistic director Andrei Boltenko. “It was a heavy workload for Liza but we decided to take the risk. We wanted her to be kind and human.”


Report: St Jerome’s Laneway Festival, Melbourne 2014Faster Louder, February 1, 2014

As always, Al Montfort threatened to overshadow Dick Diver’s music with his droning, deadpan chat, and Laneway was no different. He encouraged vigilante attacks on Education Minister Christopher Pyne, and promised the crowd a Lorde duet, with the New Zealand star descending to the stage via a zipline, “just like Nikki Webster at the Sydney Olympics.”


The Sovereign Wife – milkbarmag.com, July 16, 2013

Genevieve Wood: What’s the best Australian costume moment?
Owen Phillips: I really don’t think you can go past Nikki Webster’s pink hibiscus dress circa Sydney 2000.  Not many other people could have pulled that colour off as well as she did.


High Contrast: unsung hero of the Olympicsinthemix.com.au, July 31, 2012

With a performance from the Arctic Monkeys and a Hey Jude rendition from Beatle Paul McCartney rounding out the Ceremony, London’s impressive efforts have been lauded one of the best Olympic openers ever – but hey, we’ll always have Nikki Webster.


Greatest opening ceremony momentsBigPond Sport, July 27, 2012

4. Nikki Webster sings “Under the Southern Skies” – Sydney 2000
Webster went from being a regular 13-year old schoolgirl to an international superstar after her various roles at the opening ceremony in Sydney. She participated in an act which encapsulated the country’s love of the beach, and another which highlighted Australia’s Aboriginal heritage. But it was her singing of “Under the Southern Skies” which particularly caught the attention of the crowd, and the world. Organisers were so impressed with her performance that she was asked to sing at the closing ceremony. She then landed a deal with record company BMG.


London Olympic Stadium hits home straightThe Australian, January 27, 2012

“That Sydney opening was a benchmark,” [Rod] Sheard says. “It broke the boundaries for all opening ceremonies when that little girl (singer Nikki Webster) lifted off the pitch. Since then all opening and closing ceremonies have gone aerial and quite right, too. Why have a show that’s two-dimensional in a space that’s three-dimensional? You want to use it and Beijing used it spectacularly (with gymnast Li Ning “running” around the roof of the stadium to light the cauldron)


Asian Games: China ready to dazzle againIndia Today, November 12, 2010

Just to jog the readers’ memory, children have played a key role in opening ceremonies. At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Nikki Webster had created a wave and in 2008 in Beijing, Lin Miaoke was the talking point.


Starting with a bang China Daily, November 11, 2010

Children have always been the most talented performers at the opening ceremonies of major international tournaments such as Nikki Webster at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, and Lin Miaoke at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. It is not difficult to predict the Guangzhou Asian Games will also feature some talented children performers at the opening ceremony.


Great Olympic musical deceptions of our timeThe Age, August 24, 2008

SOCOG officials had ordered pre-recorded backing tapes for the entire ceremony to ensure nothing could go wrong on Sydney’s big night.

This included Nikki Webster’s solo, Under Southern Skies and Human Nature and Julie Anthony singing the national anthem.

“You simply can’t embarrass yourself on the world stage – you must do whatever you can to make it perfect,” the source said.

Nikki Webster’s piece was recorded in July, almost three months before the ceremony.


Olympic Games: Week 1The Drum Opinion, August 18, 2008

I was mildly surprised to learn the opening ceremony team had digitally altered some of the fireworks effects for the broadcast. And though I didn’t notice it at the time – I’d fallen into a deep coma around hour three – I can’t believe the young girl, nine-year-old Lin Miaoke, who sung her little heart out and became the pride of China, was a fraud. A dirty, lying, lip-synching little fraud.

How could any Opening Ceremony organizer be so brazen as to perpetrate such a gross misleading of the viewing public, by having someone lip-synch at the games? Next they’ll be telling us the darling of the Sydney 2000 opening ceremony, Nikki Webster, can’t really fly!



Off The FieldSMH.com.au, August 15, 2008

It was also revealed that the sweet nine-year-old shown singing a stirring rendition of “Ode to the Motherland” at the opening ceremony – a la Nikki Webster at the Sydney Olympics – was in fact only mouthing the words. Moreover, she wasn’t even lip syncing to her own voice. Authorities later admitted that Lin Miaoke was just chosen to be the public face of Yang Peiyi, the girl with the voice of an angel, but with the teeth of a developing seven-year-old.


Not only were the Olympic Fireworks fake, so was the 7 year old singerThe Inquisitr, August 12, 2008

The news that television footage of the fireworks shown outside the stadium at the Beijing Olympic opening ceremony were computer generated fakes has spread online in the last 48 hours, but the latest news will be an even bigger shock: the 7 year old girl singing (China’s version of Nikki Webster) was not only miming, but the voice played wasn’t hers.


Talking Heads – Meryl TankardTalking Heads ABC TV, August 11, 2008

“I directed the first section of the Olympic Ceremony, Deep Sea Dreaming. Came up with the idea of having that little girl flying, Nikki Webster. I wanted to make the whole stadium look like it was underwater.  Choreography is so different in that situation, because you’ve got 2,000 people, so you have to just think of it as a big painting.” – Meryl Tankard


Duck boy awes themThe Age, March 16, 2006

Sean Whitford is a precocious and dedicated talent, with Les Miserables and The Lion King already on his CV.

But, just as Nikki Webster will never grow up from — or live down — being the Dream Girl of the Sydney Olympics, after last night he will be forever known as the Melbourne Commonwealth Games Boy with the Duck.


The hits and misses of Sydney eventssmh.com.au, January 15, 2005

The hits

* Three key moments from the Sydney Olympic opening ceremony: the lone horseman rides into the arena; Nikki Webster takes to the air; Cathy Freeman lights the Olympic cauldron.


Heeler loses faith in GoldThe Age, May 11, 2003

“The new image of Australian culture is a feminine image,” [Alan] McKee said, noting that the face of Australia in the Sydney Olympics opening ceremony was Nikki Webster. “It’s not surprising that the most popular icons of Australian identity, which is obviously in some way what the Logie winners are, are the people who are not just women, but you look at the kind of images of people winning them. It’s Lisa McCune, it’s Georgie Parker – they’re nice, kind, sweet, generous, they bring people in, they listen to them, they understand them. These are the qualities that we are celebrating.”


Diva Las VegasThe Sun-Herald, March 30, 2003

She even took a note out of Nikki Webster’s book and flew high above the stage on wires during one number.

Nikki Webster set to expand her business to the Central Coast

Nikki Webster is set to open a performing arts school at Erina that will offer a brand new training ground for the Central Coast’s brightest stars providing them with the chance to perform in Australia and around the world!

Nikki flew her way into the spotlight at the Sydney 2000 Olympics opening ceremony. Since then she has continued to thrive with successes including Double Platinum selling records and ARIA nominations. She danced her way into lounge-rooms across the nation on Dancing with the Stars, appeared on Thank God You’re Here and played the dream role of Dorothy in the multi-million dollar Australian production of Wizard of Oz.

Nikki is an accomplished business women, at 24 years of age she has had extensive exposure to business and has been mentored by some of the worlds biggest and best entertainment business people during her career.

Nikki has been running her own performing arts school in Sydney with talented brother and co-founder Scott Webster for the past four years.

The gifted pair are expanding Dance @ Nikki Webster to the Central Coast following huge success in Sydney with an expansive client base that has produced stars such as leading actress in Terra Nova, Alana Mansour, as well as lead roles in Annie, Mary Poppins and the new television program Young Talent Time.

Source: Business Insider

Child Stars – What happens when they grow up?

When the notices went up, literally thousands of young girls around Australia put up their hands to audition for the musical Annie on stage next year in Sydney. Melbourne and Brisbane auditions follow next year. While they may dream of stardom, is scoring a lead role at a young age good for them? David Spicer spoke to former child stars to find out what happens when the applause dies down.

in 1978 Gabi Schornegg auditioned for the role of Annie in the first production ever staged in Sydney. She had the opposite of traditional stage parents. “My mother did not have a clue what was going on. My father told me I did not have a hope in hell and was not really interested in me being involved in theatre,” she recalls.

As other parents looked more confident, it made Gabi more determined. With a dancing background and unproven as a singer, her expectations were low. “A voice” which she didn’t know about emerged at the audition.

She scored the coveted role and performed up to four times a week for nine months. “Many children were more talented than I was, but when I got that lucky break, I followed instructions and was a good team player,” she said.

After Annie, roles in music theatre and TV commercials came thick and fast. She said the key to staying well grounded was not wanting to be a star, but just loving the art form. “My parents put a strong emphasis on a good education, just in case it didn’t work out.”

But she only needed to hang up her dancing shoes when it came time to raise a family. Several decades later Gabi (now) Thompson took her four daughters to audition for Annie for its 2012 season. They competed against 1000 other hopefuls. “I was not going to push them, but being in Annie intrigued them.”

She started to panic when they made it into the last 50. What would happen if one got in and the others didn’t? “I was very impressed at how well they did, as they did not start dance training until a few years ago.” They missed out in Sydney, which Gabi thinks may have been a blessing in disguise, but they will try again for Melbourne.

“You’ve got to audition for the experience and not take it personally. You can miss out on a job because you have the wrong hair colour.”

Not all child stars have such success and good experiences. “It ends in tears a lot. Parents boost children up to go on to theatre careers. When they get older the competition is unbelievable. You hear tales of rejection after rejection and you are in your 20s or 30s, not married, working as a waitress in a job rather than career. It is a tough business.”

Hollywood is littered with examples of show business youngsters who don’t cope. Look at Macaulay Culkin. He became an international star in the hit Home Alone movies series. But his adolescence was plagued by family disputes and a brief time in jail on a minor drug possession charge.

But there is no shortage of those wanting to taste the fame game. Queenie van de Zandt ran a series of workshops preparing youngsters for the 2012 Annie auditions. Hundreds took part. She counsels those at her workshops to focus on the artist side. “It is tough when one of the most exciting things in your life happens when you are young. If you have a great run as a child, you start expecting everything to be like that,” she said.

“Fame is transient and you see the disastrous affect on people who try to hold on to that level of fame. I am not saying that the girl who does Annie will turn into an alcoholic. They have to say this is a fantastic experience rather than this is the beginning of a fabulous career.”

At her workshops she sees plenty of classic stage mothers and fathers. “I don’t think they are in the majority. Most parents are really lovely, but part of my workshop is to make them understand what’s involved.”

One girl who was overwhelmed by the fame which followed a big ‘show’ was Nikki Webster. In the year 2000 she auditioned for a role in the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics. “There were six months of auditions. We didn’t know what we were auditioning for. Then we heard it was about a little girl flying linked together with a storyline,” she told Stage Whispers.

A worldwide audience of more than one billion people watched her sing, act and fly around Stadium Australia. “It was difficult to cope with the overnight fame. No-one expected to have the media camped out on our door for days.” Enrollments at her school – The McDonald College of Performing Arts – tripled.

Before the opening ceremony Nikki already had years of experience under her belts, having scored professional gigs in Les Miserables and The Sound of Music. While her parents took her from one audition to another she says the “drive to perform and passion” came from within.

More success followed the Olympics. A lead role in The Wizard of Oz, her own clothing label and a number one record, Strawberry Kisses. “It became my life. I worked with the most incredible artists and fulfilled a dream at the age of 13.” The let down came when she turned 18 and was not the cute little girl anymore. “I finished a record deal and did not want to re-sign after completing four albums. So I went to Los Angeles for a period of self discovery… to find out who I wanted Nikki to be.”

Nikki says she became a victim of the tall poppy syndrome. “If I was a swimmer I would have been supported more. There were tough times – people had to accept I was not going to stay 13 years old.”

To break the mold Nikki Webster did a photo spread in lingerie for Zoo magazine in 2006. It received a hostile reception in online chat rooms. Some of the milder responses included: “Posing for a lad’s mag is possibly the dumbest way ever to prove to the world how mature and adult you are.” “I agree!! I was shocked when I saw the cover… it is just sad… to see her like that!”

When I asked Nikki about this there was silence at the other end of the phone line. She says it was a ‘fun and glamorous fashion shoot’. Since then however Nikki Webster’s career has taken a turn out of the spotlight.

Now 24, she’s engaged to be married and the next phase of her performing arts career is training and mentoring. In Sydney, with her brother and business partner, she’s opened the Nikki Webster Modelling and Talent Agency. She has 32 clients including a cast member of Mary Poppins and Annie.

“I am guiding and mentoring when they need it. It is so exciting working with up-and-coming talent. I am still writing music and will never give up performing.”

Once child stars leave the limelight it is difficult to return. Martin Portus scored the role of Oliver in JC Williamson’s first production of the musical in Adelaide in 1966. His sister took him to audition and he got the part because he had the right look and sweetly sang a Benjamin Britten song.

He says stardom did not go to his head, but recalls the excitement of people asking for autographs and being picked up in a car at school to attend a performance. “It made me obsessed about acting. I went to NIDA. All through my 20s I had good work, including an appearance as a priest in the Young Doctors, who had a naughty affair with a nurse.”

He left acting in the 1980s to commence a very successful career as a journalist and theatre critic. He’s best known as a former broadcaster of Arts programs on Radio National. Now after 30 years off the stage he’s returning in a one-man show in November. He says learning lines again is a prospect he finds ‘terrifying’, but years as a critic have helped him develop a better appreciation of good acting.

However Martin Portus says people often waste a lot of time striving to become a star. “They are seduced as children… into the illusion of celebrity, but there is often too much competition. If only more could skip the acting phase and to straight to becoming a director, sound person or a theatre critic.

“There is a greater need to help build creative industries… rather than everyone demanding attention under a spotlight.”

You can see Martin Portus under the spotlight in The Giraffe’s Uncle: The Les Robinson Story from November 16 – 27, 2011 at King Street Theatre, Netwown (02) 95195081

Auditions for Annie will be held in Brisbane and Melbourne in early 2012
www.anniethemusical.com.au/auditions.html

Nikki Webster’s dance school is in Sydney
www.dancenikkiwebster.com.au

Booking details for Annie are on the back cover.

Source: Stage Whispers
Click here to view scans of this article

Child Stars – The Kerri-Anne Show

kerrianne_02aug11_054

Kerri-Anne was joined by former child star Nikki Webster on the back of her advice for AGT contestant Jack Vidgen.

Kerri-Anne: Well he’s the favourite to take out Australia’s Got Talent, the final, but now 14-year-old singing sensation Jack Vidgen is receiving very disturbing death threats via Facebook, which I guess begs the question, why are we so quick to criticize people who’ve enjoyed some success?

Nikki Webster grew up in the spotlight, knows all too well how brutal people and the media can be. Now she’s offering Jack some sound advice to help him avoid Australia’s tall poppy syndrome. She joins me to discuss how challenging it can be growing up a child star. Nikki, great to see you again.

Nikki: You too, you too. Good morning.

Kerri-Anne: It was interesting your remarks and advice to Jack Vidgen. You suggested that he leave the country, what’s behind that remark?

Nikki: It wasn’t so much ‘Get out of Australia.’ I love Australia, this is where my career started and I’m so grateful and blessed to have had the opportunities that I’ve had, and I wouldn’t change anything for the world. But I was asked to give Jack advice, and it was more the fact that the media can get quite vicious – and I hope it doesn’t for his sake – but they can get vicious, and it can affect his passion to perform and entertain, and if that’s gonna happen then he needs to go overseas and travel the world and make music throughout the world, and then Australia’s always gonna be here and we’re always gonna love him. So that was the context, that I was saying it to him.

Kerri-Anne: Are we still in the era that we appreciate our people more when they’ve gone away, done the big stuff, and come back – are we still in that era?

Nikki: You know, I think we are still in that era. When I look at the history, you know Kylie Minogue’s gone overseas, Danni’s gone overseas, there’s a lot of stars that’ve had to go overseas.

Kerri-Anne: And they’ve copped their own. Kylie: the singing budgie.

Nikki: Horrible, yeah.

Kerri-Anne: They’ve been [through] some really tough stuff. But what was is that affected you so much? You talk about how brutal the media and people can be, what do you mean by that?

Nikki: Um, I think it was more the fact that I was a 13-year-old girl who represented my country, had a wonderful opportunity, created music after that, all my dreams were fulfilled. Got to about fifteen and all of a sudden, media personalities who I thought I had a good relationship with were making me the brunt of their jokes and, you know I was sitting at home and they weren’t letting me on their show, and I was always the punch line of jokes. And I couldn’t really work out what was going on, and I’d go to school and people would say to me, “You’re this diva,” or this, that, the other, and I was like, “But you know me, we’ve grown up together.” And people were believing what they were reading and hearing more than the relationship I had with them.

Kerri-Anne: Why do you think people turn, in Australia? Is it very much the tall poppy syndrome, an Australian thing to go through?

Nikki: You know, I think it happens all over the world. I think we do put people up on a pedestal and then we kinda need to let them get a little bit rocky and give them a hard time and see if they can fight through. But I think in Australia it happens more so with our child stars – not our sports stars, we do support our sports stars – but with performers it does happen. Yes, everyone knows I went through it and I’m not crying out saying I want an apology. It happens.

Kerri-Anne: What was the most hurtful thing you remember, when you were fifteen or sixteen?

Nikki: [laughs] I think it was something where I was, I think it was on the Rove show, and they actually blew me up or something and, they had like a fake character of me and they blew me up. And I thought that was just a little bit inappropriate.

Kerri-Anne: It’s very hurtful to be constantly the butt of people’s jokes.

Nikki: And it does hurt your passion, as a child.

Kerri-Anne: And that’s what you think may happen to Jack?

Nikki: It could happen; I hope we’ve learnt and I hope we support him. He’s an incredible talent and I wish him all the best and you know I hope that we can watch his journey grow, wherever it may go musically.

Kerri-Anne: On the weekend Toddlers and Tiaras, a lot of hoo-ha about this sexualisation of young kids. How have you viewed that?

Nikki: I think we need kids to be kids. We’re only kids for such a short amount of time, we need to nurture kids, and when I opened my dance studio three years ago, it was for that reason. It was to nurture young performers, to share my experiences with them and to guide them, and protect them. You know, they’re so innocent and beautiful.

Kerri-Anne: Aren’t there parents who are just way too involved in a kid’s career?

Nikki: I think there are two sides. There are parents who live through their kids, and their kids aren’t really enjoying what they’re doing, and there are parents whose kids actually have talent, and would give up everything to make sure that kid has the best opportunity possible, to fulfil their dreams.

Kerri-Anne: Nikki, if you hadn’t been the big star you were from the Olympics, do you believe you would have had a better career and a better life?

Nikki: Not at all, not at all. My whole life has been performing. I started performing at the age of five and you know, I was doing musicals and TV, and performing and dancing. It was my dream! The fact that it came true at thirteen is just a blessing, and I wouldn’t change anything. It’s allowed me to open my dance studio, my talent agency, you know I’ve made music, I’ve done records. I’ve travelled the world and what more could a 13-year-old ask for?

Kerri-Anne: We’re just sorry for all those brickbats. Quite undeserved. But thank you.

Nikki: Definitely! Let’s support our talent and get behind them, because it’s a great thing we have incredible talent in this country.

Kerri-Anne: Well said. Nikki Webster, thank you.

Nikki: Thank you, so good to see you!

Source: Kerri-Anne
Watch the video here. View screencaps here.

Child stars cut down

By David Richardson

We like to describe Australia as the land of the ‘fair go’ but that’s far from the truth when it comes to the treatment of our young stars.

Some people are hell bent on tearing down child stars. Whether it’s fourteen-year-old Jack Vidgen, or six-year-old Eden Wood, there’s no stopping those who are out to get them.

Nikki Webster was the most famous little girl in Australia, a thirteen-year-old who became a household name, until she was cut down by the tall poppy syndrome.

Now it’s time for Australia’s latest talent, Jack Vidgen, to be cut down by a Facebook site offering a bounty to kill him. An unbelievable attack from cyber space, that’s now being investigated by the police.

“Thank God I didn’t have Facebook when I was in the midst of my career. I did have death threats but nothing that was so public. It was more people sending me notes and stuff like that,” Webster said.

The road to stardom in this country is littered with the psychologically broken bodies of young stars – hounded out of their own country and forced to quit promising careers.

Entertainment reporter Craig Bennett is ashamed at some of the dirty tricks and campaigns launched against our youngest stars. “I think it’s pretty heavy going in Australia. In America and Britain it exists, but I don’t think anywhere near the degree, and the really personal degree, that it exists here. And I’m really sad about that,” Bennett said.

Peter Andre is a shocking example of Australia’s obsession with knocking down our stars. “He was literally howled out of Australia. A golden boy singer, and good looking, he had a promising acting career. He then said the death threats began rolling in, the hate mail was tumultuous, to the point where he was having twenty panic attacks a day, and had to seek refuge in a mental clinic in New York,” Bennett explained.

Danni Minogue was also vilified here, and forced to England to launch her own career. Jason Donovan barely survived his Neighbours experience, becoming another star forced overseas.

Hate sites litter the internet, and our young, vulnerable and inexperienced stars are targeted by cyber warfare. The recent, shocking attacks on Bindi Irwin were some of the worst.

“There are Facebook sites springing up everywhere lampooning our fabulous talent, and taking unbelievable potshots, and saying the worst things. ‘Throw a stingray at Bindi Irwin’, is one such Facebook smear campaign, and these things are growing by the second. It is alarming, frightening, and shocking.”

Psychologist Grant Brecht warns the hate cyber sites, and threats do take their toll on young performers.

“Unfortunately because of the bullying and the death threats, we see a lot of child stars, and those with great talent, deciding not to go on with it. The price they pay is too high,” Brecht said.

“Death threats can really traumatise young people, and throw them into a great degree of uncertainty. They can suffer and develop performance anxiety where they don’t want to perform anymore, and don’t want to go out in public because they’re very frightened and fearful of what may happen to them.

“By and large we turn our backs on our own stars that have fantastic talent, so they need to go overseas to realise their full potential. That in itself is a tragedy,” Brecht concluded.

Source: Today Tonight

Webster’s warning

Former teen star Nikki Webster has issued a warning to 14-year-old Australia’s Got Talent singing sensation Jack Vidgen.

The 24-year-old, who at age 13 shot to fame when she starred in the Sydney Olympics opening ceremony, has advised the star on the rise that moving overseas will help avoid tall poppy syndrome.

“I wish I knew to get out of Australia at age 14, but I chose to stay in my home town and got burnt for it,” she told an Eastern States newspaper.

“If he’s got a great supportive family and has the opportunity to go overseas and make music, go do it. They (Australia) will love you when you come back.”

Webster, who now runs a dance studio, added that she hopes the nation will stay behind Vigden after the winner of the popular Seven show is decided on Tuesday.

“Hopefully he can learn from what I went through, because I guess I was one of the first in Australia to go through it, other than Kylie (Minogue),” she said.

“Australia’s a tough country. We support talent initially then we try and knock them down, so it’s about being strong and staying grounded.”

Source: The West Australian

Big break for Nikki Webster

NIKKI Webster has gone back to school. The 23-year-old has landed her first lead film role, shooting independent feature Short Beach around Sydney in recent weeks.

Webster’s been cast as V, a schoolgirl, in the “teen beach movie” also starring Johnny Boxer and Matt Zeremes.

“This role is fun because I wasn’t at school a lot in years 11 and 12, so I never got to be that girly girl,” she said.

“I missed that – I was too busy designing a clothing range and releasing music.”

Webster has started her own performance school at Stanmore in Sydney’s inner west, specialising in singing, dancing and drama classes for children aged five to 16.

“It’s hard running your own business but it allows me to share my experiences with the kids and teach them,” she said.

“I love it. The benefits of having your own business and watching it grow is so rewarding.”

Webster, who gained fame after starring in the Sydney Olympics opening ceremony, recently got engaged to 31-year-old Matthew McMah who works in the aviation industry.

The pair have yet to set a date

Source: The Herald Sun