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Spice Girls to launch world comeback tour
Elodie Mazein
LONDON—The Spice Girls will launch their worldwide comeback tour this
weekend, vowing the return of “girl power” more than a decade after
making it a buzzword for a generation of teenagers. The five British
singers will take the stage in Vancouver on Sunday at the start of their
“The Return of the Spice Girls” tour, including some 40 concerts on five
continents over the next few months.
More than 750,000 tickets have already been sold since they unveiled the
plans in June. Initially gigs were planned in 11 cities, but due to
demand that number has expanded, and some dates still remain to be
fixed. Tickets for the first announced London gig sold out in just 38
seconds. More were added, with the same response, and the British
capital will now host 17 concerts from December 15.
The 1990s all-female band, one of the most successful acts in pop music
history and the latest to launch a comeback global stadium tour
alongside the likes of The Police and Genesis, insist they are not doing
it for the money.
“For us, it’s about celebrating the past, and it’s about our fans. It’s
really, really the right time,” said Geri Halliwell — “Ginger Spice” —
when the tour was announced. But the tour is almost certain to be a
money-spinner: the girls — who have been rehearsing in Los Angeles since
late October — could make up to 10 million pounds (21 million dollars)
each, according to press reports.
Halliwell will be joined on stage by her fellow bandmates Victoria
Beckham (“Posh Spice”), Melanie Brown (“Scary Spice”), Melanie Chisholm
(“Sporty Spice”) and Emma Bunton (“Baby Spice”). They will travel in a
Virgin Atlantic 747 jet whose name, either “Spice One”, “Girl Power” or
simply “Spice Girl”, will be decided by an online competition. “Spice
Force One” had also been suggested.
Some 500 costumes have been made by Italian designer Roberto Cavalli,
while their combined seven children are expected to have a travelling
creche. Their last tour was almost 10 years ago — it was during it that,
on May 31, 1998, Halliwell announced she was quitting. The four
remaining girls put out a third album in 2000 before officially
splitting in February 2001. |