Celebrities celebrate Mandela's 91st birthday
Published: Monday | July 20, 2009
Nelson Mandela - File
NEW YORK (AP):
A flock of global entertainment notables and politicos, including France's first lady Carla Bruni, toasted Nelson Mandela's 91st birthday with an all-star concert at Radio City Music Hall.
The tribute, held last Saturday night, celebrated the anti-apartheid icon's birthday with a diverse collection of musical collaborations that ranged from pop to disco to gospel.
Bruni made her American stage debut at the show paired with Eurythmics founder Dave Stewart as her husband, President Nicolas Sarkozy, sat cheering in the audience. She paid homage to Mandela's social activism by covering Bob Dylan's Blowin' in the Wind, calling it a song by another famous activist.
A song for dreaming
For her first song, a slow French ballad, she told the crowd: "This one's not good for dancing. But it's good for dreaming."
But from an early performance by disco queen Gloria Gaynor to the star-studded finale led by Stevie Wonder, the crowd was on its feet for most of the night.
The 22-year-old pop singer Jesse McCartney, one of the evening's youngest performers, performed his hit, How Do You Sleep? Italian artiste Zucchero, who has appeared at every Mandela foundation concert, chose to sing the soulful You Are So Beautiful.
While the South African freedom fighter could not make the festivities, his presence was felt inside and outside of the theatre. African artistes such as Suzanna Owiyo, Yvonne Chaka Chaka, Sipho Mabuse and the Soweto Gospel Choir played backup for the night and were among the strongest performances.
Electrifying performance
Queen Latifah performed a booming rendition of There's a Light that ended with thunderous applause. She originally recorded the song for the 2007 movie, Hairspray.
Among the eclectic collaborators were the queen of soul, Aretha Franklin, who joined Josh Groban for his You Raise Me Up. After the song, Groban told the crowd that performing with Franklin was "the thrill of a lifetime".
Alicia Keys and African artiste Angelique Kidjo performed the spiritual Afrika. Rapper Lil' Kim's duet with Cyndi Lauper offered a stripped-down rendition of Lauper's Time After Time.
Before the show, the rapper spoke of how Mandela inspired her, saying: "He was very instrumental in my experience in prison." Lil' Kim spent a year in prison on conspiracy and perjury charges.
Mandela appeared last year for a concert in London's Hyde Park to celebrate his 90th birthday but since then, Mandela's doctors have advised that he no longer travel internationally.