Always the fashion ... in Las Vegas



At the relatively grand old age of 66, Barry Manilow has announced that he is to start a new residency in Las Vegas that will run for two years. Manilow's 78-show engagement at the 1,500-seat Paris Las Vegas hotel will start on March 5 and will feature standards by songwriters including Irving Berlin and Johnny Mercer alongside Manilow's famous hits. "It's an all-singing, all-dancing, extravaganza that's camp and fabulous and completely non-threatening," says the music writer and broadcaster John Aizlewood. "It will do fantastically well - you forget how popular he is. He has a committed group of female fans - the Manilettes - who follow him everywhere."

But if you think this is a comeback, think again. By pop music standards he may be well into his dotage, but Manilow has never quit the stage. His residency at the Las Vegas Hilton ends this month after a four-year run. Throughout his 35-year career, Manilow has been the "dictionary definition of a trooper", says Aizlewood. Born in Brooklyn in 1946, Barry Alan Pincus (he later changed his name to Manilow) launched his musical career as touring pianist for Bette Midler. Discovered by the Arista boss Clive Davis in the 1970s, Manilow polarised opinion like no one else. At the time of long-haired rockers such as Neil Young, Manilow tossed aside rock music's masculine conventions, preferring to oil his melodies with garish orchestrations and Broadway sentimentality. He scored hits including the Chopin-sampling Could It Be Magic, Mandy (written by Scott English and Richard Kerr for F Scott Fitzgerald's dog Brandy) and the dizzy suburban disco of Copacabana.

"Listen to the lyrics and Copacabana is quite a sad song," says Aizlewood, "but most don't think of it that way. Manilow can't help but make it sound joyous and fun." Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Manilow sustained a successful career in the US and the UK, but by the turn of the century, he had lost his way. In 2001, he released a jazz-tinged concept album titled Here At the Mayflower. Taking a page from the composer Stephen Sondheim, the record detailed the lives of the people from a mythical New York apartment block. But unlike Sondheim, Manilow was not a skilled chronicler of white working-class New York. His album did not do well.

"People don't want to hear songs about couples arguing in apartments," says Aizlewood. When the CD failed, Manilow retreated. "He gave up trying to convince people he was a serious artist," says Aizlewood. To the rescue came the music industry genius - and his old boss - Davis. Davis suggested he abandon jazz and record an album of 1950s standards. The Greatest Songs of the Fifties gave Manilow his first US number one album in more than two decades. There followed hit albums of cover versions from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.

"Clive Davis turned around Barry Manilow's career," says Aizlewood. "It's a staggering achievement." For all his success, Manilow remains mysterious. Intensely private, he has been plagued with ill health but underwent comprehensive plastic surgery on his face in 2003. Throughout his career, Manilow couldn't understand why some found his music ersatz or cheesy. In 1994, he sued the Los Angeles radio station KBIG for defaming his reputation by advertising the fact that the station refused to play his music. When Australian authorities recently revealed they played his songs in order to discourage delinquent youths from congregating in residential areas, he could only shrug. (But he did put out a press release suggesting some of them might have quite liked it.) Unlike The Beatles, he has not attracted a younger generation to his music and his songs and albums have never been rehabilitated.

"A new generation of musicians have come along saying they listened to Michael Jackson," says Aizlewood, "but no one ever says they are influenced by Barry Manilow." But whatever his legacy, few doubt his ability to pack a Vegas theatre, and given the current economic climate, a spot of glitzy, unchallenging entertainment may be just what the doctor ordered. "Would I go and see him perform in Las Vegas if I could?" says Aizlewood. "Yes, it'll be great. People who say they don't want to go are not being entirely truthful. It will be hugely entertaining. I would be there like a shot."

A%20QUIET%20PLACE
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarring%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Lupita%20Nyong'o%2C%20Joseph%20Quinn%2C%20Djimon%20Hounsou%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirector%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EMichael%20Sarnoski%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%204%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
All you need to know about Formula E in Saudi Arabia

What The Saudia Ad Diriyah E-Prix

When Saturday

Where Diriyah in Saudi Arabia

What time Qualifying takes place from 11.50am UAE time through until the Super Pole session, which is due to end at 12.55pm. The race, which will last for 45 minutes, starts at 4.05pm.

Who is competing There are 22 drivers, from 11 teams, on the grid, with each vehicle run solely on electronic power.

Feeding the thousands for iftar

Six industrial scale vats of 500litres each are used to cook the kanji or broth 

Each vat contains kanji or porridge to feed 1,000 people

The rice porridge is poured into a 500ml plastic box

350 plastic tubs are placed in one container trolley

Each aluminium container trolley weighing 300kg is unloaded by a small crane fitted on a truck

While you're here
Skewed figures

In the village of Mevagissey in southwest England the housing stock has doubled in the last century while the number of residents is half the historic high. The village's Neighbourhood Development Plan states that 26% of homes are holiday retreats. Prices are high, averaging around £300,000, £50,000 more than the Cornish average of £250,000. The local average wage is £15,458. 

CONFIRMED%20LINE-UP
%3Cp%3EElena%20Rybakina%20(Kazakhstan)%3Cbr%3EOns%20Jabeur%20(Tunisia)%3Cbr%3EMaria%20Sakkari%20(Greece)%3Cbr%3EBarbora%20Krej%C4%8D%C3%ADkov%C3%A1%20(Czech%20Republic)%3Cbr%3EBeatriz%20Haddad%20Maia%20(Brazil)%3Cbr%3EJe%C4%BCena%20Ostapenko%20(Latvia)%3Cbr%3ELiudmila%20Samsonova%3Cbr%3EDaria%20Kasatkina%3Cbr%3EVeronika%20Kudermetova%3Cbr%3ECaroline%20Garcia%20(France)%3Cbr%3EMagda%20Linette%20(Poland)%3Cbr%3ESorana%20C%C3%AErstea%20(Romania)%3Cbr%3EAnastasia%20Potapova%3Cbr%3EAnhelina%20Kalinina%20(Ukraine)%3Cbr%3EJasmine%20Paolini%20(Italy)%3Cbr%3EEmma%20Navarro%20(USA)%3Cbr%3ELesia%20Tsurenko%20(Ukraine)%3Cbr%3EEmma%20Raducanu%20(Great%20Britain)%20%E2%80%93%20wildcard%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Fight card

Preliminaries:

Nouredine Samir (UAE) v Sheroz Kholmirzav (UZB); Lucas Porst (SWE) v Ellis Barboza (GBR); Mouhmad Amine Alharar (MAR) v Mohammed Mardi (UAE); Ibrahim Bilal (UAE) v Spyro Besiri (GRE); Aslamjan Ortikov (UZB) v Joshua Ridgwell (GBR)

Main card:

Carlos Prates (BRA) v Dmitry Valent (BLR); Bobirjon Tagiev (UZB) v Valentin Thibaut (FRA); Arthur Meyer (FRA) v Hicham Moujtahid (BEL); Ines Es Salehy (BEL) v Myriame Djedidi (FRA); Craig Coakley (IRE) v Deniz Demirkapu (TUR); Artem Avanesov (ARM) v Badreddine Attif (MAR); Abdulvosid Buranov (RUS) v Akram Hamidi (FRA)

Title card:

Intercontinental Lightweight: Ilyass Habibali (UAE) v Angel Marquez (ESP)

Intercontinental Middleweight: Amine El Moatassime (UAE) v Francesco Iadanza (ITA)

Asian Featherweight: Zakaria El Jamari (UAE) v Phillip Delarmino (PHI)

Real estate tokenisation project

Dubai launched the pilot phase of its real estate tokenisation project last month.

The initiative focuses on converting real estate assets into digital tokens recorded on blockchain technology and helps in streamlining the process of buying, selling and investing, the Dubai Land Department said.

Dubai’s real estate tokenisation market is projected to reach Dh60 billion ($16.33 billion) by 2033, representing 7 per cent of the emirate’s total property transactions, according to the DLD.