domingo, 24 de diciembre de 2023

The Abba Voyage success story

The Sunday Times



Sunday December 24 2023

The Abba Voyage success story — and why it might become permanent
They took a chance when they built an arena for avatars. Two million ticket sales later, its backers want the show to go on and on and on

When they appeared on stage in May 2022 it was the first time the members of Abba had been seen in public together for 40 years. Since then, avatar versions of the Swedish group, created after years of painstaking research and following weeks of filming, have “sung” every night in a temporary arena built on a disused car park in east London.
Initially, Abba Voyage was planned to last two or three years. Yet the show has been so successful that its creator has revealed he is planning to keep it in London permanently — which could inject £1 billion into the capital’s economy in the next six years.....
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“It’s an extraordinary number,” said Michael Bolingbroke, the chief executive of Abba Voyage. “Given that, I hope that they will see the value in us staying. And we’d like to stay. This is the most successful show in western Europe. It’s mind-blowing.”

The 90-minute performance involves 3D renderings of Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad appearing in a dedicated 3,000-capacity arena beside the Dockland Light Railway’s Pudding Mill Lane station.

Money, Money, Money may not feature on the set list — but it is nevertheless proving lucrative for the show’s backers, averaging $2 million (£1.6 million) a week in ticket sales. Last week, the show hosted its two millionth audience member after launching little more than 18 months ago.

The performance boasts an average of 99 per cent occupancy, running seven shows a week. A quarter of the audience comes from abroad, according to analysis of ticket sales using geotracking data. The best West End shows typically attract 84 per cent occupancy by comparison, according to the Society of London Theatre.

Bolingbroke also confirmed plans for the show to be taken abroad. “We could do it in Germany. We could do it in Australia. Both are big Abba markets. We are looking at the potential of that,” he said.

The show was originally scheduled to last for “two-and-a-half to three years’’, according to Bolingbroke.

It was temporary in part because the London Legacy Development Corporation — responsible for planning the future of the Olympic Park created for the 2012 Games — and the Greater London Authority, headed by Sadiq Khan, had committed to building 1,000 flats and houses on the site.

Bolingbroke said: “The question is: can the housing still be done, but centred around the Abba Arena? If you rejig [the plans] slightly, is there a world where the arena can stay there? And if there is, then we’re there indefinitely.”

Even if officials press ahead with the houses and flatten the arena, delaying the residential development could still boost the London economy, he says.

The avatar idea was conceived by Ulvaeus and Andersson in 2016, alongside the Swedish billionaire Conni Jonsson. It took them two years to find the right technology. Their breakthrough came when they met technicians from the UK arm of Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), a special-effects firm founded by Stars Wars creator George Lucas.

Once the finer details of the show were nailed down, the Swedish quartet were then filmed by 160 cameras performing what would become Abba Voyage over and over again over a five-week stint.

Bolingbroke, who previously oversaw the UK Cirque du Soleil shows, says he immediately saw what would become the secret of Abba Voyage’s success: the authenticity of the avatars. “It was so real, it took me back to 1981. It was overwhelming,” he said.

This month, Bolingbroke was spotted visiting sites in Melbourne. Asked about plans in Australia, he said: “We would have to build an arena like ours. It’s a significant undertaking. The investment to get to opening night was £141 million. It will be cheaper the second and third time around because the technology is there to go. But it’s not much cheaper.

“We would do Australia first because we are [already] in Europe.”

For Abba Voyage, a ten-piece live band supports the avatar quartet, with 291 speakers booming favourites from SOS to Waterloo. Tickets are not cheap — especially when you consider this is mainly computer-generated art — starting at £55, with more expensive ones well into three figures. The average price is about £90.

As well as being the chief executive and executive producer of Abba Voyage, Bolingbroke chairs the board of Pophouse, the parent company that Ulvaeus, Andersson and Jonsson created alongside executives from Universal Music and Nordic corporate bank SEB.

This month, the Abba avatar technology owned by Pophouse was used at the end of the final farewell concert by the American rock group Kiss at New York’s Madison Square Garden. It was the first time it has been used to immortalise another band.

Per Sundin, chief executive of Pophouse, said: “Now there is a proven template, that undoubtedly paves the way for new and exciting opportunities. We have received interest from several other artists who see the potential for a similar avatar show to create, cement and elevate their legacies in a way that was never possible until now.

“We believe there are a number of exceptional artists and bands that have both the catalogue, active fans and storied histories to fully capitalise upon an avatar show.”

But Bolingbroke insisted that Abba-style avatars would not signal the death of the ageing rock star. “My personal opinion is that whatever you do, nothing beats live. However, if an artist is not able to be there, this is a pretty good alternative.”

https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/abba-voyage-success-story-london-permanent-dqjj5d507

articulo completo gracias  a  abba newsflash on facebook


Merry Christmas from ABBA!

 Merry Christmas from ABBA!

Never before seen clips from the making of 'Knowing Me, Knowing You' by Lasse Hallström.










































Stacey’s Christmas Celebrity

 


https://www.instagram.com/reel/C1O7hK7o93K

Stacey’s Christmas Celebrity crackers p7
As we come down to the last two celebrities for mt christmas crackers let’s go out with a bang! Here is the amazing @bjornulvaeus and we find out what Christmas means to him and who he would have over for Christmas Eve dinner…
Who else would love to have the same guest for dinner as @bjornulvaeus
Come back tonight to see my last guest
------------------



Merry Christmas !!!

 Merry Christmas !!!




Merry Christmas Björn !!
Bjorn2023




jueves, 21 de diciembre de 2023

ABBA Voyage costumes

 Discover designer B. Åkerlund’s ABBA Voyage costumes on display at the ABBA Museum in Stockholm.


https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=372340175309758&set=pb.100076013352325.-2207520000



Abba effect brings £322million boost to London

 Money, Money, Money! Abba effect brings £322million boost to London

Jonathan Prynn — 



Money, Money, Money! Abba effect brings £322million boost to London

The Abba shows generated more than one million ticket sales - at up to £181.50 each - by the end of the 

ABBA Voyage concerts have contributed £322.6 million in spending, analysis reveals

They may only be digital dancing queens - and kings - but the four glittery holograms performing every night in front of sell out audiences in east London are pumping serious Money, Money, Money into the capital’s economy.


That is the conclusion of a report into the “socio-economic impact” of the ground breaking Abba Voyage attraction in Stratford published on Thursday just a year and a half after it opened.


The analysis, carried out by strategists Sound Diplomacy and social value consultancy RealWorth, found that the series of concerts at the 3,000 seater Abba Arena contributed £322.6 million in spending, and £177.7 million in extra economic activity - known as GVA - in its first year.


The show feature digital “Abbatar” versions of the Swedish quartet - Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad - performing a setlist of “bangers” such as Mamma Mia, Voulez-Vous and The Winner Takes it All over a 90 minute run time alongside a live 10 piece band.


They were created through motion capture technology from visual effects company Industrial Light & Magic and appear as their 1979 versions of themselves. The band members themselves are now all in their seventies.


The report - commissioned by the show’s producers - found that the show had siginficant benefits for the surrounding boroughs of Newham, Hackney, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest with 42% of the total impact felt in these local authority areas worth a total of £73.7 million in GVA.




Agnetha Fältskog is among the Abba stars featuring in the digital show

The bulk of the impact in the local area was from paying for accommodation, food and drink, transport and shopping with an average spend of £103 per attendee on top of the ticket price, rising to £135 across London as a whole.


The report claims ABBA Voyage has supported more than 5,000 jobs in London, including those directly employed at the venue and those in other sectors that rely on spending by visitors.


The report also highlights how Abba Voyage has drawn thousands of visitors from outside London with almost half the non-ticket spend from “out of towners” coming from elsewhere in the UK and more than 40% from foreign visitors.


Michael Bolingbroke, executive producer for ABBA Voyage, said: “The presence of ABBA Voyage is felt in a way that will be enduring. Knowing that in our first full year, the operations of ABBA Voyage has had an economic impact in London of £322 million is extraordinary, and our challenge will be to maintain and grow this number, and to ensure that its effects are long lasting.”


The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “The fantastic success of ABBA Voyage shows once again how London is the music capital of the world and is roaring back from the impact of the pandemic. I am so proud that City Hall was able to help ABBA bring this pioneering show to east London, providing huge benefits to both the local area and London’s wider economy.”


Lyn Garner, Chief Executive of the London Legacy Development Corporation, said: “ABBA Voyage has been an amazing success for the area and a vibrant addition to the attractions on Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.”


https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/abba-voyage-stratford-abbatar-holograms-audience-spending-b1128486.html

martes, 19 de diciembre de 2023

The ABBA Voyage Tour


 Celebrity

ABBA fever sweeps Oz as rumours swirl of the supergroups’s return with ABBA Voyage Tour

Matthew Hart

Dec 19, 2023

Social media platforms are ablaze with speculation, as fans share their hopes and dreams of securing tickets to what could be the concert event of the decade. Source: Getty Images.

Australian ABBA fans are buzzing with excitement as rumours swirl that the legendary Swedish pop group is set to grace Australian soil as part of their highly anticipated ABBA Voyage Tour.


The ABBA Voyage Tour, which accompanied the release of their first studio album in 40 years Voyage, has been making waves globally for its holographic avatars of the band members, capturing the essence of their youthful days and recreating the magic that made them international sensations.


While ABBA’s management are yet to confirm or deny the rumours, executives from ABBA Voyage have reportedly been scouting locations in Melbourne, as reported by The Age.


The band’s representatives have also reportedly met with the state government, Visit Victoria and entertainment company TEG Dainty.

https://startsat60.com/media/news/abba-fever-sweeps-oz-as-rumours-swirl-of-the-supergroupss-return-with-abba-voyage-tour


Frida - 1980

 

19 December 1980 .. CHRISTMAS COMES EARLY .. ONE MAGAZINE ..  interviews  translated from Swedish

FRIDA: A professional mask is necessary, says Frida.
Östermalm in Stockholm is embedded in snow. It's like a world of its own, a small town in the big city. The Polar Empire is also a world of its own, a world that is quite difficult to penetrate in order to reach the people who are there.
Therefore, I am quite surprised that no one asks who it is when I press the intercom, but Sesam opens immediately. I mean, I could have a bomb in my bag or an assault rifle under my arm. That is not the case now. I'm going to meet Frida and I'm only equipped with a tape player.
Frida is on the phone with Japan when I arrive, a phone interview.
"Understanding Japanese people who speak English is not the easiest thing," says Frida when she arrives.
English with a Japanese accent, I giggle a little.
We enter Stikkan's room. It's quiet there. Just like Frida. She exudes some kind of calmness and doesn't seem at all like she's going to run off to an intensive French course in an hour.
Frida attends an adult high school and enrolls in a three-year course in French in three months.
— I have always dreamed of having time to go and learn languages, I enjoy languages ​​very much, and now that Linda was about to start school and Agneta wanted to be at home a little more, I thought it could be a good fit. It has been extremely hard but fun.
Frida is the one who does the most stuff besides ABBA. Before, she danced several times a week. Now she runs, bodybuilds, reads French and takes singing lessons.
— It's important to do something else, and maybe it has to do with getting a certain distance from the ABBA person. In some way you don't want to consider yourself a star, it's not about that. I've never seen myself as one, neither have any of the others in the group, by the way.
— It is so easily magnified in newspapers. It's really about people who aren't me. You stand outside and watch.
Through the logic of French verbs, we come to the conclusion that Frida is a logical person. But still an emotional person. That's probably a bit of what she appears to be as well. Stands with both feet on the ground. Is adult and sane. Living family life. Going for ABBA as a profession, not nine to five, but a little in that direction. Sees himself as a professional in his field. An efficient professional woman in her career.
FABULOUS
Suddenly it occurs to me that ABBA should actually be called FABB. It's been a while since Frida was called Annifrid. She did it when the two girls drove on "Hey old man" with which the two guys ended up on the Svensktoppen. The first real thing the four did together was "People need love".
— We were surprised and insanely happy when it made it to the top ten. Back then it was a bit more baller than the Swedish top, says Frida with an ironic emphasis on "baller".
— In a way, I yearn back to that time. Then you had that hunger that you don't have now.
On their first tour, the four of them called themselves Festfolket. They ran a kind of pub show where Peter Himmelstrand was responsible for most of the material. The idea that ten years later they would be found as toy dolls in the shops and not be able to walk the streets of the world's big cities in peace would probably have seemed utopian.
What they dreamed of then is today a glittering reality. Although among the sparkling there are also dull parts.
— Sometimes it's hard to always feel watched. If you put the mask on because you know you're going out one evening, then it's fine because then you know it before you leave home. But if you're just going out privately to shop or sit down at a restaurant, it can be difficult if you're not in that mood.
— I have a professional mask when it comes to ABBA. I must have that. If I've had the world's biggest fight with Benny before I leave home or something else has gone terribly wrong, I have to put that mask on. But maybe it applies to everyone, if it applied to you, maybe you would screw up going to that party because you feel lousy.
— I have to do it because it is part of my job.
Frida observes herself. Throughout our conversation, she looks me straight in the eye. Maybe she's trying to check out what I'm like, what I might write. And surely there is a certain measure of caution when she answers the questions. Frida is by now used to seeing her name and the other ABs' names in the columns. sometimes it can be too much.
— Just because you happen to be a member of a group that is world famous, it should be written about us. No matter if it's just a small piece of shit, it makes headlines. It takes on such strange dimensions, which do not appeal to me in any way.
You actually stop and think it's time to take it easy and lie low. Because that is the only way to influence. We do it now, lie low and don't give interviews and stuff like that.
The light from the window falls on Frida's red hair. She leans her face in her hands. I have no bubbly spontaneous person in front of me. But it seems to be a straight and fair girl.
And somehow cute. Almost so you feel like telling about yourself. But it is Frida who will tell the story. We start talking about the fact that ABBA are frugal with the tour.
— We are not a concert act but more of a studio act. Actually, I think it's fun to be on stage. But I don't like long trips, I'm a real homebody. Don't want to be away from the kids, friends and everything else here at home. Would never want to live in any other country than Sweden. People here know what we are. They have seen us from the beginning.
Never looked
Money, money, money, is always mentioned in connection with ABBA. Monarch, real estate, art. Frida is interested in business operations. But only to a certain extent. She attends a board meeting once a month. Otherwise, she tries to avoid as much as possible. There are others who take care of that part.
The money first and the music second or vice versa.
— The musical is and has always been the most important thing for us. It has been that way from the beginning. That's where you get the kicks. When you lift off the floor because it feels so good. Nothing can change that. It's a rather funny thing about us that we have always worked based on our own conditions, what we think is good, without looking anywhere. We have done what felt right.
Now Frida's tone is more determined. This is how it is. There really isn't much to talk about. With some things, it is what it is. It doesn't help with eyebrow angles and, as I notice she thinks sometimes, negative questions. Frida is Frida in ABBA.
She doesn't long for the good old days, she doesn't think it's miserable to be a celebrity, she likes their music, she's not desperate to do something of her own, she doesn't think the ABBA empire will grow to too big, she has no great desire to write ABBA's songs or lyrics ("Björn and Benny are such skilled songwriters"), she is not nervous when she is on stage.
Although ABBA has a big impact on a lot of things, they can't do much about the way the world looks.
— You feel this anxiety in your stomach. It feels heavy just like there is no future. It doesn't concern me so much but my children, you wonder what it will look like when they grow up. It is a hopelessness that infects the whole society. You feel powerless as a human being all this big.
— When the politicians can't handle it, how the hell am I supposed to be able to handle it, what can I say then that people listen to more.
— Somewhere I think it's fun to be in a group like ABBA that can bring people a little joy and positivity. I notice that in letters I get home. People think it's amazing that our music exists. When they are sad or depressed, they turn on our music and become happy and fulfilled.
Sex symbol
It is the emotional Frida who cries over the hopelessness instead of putting things in writing or shouting out what she thinks.
— It is redemptive to cry. It's my best way, to get rid of it all. Then I'm clean inside and can stock up again, so to speak. A few years ago I was more violent, but I don't have much aggression left in me. It has been muted. You have learned to be nuanced.
The girls in ABBA are perceived differently than the boys, at least abroad. Their body parts are commented on in the press. The audience looks at the girls in a different way.
— Sometimes you feel that you are regarded as a sex symbol. That the male, and also the female, part of the audience sees you as such. It feels like you don't have a part in it, just like a lot of other things. Because I have never perceived myself as a sex symbol, it is so far from my way of thinking about life, girls and in general.
The magazines that talk about girls as sex symbols should not be allowed to exist, they are horrible.
Frida starts to hurry so as not to be late for the French lesson. We make company out. Stikkan and Görel Hanser are there. Frida stops and talks to them. About dinner for the kids. About a party she has to go to in the evening.
I wonder in my quiet mind how she is coping. But she is used to and enjoys that life. So Frida puts on her red fur that matches the tone of her hair. And I, who hate furs in general and dyed ones in particular, can't help but think she looks elegant.
We hurry and part ways outside in the street. When I get a little way, the red figure that is Frida calls out to me.
- Do you want a ride?
But I'm going in another direction and I'm in no hurry. From the slightly secluded corner of town, I trudge off towards more noisy parts.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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lunes, 18 de diciembre de 2023

ABBA Voyage at Christmas: Extra performances announced for festive season

 



ABBA Voyage at Christmas: Extra performances announced for festive season

ABBA Voyage has announced extra performances for the Christmas season with festive treats featured at the ABBA Arena. Here's how to get tickets.

16:37, Mon, Dec 18, 2023 | UPDATED: 16:39, Mon, Dec 18, 2023

Abba Voyage: Trailer released for revolutionary concert

It’s been a year and a half since ABBA opened their virtual residency in London.


Four decades on since breaking up, Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid Lyngstad reteamed for motion-capture performances in Stockholm.


Since opening at the ABBA Arena last year, their younger ABBAtars have been performing on their behalf with a live band and backing singers to critical acclaim.


As Christmas approaches, the specially-made venue in East London has been getting into the festive spirit.


Mulled wine and seasonal food and drinks were available to purchase alongside Christmas jumpers and baubles in the ABBA Arena gift shop.


Entering the dance floor ahead of the start of the show, an animation of a snow-covered forest was projected onto screens in front of the stage, adding to the twinkly festive atmosphere.


The show itself was like nothing we’d seen before as the ABBAtars performed with cracking live accompaniment across a thoroughly entertaining visual spectacle. The only thing we’d say could have been improved is that up close the ABBAtars themselves looked a little like soulless CGI characters from a mid-2000s Robert Zemeckis mo-cap movie. But no doubt the already impressive technology is only going to get better as time goes on.


A real treat even for the casual ABBA fan, the seasonal schedule with extra performances has been announced alongside Björn Ulvaeus and Sir Ian McKellen’s latest knitting videos with ABBA Christmas jumpers and socks.


Wednesday December 20th 7:45pm *extra performance
Wednesday December 27th 3:00pm / 7:45pm
Thursday December 28th 3:00pm / 7:45pm
Friday December 29th 3:00pm / 7:45pm
Saturday December 30th 3:00pm / 7:45pm
Sunday December 31st 1:00pm
Monday January 1st 3:00pm / 7:45pm

The standard performance schedule will resume from January 4th.

https://www.express.co.uk/entertainment/music/1846917/ABBA-Voyage-tickets-Christmas


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