Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Mamma Mia! The party. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Mamma Mia! The party. Mostrar todas las entradas

viernes, 23 de agosto de 2024

Conni Jonsson in an interview - Pophouse Entertainment Group AB

 





EQT Founder Conni Jonsson Looks to ABBA Toolbox to Reboot the Music I…

Rafaela Lindeberg — Tiempo de lectura: 6 minutos


In recent years, some of the biggest names in the investment industry have sought to transform music catalogs into money-making assets. Most have pinned their hopes on streaming revenue and licensing songs for ads. But billionaire Conni Jonsson, founder of the world’s third-largest private equity firm, EQT AB, is making a bolder bet: that fans will fork over hundreds of dollars to engage with artists’ likenesses and stories. And specifically, that ABBA enthusiasts around the world will pay up to $270 a ticket to enjoy four hours of the band’s hits over lamb stifado in a faux Greek taverna.


Pophouse Entertainment Group AB, an investment firm that Jonsson co-founded a decade ago as a side gig, has just acquired the licensing rights to this “immersive dining experience” for an undisclosed sum from Bjorn Ulvaeus, an original member of ABBA. Ulvaeus, who is also a Pophouse co-founder, created and debuted Mamma Mia! The Party in Stockholm eight years ago. With plans now in the works to expand the show into Australia, the US and Japan, Pophouse is hoping to replicate the success of ABBA Voyage, a 90-minute virtual reality concert it invested in which has sold over two million tickets since 2022.


The music business is at an inflection point. Large record labels have struggled to capitalize on the streaming era, and private equity firms such as BlackRock Inc. and KKR & Co. Inc. are sitting on catalogs they spent billions acquiring during the pandemic years. Just last month, Apollo Global Management Inc. pumped $700 million into Sony Music Group, which is itself in talks to acquire Queen’s music catalog in a deal that could total $1 billion, Bloomberg News reported in May. In the realm of live music, KKR recently beat out Blackstone to purchase the European concert promoter Superstruct for $1.7 billion, while Blackstone bought a stake in the Ambassador Theatre Group.


Now, their challenge is to turn rights into profits.


Performances of Mamma Mia! The Party are already running in London and Stockholm.Photographer: Marc Brenner

Traditional investors are betting that demand for back catalog hits will pay off in the long run — that “streaming growth will bail them out and give them a decent return, like a utility,” Jonsson explained during an interview near his summer house in Stockholm.


As active chairman of EQT, which has $273 billion in assets under management, Jonsson is well aware of how efforts to financialize the music industry have failed. A classic cautionary tale is that of Guy Hands, founder of Terra Firma Capital Partners, who purchased the EMI music label in 2007 for $5.8 billion only to watch his investment implode during the financial crisis. Hands personally lost $227 million and in 2011 ceded the company to Citigroup, which had loaned him $3.2 billion to finalize the deal. (The following year, the bank sold EMI’s recorded music division to Universal Music Group.)


More recently, the London-listed Hipgnosis Songs Fund Ltd. became the latest high-profile investor to stumble. Launched in 2018 by former band manager Merck Mercuriadis, the company made its reputation by snapping up music catalogs, including those of Shakira and Neil Young. But rising interest rates brought its acquisition spree to an end. After public battles with shareholders and artists, the fund is now being bought by Blackstone for $1.6 billion.


Even so, Hipgnosis is credited with being the first of a new breed of specialized music investors — one whose strategy is to extract as much cash as possible from iconic artists’ back catalogs through complex copyright deals. Along with US firms Concord Music Group Inc. and Primary Wave Music Publishing LLC, that’s what Pophouse is aiming to do.


In addition to ABBA, the Stockholm-based company has struck deals with the estate of the late DJ Avicii, the rock band KISS and 80s icon Cyndi Lauper, who told Bloomberg she was drawn to Pophouse’s energy and ideas. With the help of Ulvaeus’s music industry connections and expertise, Jonsson’s goal is to build a portfolio of about 10 global artists who could benefit from the “ABBA toolbox,” whether that’s a biopic, a sing-along dinner party or something completely new. In addition to generating their own revenue, the hope is that these artist-focused experiences will also boost back catalog value.


“People have started to see what you can do with intellectual property if you control the right rights,” Jonsson said.


Conni Jonsson during an interview in Varmdo.Photographer: Erika Gerdemark/Bloomberg

Part of the 64-year-old’s confidence lies in his decades of experience in finance. In addition to his work at EQT, which he founded thirty years ago with the backing of Sweden’s powerful Wallenberg family, Jonsson has also invested in the entertainment, real estate, hospitality and green energy sectors through his family office, Qarlbo AB.


Another source is his belief that, when it comes to the music business, traditional private equity firms are in over their head. “If you are too financial or if you’re too big, loud, noisy and aggressive, I don’t think that would work,” Jonsson said of rival investors.


Music rights are enormously complicated and can involve dozens of stakeholders, any of whom could hold up a deal. Investing intelligently in the sector requires a “completely different type of due diligence” than traditional M&A contracts, Jonsson said, adding that because there’s no transparency into how royalties are paid out, it’s impossible to “figure out what was actually bought.”


As “every catalog has a bespoke contract” untangling ownership issues requires time and attention. For Pophouse’s KISS deal, Jonsson said, it took about two months to nail down what rights the rockers actually held. Eventually, along with the band’s song catalog, the company bought “the name, likeness, their merch, everything” — an arrangement he described as “unique” in the market.


Ola Sars, who co-founded Beats Music and now runs his own streaming company, Soundtrack Technologies, also takes a dim view of private equity’s ability to navigate such hurdles. He expects that the fallout from Hipgnosis and the impact of higher interest rates will see these investors retreat from the sector.


“My thesis is that generic private equity is out. There’s just too much competition. They’d rather invest in the funds instead of buying catalogs directly,” he said in an interview.


Cyndi Lauper in Stockholm in February. The 80s icon sold her music catalog to Pophouse to create new outlets for her work.Photographer: Erika Gerdemark/Bloomberg

Should that happen, it could clear more room for Pophouse to grow. In 2022, Bloomberg News reported that the firm was making plans to raise €750 million ($834 million) for a new music-specific private equity fund. That process is expected to reach its final close toward the end of the year, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because they’re not authorized to speak about it. Jonsson declined to comment on the new investment vehicle or the fundraising efforts.


Another possible outcome is that record labels and publishing houses, which have taken a largely passive approach to music industry transformations, will become more aggressive in capitalizing on the assets they already hold. That would make sense to Jonsson and Sars. Not only are the big labels best positioned to buy rights, they said, they’re also best positioned to pay what Jonsson calls “the right price” for them.


This transition may already be underway. Instead of “focusing completely on breaking new artists, breaking new stars,” Jonsson has noticed major labels starting to recognize the value in their back catalogs.


They are, in other words, learning from the competition.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2024-08-23/eqt-founder-conni-jonsson-looks-to-abba-toolbox-to-reboot-the-music-industry

 

jun 20, 2024





POP HOUSE

lunes, 23 de septiembre de 2019

Mamma Mia! The Party, The O2, review: the noisy, natural culmination of entertainment success

Mamma Mia! The Party, The O2, review: the noisy, natural culmination of entertainment success
The event is billed as an immersive theatrical, dining and club experience, 'that will awaken your five senses'

By Alice Jones
Monday, 23rd September 2019, 22:00 pm




Steph Parry and Fed Zanni entertain guests at Mamma Mia! The Party at The O2 (Photo: Helen Maybanks)
Mamma Mia! The Party, The O2, London ★★★
My, my. I suppose we should start with what Mamma Mia! The Party is. It is an immersive theatrical, dining and club experience, "that will awaken your five senses", in an ersatz cavernous Greek taverna at The 02, with songs by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus and a script by Sandi Toksvig, adapted from the original show, which has been running in Stockholm since 2016. I sense I may have lost some of you already.

It is also, if you were foolish enough to look for depth in a 500-seater fake Greek restaurant on the Greenwich Peninsula, the noisy, natural culmination of entertainment success. No hit ever truly ends anymore and so it is that the music of Abba – record sales of over 380 million worldwide – became a West End musical in 1999, a film in 2008, a sequel in 2018 and now, this. And because it is no longer enough simply to watch a show, without also being in it – see Secret Cinema, Punchdrunk and so, immersively, on – it is the perfect encapsulation of 21st-century solipsism, too.

Such 360-degree experiences don't come cheap. Tickets cost from £115 to £220 per person depending on how close to the action you are; drinks are extra. For this, you are whisked, via a blue door opposite Hollywood Bowl, to the Greek island of Skopelos, where much of the original Mamma Mia! film was shot. There are burbling fountains, blue chairs and tables with checked tablecloths, ferry timetables tacked to the walls and enough plastic bougainvillea to strangle a whale. The attention to detail is quite charming.

A band idly plucks out “Zorba the Greek”. Waiting staff buzz around loading tables with soft bread and platters of olives, tzatziki and taramasalata, the first of four courses. Some are wearing face mics. Debbie the chef (face mic) tells me that the charred octopus in ouzo starter is her speciality. I don’t think she really cooked it, but I am immersed!

After the dips, the show starts in earnest. Nikos (Fed Zanni) welcomes us to his restaurant and introduces his partner Kate (Steph Parry) – she did the costumes for Mamma Mia!, fell in love and never left. Nikos has a pert daughter, Konstantina, and Kate has a cheeky nephew, Adam, who works on the bar. As the show opens the young couple are in love, Nikos is not happy about it, and this state of affairs continues for four hours (it is a long night, but there is a lot of food, the orange cake being the highlight - sorry Debbie).

Try the octopus: Joanna Munro as Debbie the chef in Mamma Mia! The Party at The O2 (Photo: Helen Maybanks)
Try the octopus: Joanna Munro as Debbie the chef in Mamma Mia! The Party at The O2 (Photo: Helen Maybanks)
Towards the end, there is an inexplicable candlelit masked ceremony and a toga-clad nymph does some Cirque du Soleil-style aerial gymnastics above the fountain. Grandma warbles "I Have a Dream". Pyrotechnics boom. Love, obviously, wins.

Along the way, there are a lot of songs – 35! – most introduced in an archly cursory way. “There was a bang,” says chef Debbie of a kitchen mishap (“Bang-A-Boomerang”); Kate reminisces about falling for a teacher in her youth (“When I Kissed the Teacher”); Debbie tries in vain not to smoke a cigarette ("Mamma Mia/ How can I resist you?"). There is a subplot about an oven, purely to introduce “Fernando” the repair man who somehow doesn’t get a song. Maybe they’re holding out for Cher.

There are also many deliberately bad and very safe-for-work jokes about health and safety and mobile-phone reception. “Here we go again,” says one character. “That was the second film,” quips another. That sort of thing.

The cast belt it out gamely, and perform acrobatic routines atop the bar and fountain. While the script is marginally less polished than a village pantomime, it proves to be as irresistible as “Dancing Queen” at a wedding. As “One of Us” strikes up, a woman on the next table starts singing soulfully into her steak knife; another lights up her mobile phone torch and sways.

Then, just when you think it’s all over, the poor old waiting staff energetically clear the tables in the middle, set up a podium catwalk and the cast emerge in full Abba-heydey white spandex and platforms to perform even more songs as the audience dances. A club night – playing Abba and Abba only – continues until 11.30pm. Because nothing ever truly ends.


https://inews.co.uk/culture/arts/mamma-mia-the-party-the-o2-london-review-tickets-dates-636579

viernes, 28 de septiembre de 2018

Immersive Mamma Mia! The Party musical to be adapted by Sandi Toksvig




Immersive Mamma Mia! The Party musical to be adapted by Sandi Toksvig
The Bake Off presenter will pen the story for the piece
AuthorAlex WoodLocationsLondon28 September 2018






Bake Off and QI presenter, writer and comedian Sandi Toksvig will adapt the book for the brand new immersive Abba dining experience at the O2.

Mamma Mia! The Party is set on a Greek island, where guests are treated to a meal while the show unfurls around them, before culminating in a big 1970s disco.

Toksvig said: "This has been a dream job – writing this adaptation mainly because I want to go to it myself and I got to hang out with the legend that is Björn."

The piece has music and lyrics by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus (some songs with Stig Anderson), and a story by Calle Norlén, Roine Söderlundh and Björn Ulvaeus. It will be directed by Roine Söderlundh, with set design by Bengt Fröderberg, costumes design by Annsofi Nyberg, lighting design by Patrick Woodroffe and sound design by Gareth Owen.

The piece, which begins previews on 29 August 2019, is booking until 18 November 2019 with tickets going on sale next Tuesday at 9am.

https://www.whatsonstage.com/london-theatre/news/sandi-toksvig-abba-mamma-mia-o2_47697.html


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Sandi Toksvig to adapt Mamma Mia! spin-off show for London audience



Mamma Mia! The Party – pictured in Stockholm – will come to London next year, adapted by Sandi Toksvig. Photo: Dewynters

Newsby Georgia Snow - Sep 28, 2018
TWEET THIS SHARE NOW
Sandi Toksvig will adapt the story for the Mamma Mia! spin-off show when it opens at the O2 in London next year.

The writer and broadcaster will adapt Calle Norlen, Roine Soderlundh and Bjorn Ulvaeus’ original story into English for the immersive theatrical and dining experience, Mamma Mia! The Party.

The show has been running in Stockholm since 2016.

Set in a Greek taverna, Mamma Mia! The Party will take place in a venue within the O2 which is being adapted by Steve Tompkins of Haworth Tompkins.

It will seat 500 audience members, who will experience the show alongside a Mediterranean meal.

The show has been created by Abba’s Ulvaeus, with producer Ingrid Sutej, and features music and lyrics by Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson.

Toksvig said of her involvement: “This has been a dream job – writing this adaptation mainly because I want to go to it myself and I got to hang out with the legend that is Bjorn.”

Mamma Mia! The Party previews from August 29, 2019, and opens on September 19.

It will be directed by Soderlundh, with set by Bengt Froderberg, costumes by Annsofi Nyberg, lighting by Patrick Woodroffe and sound by Gareth Owen.


https://www.thestage.co.uk/news/2018/sandi-toksvig-to-adapt-mamma-mia-spin-off-show-for-london-audience/

jueves, 30 de agosto de 2018

ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus is opening a Mamma Mia! themed restaurant at the O2

ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus is opening a Mamma Mia! themed restaurant at the O2
Dinner and a show: Mamma Mia! The Party in Stockholm, near the ABBA museum (Dewynters)
JONATHAN PRYNN


photo May 2018  - Chess


ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus has said “here we go again” to plans for a Mamma Mia! themed restaurant in London, after he ditched a failed bid to open it in Waterloo.

The Swedish songwriter and singer today revealed he intends to launch an immersive attraction — called Mamma Mia! The Party — at the O2 complex in Greenwich.

When it opens in “late spring” next year, up to 500 guests a night will dine on Mediterranean food in a mock Greek taverna while singers blast out ABBA songs around them and perform a “spin-off” story from the hit musical and movie Mamma Mia! At the end of the evening, tables will be cleared away to make way for a vast Seventies-style disco dance floor.

The announcement comes less than four months after the 73-year-old was forced to abandon his original plans to create the venue in Coin Street, close to the station that shares a name with one of ABBA’s biggest hits.

Residents had launched a spirited “No Thank You For The Music” campaign in opposition, claiming their lives would be blighted by rowdy ABBA fans emerging from the restaurant in the early hours.


Ulvaeus said today: “We have long admired the O2 and the huge entertainment success it has become under the ownership and management of AEG.

“We believe bringing Mamma Mia! The Party to the O2 will add to this already vibrant cultural destination and provide the perfect location for our exciting new show.”


John Langford, vice president and general manager of the O2, said: “To be hosting Mamma Mia! The Party at the O2 is a real honour. It perfectly complements the outstanding live performances, events and entertainment all available under our world-famous roof.”

The plan marks the latest commercial venture involving the music of ABBA, who won the Eurovision Song Contest in 1974. A sequel to the movie Mamma Mia! — Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again — opened last month and has taken roughly $350 million (£270 million) at the box office.

https://www.standard.co.uk/go/london/restaurants/abba-restaurant-london-waterloo-the-o2-mamma-mia-a3923411.html

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Mamma Mia! the Party the immersive dining experience to open at the O2
The immersive theatrical dining experience is wending its way to London
AuthorDaisy Bowie-SellLocationsLondon30 August 2018

ABBA member Björn Ulvaeus has announced that his immersive version of Mamma Mia! is to open in London.

The 'theatrical and dining experience' originally launched in Stockholm and offers participants the chance to feel as though they are in a Greek taverna while Nikos and his family perform around them.

A specially-adapted venue within the O2 will host the event, with architects Steve Tompkins from Haworth Tompkins transforming the venue, complete with a fountain, olive trees and bougainvillea.

Ulvaeus originally decided to create the party when he saw so many people enjoying the musical. The Stockholm version opened in 2016 and is in its third year.

Ulvaeus is producing the party with Ingrid Sutej and tickets will go on sale this autumn. Mamma Mia! the Party is set to open in late spring 2019.

There were originally plans to open the immersive version on a space at the South Bank.

https://www.whatsonstage.com/london-theatre/news/mamma-mia-party-open-o2-immersive_47482.html
© Dewynters

sábado, 24 de diciembre de 2016

Fältskog: ”Jag tycker det var fantastiskt”


Här återförenas Abba på scen
Fältskog: ”Jag tycker det var fantastiskt”


NÖJESBLADETons 20 jan 2016
Alla fyra i ABBA tillsammans på scen.
För första gången sedan 1980-talet.
Premiären av ”Mamma Mia! The party” bjöd på en final som når alla ABBA-fans runt världen.
– Jag tycker det var fantastiskt. Jag blev alldeles nostalgisk, säger Agnetha Fältskog till Aftonbladet.

Det var längesedan Benny Andersson, Björn Ulvaeus, Agnetha Fältskog och Anni-Frid Lyngstad fastnade på samma bild. Sedan gruppen slutade göra saker tillsammans 1982 har de fyra inte synts ihop på det här sättet.
Alla var på filmpremiären av ”Mamma mia!” i Stockholm 2008, men då på bild tillsammans med alla skådespelarna.
Inte ens när det kom en fotobok till 40-årsjubileet av ”Waterloo” stod de någonsin tillsammans på en bild. När ABBA-museet invigdes var Agnetha Fältskog i London.
Sjöng med i låtarna
Men onsdagen den 20 januari 2016 gick de upp på en liten scen tillsammans. Rockröken vällde upp på Tyrol och ur dimmorna skymtades hela ABBA som vinkade till publikens jubel.
Efter 20 sekunder försvann de snabbt igen och dansgolvet började gunga till ABBA-låtar.
Alla fyra följde premiären vid matbord i närheten av varandra. Där fanns också deras familjer och kolleger som Tommy Körberg, Helen Sjöholm, Marie och Tomas Ledin.

Agnetha Fältskog och Anni-Frid Lyngstad sjöng precis som publiken med i några av de kända låtarna, som ”Kisses of fire”.
”Jag är väldigt glad”
Att alla ABBA-medlemmarna skulle komma på premiären blev klart för ett par veckor sedan. Björn Ulvaeus, som är den enda som har jobbat med ”Mamma Mia! The Party”, blev jätteglad när han fick höra att alla kunde komma.
– Jag är väldigt glad att mina tre kamrater från ABBA är här ikväll, sa han till Aftonbladet, strax innan världspremiären.









http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/article22124134.ab
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