News Archives
Keep an eye on our Twitter and Facebook pages since we often post quickie updates there when we're on-the-go.
During tours, we do our best to cover setlists in real-time on Twitter. If you want to tweet a show in, just DM or @ us on the day and tell us to watch your stream that night.
Tori is touring in 2017 to support the release of Native Invader. The European legs runs from early September through early October and the North American leg runs from late October to early December. We do not know if additional dates elsewhere will be added.
BBC Entertainment & News has posted a second video clip from Tim Masters’ interview with Tori. This time, the subject is The Light Princess musical: its current status and plans for 2013.
View the clip at bbc.co.uk. Below is the accompanying caption that was posted with it.
Tori Amos: ‘Princess musical has to be better than good’
18 September 2012 Last updated at 19:31 ET
Singer Tori Amos says she hopes her musical The Light Princess will be ready by the end of 2013.
The singer said the project, which was put on hold in October last year, is a “great challenge”.
She told the BBC’s Tim Masters she has been working with the National Theatre’s Sir Nicholas Hytner on making the musical “better than good”.
Thanks to @EarWithFeet the tip!
Update: A longer article has been posted as well. It includes the same video clip though.
Update: Broadway.com and The Guardian both reported on the status of the musical based on the BBC’s interview and article.
By Tim Masters
Entertainment and arts correspondent, BBC News
“If the fairies are with us, I’d like to say that before the end of 2013 it will be playing at the National,” she told the BBC.
It was announced last year that the show, scheduled to open in April 2012, had been postponed.
Amos said the project was still at the workshop stage.
The Light Princess, which the American singer-songwriter has been developing for several years, is based on George MacDonald’s 19th Century fairy tale.
Amos, 49, said it had been “a great challenge” marrying the fairy tale element with a 21st Century story that resonated with the teenage girls and young women of today.
Sir Nicholas Hytner, the National’s artistic director, had been the “driving force” and her mentor on the project, the singer continued.
West Side Story, she said, had been a “big influence” on her musical. “We’ve been spending the last year getting it to a place where we’re feeling really good about it,” she added
MacDonald’s 1864 fairy tale tells of a princess who, having been cursed by a spiteful aunt, defies gravity and floats away unless she is in contact with water.
She tries to master the art of crying so that she can marry a prince who has fallen in love with her.
Amos shot to fame in 1992 with her album Little Earthquakes and has since sold more than 12 million albums worldwide.
She is about to release Gold Dust, an album of reworked, orchestral versions of songs from her 20-year back catalogue.