VIVA não garante a produção e exibição de uma segunda temporada do TV Mulher

Em aberto

O Viva informa que não tem nada acertado ainda sobre uma segunda temporada do “TV Mulher” na sua grade.

E não tem porque essa conversa ainda está para acontecer com os envolvidos e a direção da produtora Cygnus, mas a expectativa pela sequência é das maiores.

Certo é que 

Marcelo Tabach/Divulgação

Marília Gabriela recebe Anitta no “TV Mulher”

A primeira temporada do “TV Mulher”, em 10 edições já gravadas, estreia terça-feira, às 22h30, comandada por Marilia Gabriela.

Ao final de cada programa, em um cenário intimista e dedicado às entrevistas, Gabi vai receber personalidades como Anitta, Glória Maria, Alexandre Nero e Juliano Cazarré, entre outras.

 

Flávio Ricco com colaboração de José Carlos Nery

Medo de cobra faz Tatá Werneck receber consultoria vip para gravar novela

Tatá "amarelou" na hora de gravar com cobra

Tatá “amarelou” na hora de gravar com cobra

Tatá Werneck foi chamada para protagonizar uma cena em “Haja Coração” baseada em uma sequência do filme “Um drink no inferno”, na qual Salma Hayek dança com uma cobra. Só que a intérprete de Fedora meio que amarelou e ficou com medo de gravar a cena.

Sem outra saída, uma vez que Tatá estava irredutível, alguém teve a brilhante ideia de pedir socorro para uma “especialista” no assunto, Viviane Pasmanter, atualmente em “Totalmente Demais”.

Ela, como se sabe, “contracenou” com uma cobra na “Em Família” e não se recusou a passar um pouco do seu conhecimento para a colega. Pasmanter entrou no estúdio de “Haja Coração” e ajudou Tatá a perder o medo e a conduzir a jiboia. O trabalho foi tão bom, que atriz e cobra acabaram apresentando o maior entrosamento nas gravações.

 

Flávio Ricco com colaboração de José Carlos Nery

Lucas Lucco deixa “Malhação”, mas quer seguir na carreira de ator

Lucas Lucco não estará na próxima Malhação

Lucas Lucco não estará na próxima Malhação

Lucco não irá integrar o elenco da próxima “Malhação”, com estreia marcada para o dia 22 de agosto. Ele não consta na lista dos nomes que serão reaproveitados em “Pro Dia Nascer Feliz”, também escrita por Emanuel Jacobina.

Lucco fez sua estreia como ator em “Seu lugar no mundo” e já avisou que não pretende parar por aí. Vai aguardar outros convites para voltar à televisão.

Apenas cinco personagens de “Seu lugar no mundo” irão emendar em “Pro dia nascer feliz”. Eles entrarão aos poucos na nova temporada e seus nomes serão divulgados nos próximos dias.

 

Flávio Ricco com colaboração de José Carlos Nery

Sabrina Petraglia vai viver conto de fadas em “Haja Coração”

Sabrina Petraglia é Shirley em "Haja Coração"

“Haja Coração”, novela de Daniel Ortiz que estreia terça-feira em substituição a “Totalmente Demais” na Globo, terá várias referências a sucessos do cinemas e contos infantis, mas sempre com uma pegada diferente ou um tempero a mais.

Só como exemplo, quando houve a decisão de reciclar a personagem Shirley Manca de “Torre de Babel”, vivida por Karina Barum e agora interpretada por Sabrina Petraglia, Ortiz buscou inspiração também na história de Cinderela para a construção do papel.

Shirley, após insistir muito em Adônis (José Loreto), um malandro que não dá bola para ela, vai acabar se perdendo durante um forte temporal em São Paulo. Por causa desse aguaceiro, sua bota ortopédica ficará presa em um paralelepípedo. Na tentativa de escapar dali, ela se vê obrigada a deixar o calçado para trás, que será encontrado pelo “príncipe” Felipe (Marcos Pitombo), namorado de Jéssica (Karen Junqueira).

Sai o sapatinho de cristal e entra a bota, e é claro que em algum momento os dois irão se envolver. Em “Haja Coração”, Petraglia vive a irmã de Mariana Ximenes, a Tancinha da vez, papel que foi de Cláudia Raia em “Sassaricando”.

Shirley por Sabrina

Em mensagem à coluna, Sabrina Petraglia diz que está compondo uma Shirley “leve, doce, cheia de vida, apaixonada, que quer se aventurar”, mas não tem nada de coitadinha.

“Possui uma deficiência física, mas não se acha menos que ninguém. É uma garota normal. O problema não está nela, está no julgamento dos outros”, explica a atriz sobre o perfil da personagem.

No processo para aprender a mancar, a atriz revela que sentiu na pele a discriminação que as pessoas com deficiência sofrem no dia a dia.

 

Flávio Ricco com colaboração de José Carlos Nery

Community organisations’ funding extended for two years

May 29 2016 – 5:06PM

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The ACT government’s will extend the contracts of 26 community organisations, a recommitment that means $22 million in funding over the next two years.

The organisations, which include the YWCA, the Scout Association of Australia, and Belconnen Community Service Inc, each cater to young people and families.

Frances Crimmins of the YWCA has welcomed the funding announcement.
Frances Crimmins of the YWCA has welcomed the funding announcement. 

The funding does not represent new or an increase in money. But Frances Crimmins, executive director YWCA, welcomed the announcement, which meant certainty for the organisation and its clients over the next two years.

At the YWCA, the money will allow staff to continue youth engagement programs in Tuggeranong, a therapeutic program for kids and families and network co-ordination for the region.

Ms Crimmins said both the community organisations and the government recognised the need for longer funding cycles beyond two years.

“Particularly when you want to measure the outcomes of that program,” she said.

Minister for Children and Young People Chris Bourke said the money would ensure vulnerable young people and families continued to receive high levels of support.

“These organisations provide holistic, wrap-around services for families and supports and services for vulnerable children and young people aged up to 25 years,” said Dr Bourke.

“This includes case management activities, group programs, youth engagement and therapeutic services, the Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Youth Engagement Service and the Young Carers and their Families Engagement Support Service.

“We have recommitted our support to these organisations by extending our contract with them for a further two years until June 2018, which provides stability to these organisations and the people they support.”

The 26 organisations who received an extension:

  • Anglicare NSW South, NSW West and ACT
  • Australian Capital Territory Council of Social Service Inc
  • Barnardos Australia
  • Belconnen Community Service Inc
  • Canberra Police and Community Youth Club
  • Companion House
  • Duke of Edinburgh
  • Families ACT
  • Girl Guides Association
  • Gugan Gulwan Youth Aboriginal Corporation
  • Lone Fathers Association
  • Majura Women’s Group
  • Migrant and Refugee Settlement Service of the ACT
  • National Association for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect ACT Inc
  • Northside Community Service
  • Queanbeyan Multilingual Centre
  • Relationships Australia
  • Roman Catholic Church for the Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn as Trustees for CatholicCare
  • Scout Association of Australia
  • Society of St Vincent de Paul
  • The Smith Family
  • The Uniting Church in Australia (Australian Capital Territory) Property Trust of UnitingCare Kippax
  • The Young Women’s Christian Association of Canberra
  • Tuggeranong Community Arts Association
  • Woden Community Service
  • Youth Coalition of the ACT

 

Source : The Canberra Times

Traffic reports hits hurdle over recommendations

May 29, 2016 11:00am

Heritage building to be replaced by laneway after council fails to act

May 29, 2016 – 6:48PM

Clay Lucas

City Editor, The Age

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Tristan Davies, president of Melbourne Heritage Action, in front of the former coach factory to be demolished to make ...

Tristan Davies, president of Melbourne Heritage Action, in front of the former coach factory to be demolished to make way for a laneway below a ubiquitous tower. Photo: Chris Hopkins

It has stood quietly near the bottom of a valley in La Trobe Street for 150 years, as the city has transformed around it.

Now, in what some experts say is the most shameful heritage failure in years, a former horse coach salesroom built in 1862 will fall under the wrecker’s ball – replaced by a small shopping plaza leading to a laneway.

Once the ornate Italianite-style shopfront is torn down, and the Edwardian building next to it goes too, hundreds of tiny 17-square-metre student apartments will replace it, in a tower approved by Melbourne City Council last week.

The building, in a photograph from a council heritage report recommending it be kept.

The building, in a photograph from a council heritage report recommending it be kept. Photo: Melbourne City Council

“They are replacing it with a half-arsed laneway and entry. It could easily be kept,” said Tristan Davies, president of Melbourne Heritage Action.

The group is despairing over the failure to protect the building, built as a coach factory in 1862 and added to in 1887.

A 2011 council heritage report records it as worth keeping because it is “one of the few structures in the central city associated with the once widespread coach building and servicing industry”.

Architects Hayball's design for the tower that will replace the former coach building.

Architects Hayball’s design for the tower that will replace the former coach building.

Some councillors agree. “It should be saved,” said Greens councillor Rohan Leppert, who last month succeeded in getting the council started on a fresh heritage study of the city centre.

But its findings will come too late to save the La Trobe Street building, known as Burton’s Livery after the former coach-maker that built it. It has no heritage protection.

The building and its neighbour were bought for $22 million last year by Brisbane-based Blue Sky Alternative Investments, which on Sunday could not be contacted for comment.

Blue Sky plans to build the 43-level student accommodation tower, designed by architects Hayball. Its construction cost is listed as $75 million in its application, lodged with the city council last month.

Melbourne Heritage Action has labelled the refusal of Lord Mayor Robert Doyle to step in as “abysmal”, and has collected more than 600 signatures calling on the council to protect the building.

The council’s planning chair Ken Ong did not return a call on Sunday about the demolition, while its finance chair Stephen Mayne declined to comment when contacted.

Rohan Storey, a heritage expert and also vice-president of Melbourne Heritage Action, said it was terrible the building would go.

“It’s possibly the only building left once associated with the once ubiquitous coach manufacturing and sales in the central city,” he said. “It’s the 19th-century equivalent of a car repairs and sales outlet.”

He said its replacement with “yet another tall, thin apartment tower like many others” would be sad – especially when it was to be replaced by a passageway. “Is that a good enough reason to demolish a heritage building?”

Source : The Age