Africa’s Lira to perform at Obama’s inauguration

lira performing

South Africa’s Lira will be one among many performers at Barack Obama’s inaugural celebrations Monday, but she is determined to be remembered for a performance to rival Marilyn Monroe’s wooing of John F. Kennedy.

The multi-platinum artist hopes to give Obama and other guests at the Ambassadors’ Inaugural Ball in Washington something as memorable, but perhaps not as racy, as Monroe’s “Happy Birthday, Mr President” 1962 enticement to JFK.

“We all remember how she sang Happy Birthday to the president,” said the 33-year-old, whose real name is Lerato Molapo.

“I am going to concentrate on seeing how I can make it special, not only for me,” she said.

Lira has chosen to play Obama a song that she has previously performed for a president: “Something inside so strong,” by Labi Siffre.

“I played that song for president Mandela in 2010; it was his favourite song when he was still incarcerated.”

The song features lyrics laced with meaning for a free South African who grew up in an apartheid township performing for the United States’ first black president.

It opens: “The higher you build your barriers / the taller I become / The farther you take my rights away / The faster I will run.”

According to Lira, “it was a song about the struggle of the native Africans during apartheid. I saw it as a great present for the president and I am singing it for Obama in the same spirit.”

lira obama

At her Johannesburg studio during recent rehearsals for the ball and for her performance at the Africa Cup of Nations — which begins Saturday — Lira admitted she has been a little nervous.

“I am feeling very confident now, I was overwhelmed and a little bit nervous, but I think we have prepared a beautiful show,” she said.

She has packed several elegant jackets for the North American winter and the dress, by South African designer David Tlale, that she will wear in one of the most important moments of her career.

But her thoughts about the trip to Washington have little to do with the razzle-dazzle of show business.

She recounts the emotion of watching Obama’s first inauguration in Kenya, where the president’s father was born.

“The whole country stood still and was celebrating Obama. It was beautiful,” she said.

“Obama represents possibility, what is possible for an African child out there.

“We Africans always needed help, but time is turning. We want to be equal, we want to be excellent in what we do, we want to play in the global field.”

Lira will perform along with South African band Mi Casa, Cape Verdian Anane Vega and popular Ethiopian DJ Biz Markie at the Washington Convention Center.

An important highlight on the Washington social calendar, inaugural balls are one way a newly appointed president rewards staffers — and more importantly donors and supporters — after a gruelling election campaign.

US gun advocates want Piers Morgan deported

US gun rights advocates have signed a White House petition calling for British CNN host Piers Morgan to be deported for allegedly attacking the Second Amendment rights of ordinary Americans.

The outspoken former British tabloid editor has launched something of a personal crusade for greater gun control measures in the wake of the December 14 massacre at Sandy Hook elementary in Newtown, Connecticut.

On Tuesday, Morgan held an especially contentious interview with executive director of Gun Owners of America Larry Pratt, appearing to become incensed and incredulous when Pratt suggested more, not fewer, weapons as the solution.

“You’re an unbelievably stupid man, aren’t you?” Morgan said at one point during the heated debate. “You have absolutely no coherent argument. You don’t actually give a damn about the gun murder rate in America.”

Following the interview, a Texas journalist posted a petition on the White House website alleging Morgan “is engaged in a hostile attack against the US Constitution by targeting the Second Amendment.”

“We demand that Mr. Morgan be deported immediately for his effort to undermine the Bill of Rights and for exploiting his position as a national network television host to stage attacks against the rights of American citizens,” it says.

Many Americans believe in the literal interpretation of the Second Amendment, which enshrines the “right to bear arms” in the US constitution.

Morgan insists America can outlaw military-style assault weapons and high-capacity magazines without infringing on people’s constitutional rights and says he has no quarrel with the Second Amendment.

Two days after the petition calling for Morgan’s deportation was posted, it had already garnered more than 19,000 signatures, closing in quickly on the 25,000 required to get a response from the White House.

A defiant Morgan refused to back down from his position.

“Ironic U.S. gun rights campaign to deport me for ‘attacking 2nd Amendment rights’ – is my opinion not protected under 1st Amendment rights?,” he posted on his Twitter feed Saturday, referring to freedom of speech provisions.

Morgan continued to post incendiary comments on the gun control debate, including a response on Sunday morning to an NBC interview with a top official in the powerful pro-gun lobby group, the National Rifle Association.

“Watching @davidgregory expose Wayne Lapierre for what he is – a dangerous, dim-witted, deluded menace to American safety. @NRA,” Morgan tweeted.

At least some Americans have come out in support of British citizen.

In one message, reposted by Morgan, Lee Cox in Arizona wrote: “I’m a native-born US citizen, and I agree 100% with Mr. Morgan. If he goes back to the UK, should I go with him?”

America has suffered an epidemic of gun violence over the last three decades including 62 mass shooting incidents since 1982. The vast majority of weapons used have been semi-automatic weapons obtained legally by the killers.

Jolie, Pitt meet Obama in Oval Office


US President Barack Obama took a break from the affairs of state to rub shoulders with Hollywood royalty on Wednesday, meeting Angelina Jolie and her beau Brad Pitt at the White House.

Jolie was in Washington for the launch of her new movie “In the Land of Blood and Honey” and the couple were seen through the panelled windows of the Oval Office by reporters and photographers.

“President Obama spoke with Ms Jolie about her work to raise the profile of preventing mass atrocities and combating sexual violence against women,” said Jamie Smith, a White House spokeswoman.

Jolie, in a dark dress, and Pitt, wearing black framed glasses, spent several minutes speaking to Obama before he left aboard his Marine One helicopter for a campaign fundraising trip in Chicago.

The Oscar-winning actress premiered the film, her directorial debut, at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington on Tuesday night.

The movie relates the story of a couple who had a fling before Bosnia’s 1992-1995 war and met up again when the woman was taken prisoner by a unit of the Bosnian Serb army commanded by her former lover.

He shields her at first but is transferred and she suffers abuse and rape at the hands of the soldiers.

At the premiere, Jolie, who as well as her film work pursues a wide range of humanitarian causes as a UN goodwill ambassador, offered a mixed review of Obama’s presidency.
“I think there are many, many things I think have gone in a wonderful direction and there a few things I am in disappointed in,” she told the Daily Caller website.

“But there are many wonderful things that have moved forward and of course some other things that are very frustrating.”

Lady Gaga takes campaign to the White House


Eccentric pop diva Lady Gaga took her anti-bullying campaign to the White House on Tuesday where she was lauded as a source of strength for many young people who are scared at school.

Her visit follows a White House bullying conference earlier this year, called to mitigate the plight of nearly a third of US schoolchildren, or 13 million students, who are bullied each year, according to official figures.

President Barack Obama was away making a major speech on the economy in Kansas, but Lady Gaga was welcomed to the White House by Valerie Jarrett, one of his most senior political advisers.

“Lady Gaga has described this cause as a personal one — she has said that as a child, she was often picked on for being different,” Jarrett said in a White House blog post.

“I am deeply moved by the way she has used her story, and her success, to inspire young people, and shine the spotlight on important issues.

“Over the last three years, we have seen that when we work together on behalf of human rights, we can accomplish truly amazing things, yet too many young people still remain at risk.”

The “Bad Romance” singer has linked up with the MacArthur Foundation and Harvard University to launch the Born This Way Foundation, which will explore ways to enhance the safety of children at school.

Obama encountered an extravagantly dressed Lady Gaga during a fundraising event in California in September, and ABC News said she brought up bullying with the president during a closed question and answer session.

Lady Gaga told fans in September that she would bring up the case of a 14-year-old New York boy Jamie Rodemeyer, who committed suicide after complaining in an online video that he had been bullied.