Showing posts with label Daily Mail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daily Mail. Show all posts

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Sophie in Daily Mail (and some bad journalism)

Sophie turned 31 yesterday, and she celebrated that by going over the top with glitter make-up. Here's what Sarah Bull from DailyMail.co.uk has said:

Sophie Ellis-Bextor goes back to her disco roots with sparkly eye make-up as she celebrates 31st birthday. As a singer most famous for her disco sound, Sophie Ellis-Bextor is no stranger to a bit of glitter. But she took it to the extremes last night with some dramatic eye-makeup for her 31st birthday party. The Murder on the Dancefloor singer decided to layer purple and gold glitter on to her eyes get her into the party spirit.

Arriving at London's famous Groucho club for the celebration last night, Sophie hid her blue dress under a knee-length coat, but seemed more than happy to point out her stunning makeup. While Sophie decided to co-ordinate her eyes and her shoes, she did obey the cardinal makeup rule by keeping the rest of her face plain and simple, ensuring the attention was entirely on her glittery eyes.

Clearly in the party mood when she arrived at the Groucho club, Sophie had celebrated her birthday with a dinner with family and friends at the Maddox club earlier in the evening. She also unveiled her dress - a flattering strapless black and blue dress cinched in at the waist with a yellow belt.

But while some celebrities use birthdays as an excuse to slap on some fake tan, Sophie followed in the footsteps of Girls Aloud's Nicola Roberts by embracing her porcelain complexion. (You're allowed to laugh here, cos Nicola followed Sophie by embracing her pale complexion, and Nicola has said it herself. This was such a joke!)

She said recently: "I think fake tan would be the worst idea. I'd look ridiculous so I'm never going to try. I'd worry that I'd become addicted to it and not know when to stop. But I've come to accept my pale skin."



















And here's an article about Sophie in The English Home magazine
(thanks to Paul for the find, and Renzo for actually typing out the whole thing!)

AT HOME WITH SOPHIE ELLIS-BEXTOR

The singer, model and mother tells Niki Browes about her eclectic English style and why London will always be home for her.

With her delicate porcelain features, Sophie Ellis-Bextor is unmistakable both as the award-winning pop star and the face of Rimmel London make-up. Sharing her west London home with husband Richard Jones (bassist with pop band The Feeling) and their two sons Sonny, aged five, and Kit, aged one, she's gearing up for the release of her new album Make A Scene this summer.

Where do you live?
Chiswick. We've lived here for just a year. Before that, it was the Portobello Road. The two are more similar than I'd imagined. Chiswick is a beautiful part of the city, full of bars and cafés and there's lots of open space. I'm a big fan of London parks and like the idea of greenery next to the metropolis. The only thing that's missing is the market, which is the heart of Notting Hill.

Can you describe your surroundings?
It's in a place called Bedford Park. When it was built in the late 1800s, it was popular with supporters of the Arts and Crafts movement, like William Morris and John Ruskin. As they were designed for artistic types, the houses have loads of light and the rooms are very big. I feel very lucky to live here.

What word describes your interior style?
Kitsch, which I think is a rather British trait. I'm a big fan of colour and see it as a celebration. I'm not afraid to take risks at home. I treat my interior as I do my clothes - if you get it wrong, you can always go back to how it was before.

Do you have a garden?
We do and it is lovely - although I'm not at all green-fingered; we have someone who looks after all of that. It sounds a bit hippyish but we had a naming ceremony for the children because we're not really religious. At the ceremony, the children got a tree each, which are now planted in the garden.

Can you see yourself living in the countryside sometime in the future?
I have only ever lived in London, though I grew up in St Margaret's which is just outside of Richmond; Chiswick is about as far from the centre of town that I'll ever go. I find it comforting to see black cabs and bus stops from my window. And the thought of buying a house in the country for weekends seems too decadent for me.

Where do you find interior treasures?
I'm something of an eBay addict and the site is responsible for quite a lot of junk in our house. I like to see what I can find and put in words such as "funfair". I got a "Roll Up! Roll Up! Roll Up!" sign from that search. Another find was a great big vintage Perspex ice-cream cone, which must have been an old promotional device.

What about the high street?
I mostly shop online for things for the home. Or should I say "window" shop. I'm always on the Heal's and Conran Shop websites, filling up my basket only to have to empty it again, because everything I've chosen is far too expensive.

Do you own anything that's inherited?
My grandfather gave me a picture of Queen Victoria that used to make me cry when I was little because she looks so stern. In our home, it is on a wall pasted in London Toile wallpaper by Timorous Beasties. From a distance it looks like classic toile, although closer up you can see it describes contemporary urban scenes and features modern architecture such as the Gherkin and the London Eye. It is a good contradiction to the austere royal portrait and helps to remind me about the diversity of London living.

What treasures would you try and save in the event of a fire?
I am not very sentimental about things but, if I had to choose, it would probably be a pair of gold shoes I bought from Hamburg. I wore them on a really good early date with my husband, have had some great nights out in them and have also taken them on tour. They represent happy time for me.

What does home mean to you?
My second baby, Kit, was born nine weeks early, weighing just under three pounds. When we brought him home, all that mattered was the four of us. It made me realise that, while it is lovely to have nice things, home is your family. Nothing else really matters.

Is there very much evidence of your career in your house?
Absolutely not. We have a studio above the garage and keep awards and the like in there. It seems a bit wrong to keep them in the house, a little bit naff even. But then that's probably very English of me, that element of not wanting to show off.

What would probably surprise us most about your home?
If I told you that how messy I am was a theme running through every speech at our wedding, would that give you a clue? I take after my Mum [former Blue Peter presenter Janet Ellis] and am much more like her when it comes to my interior taste - her house is very Bohemian; my Dad's house is very tidy.

Are you tidy when it comes to organising the toys?
We are lucky in that we have got room to have a designated playroom for the kids - plus all of their stuff. When you have children, you have to take a deep breath and embrace the plastic and tat that they love. I am not afraid to put the children's paintings on the wall. In fact, I wouldn't have it any other way.

Who has the most say in your interior style - you or your husband?
I think it's fair to say neither of us. Richard has great taste and I respect his opinion. If anything, it's he who reins me in every now and then if I want to do something especially "out there".

What do you believe no English home should be without?
A great kitchen where you can cook the most traditional of British meals: a Sunday roast. Tucking into a roast while catching up on the weekend papers is hard to beat.

Sophie Ellis-Bextor's new single, 'Bittersweet', is released on 2 May, by Fascination Records.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Bits from here and there

Crafty Move

With a new album on the horizon and a baby clamped to her side, the last thing singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor needed this year was a major property renovation project.

But that's exactly what she has faced - and conquered - in an action-packed 2009.

'It sounds like a stressful combination of things to be doing at the same time, but that is how I have always lived my life,' says the star.

After selling their three bedroom Victorian townhouse off Ladbroke Grove in London's trendy Notting Hill in September for a reported £1.3 million, Sophie and her Feeling guitarist husband Richard Jones, bought a dilapidated five-bedroom Victorian Arts and Crafts style property in Turnham Green near Chiswick in West London.

'Parts of the house were pretty much a shell,' says Sophie. 'When we first visited there were no floorboards - it was hard-hat territory.'

'The previous owner had been there for 60 years and just lived downstairs so there was no central heating and only sporadic electrics.'

'So that has all been gutted and updated and a rear exterior outhouse has been replaced with a modern extension, but I can't take credit for the building work as a contractor was already involved when we exchanged.'

Inside, however, Sophie - who is appearing in a celebrity online video advent calendar in support of Great Ormond Street Hospital this year (www.merrychristmas.co.uk) - has been more hands on.

'I love Fifties fashion and bright colours - the TV show Mad Men was a big influence. There is a dark navy room, powder blues and greens and lots of rich Fifties shades,' says Sophie, right, whose big hit was Murder On The Dancefloor.

'There is a fine line between creating something that's stimulating and something that looks like a children's TV set, but hopefully we've pulled that off.'

'We are just relieved that it is finished before Christmas.'

SOURCE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/property/article-1235722/Property-gossip-Crafty-singer-Sophie-Ellis-Bextor.html



Designer Clothes Are Wasted On Me

The singer Sophie Ellis-Bextor, 30, is now a bigger star than her mother, the former 'Blue Peter' presenter Janet Ellis. She lives in Chiswick with her husband, Richard Jones, and their two young children.

How did your childhood experience influence your attitude to money?
I'd never really thought about it before, but now you ask I can see that how my parents handled money definitely affected my relationship with it. It's a bit like the degree to which they are respectful to one another affects the expectations you have of marriage. My parents divorced when I was young and I now have two very different influences from two very different characters. I can definitely tell when mum has got money because then she likes to go shopping to spend it, whereas dad is steadier and avoids splurges. I like to think I've inherited both sides.

In what way do you show both tendencies then?
Like my mum, I sometimes buy things I shouldn't and fill my house with rubbish. But, like dad, I try to take a more measured approach because I'm frightened by the idea of debt. Mum is happier than I am to run up a balance on her credit card. When I was 18 she told me I only needed to pay the minimum amount and I did that for a while until I got a store card and realised the interest on it was absurd. I paid it all off and I've never had another one since.

What credit cards do you have?
I only have one, a Visa, and I pay that off every month. I bank with Coutts and they also gave me a debit card, but I'm not very organised and I don't have a proper purse or wallet so I put both cards in my handbag and one day I couldn't find the debit card. I cancelled it and started using the Visa instead and now I use it for everything. I pay it off automatically each month so I think of it as more like a debit card anyway.

Are you good with money or cautious with it?
I think I'm fairly good with money, but I've developed some strange tics – in shops I don't like to go to the counter unless I've got at least two things to buy. If I'm walking around with just one thing in my hand I'll put it back and wait a few weeks because that doesn't seem like a proper purchase. I don't know whether that's a good thing because it stops me spending money so frequently or a bad thing because when I do spend it I go home with more than I came out to buy.

Do you have a financial adviser?
Yes, but I probably throw the net too wide when I want advice. I talk to my parents quite a lot about money and also my manager. My parents are good role models because they've worked hard and gave me a happy childhood. I also have an accountant and it can be difficult balancing the different advice.

How do you separate responsibility for finance with Richard? Do you have the same financial outlook?
We're pretty similar and we make a lot of decisions together. We haven't had any arguments about money. We run a joint household account and we have separate bank accounts as well so that we can enjoy a bit of independence. I think that's important, especially at a time like Christmas when you want to receive gifts without feeling you've basically bought it yourself.

Have you learnt any difficult lessons about money through mistakes?
I started my music career at 18 and for a long while I let other people handle my affairs. It's only since I've been with Richard that I've woken up to the need to take more responsibility and start planning for the future. Not that I've got very far – I'm still working out what my goals are.

Haven't you set up a pension?
Sadly no. My financial adviser brings the subject up every once in a while, but it just sounds so unsexy.

So what do you do to invest?
Apart from my home – we have a five-bedroom detached house in Chiswick – and two other properties I let, I put money into individual savings accounts (Isas) each year – my accountant makes sure of that. And I have some money saved on deposit. I'm with Coutts and they have set up my current account so that when it reaches a certain defined amount, anything over is automatically transferred into my deposit account to get a marginally better rate of interest.

Have you ever been in serious debt?
Thankfully no, but I've had a few near misses. After I had my first baby I took three years to make my next album. I wasn't touring or working and I had my head in the clouds. I was very lucky to have enough money to do it, but when I took a proper look at my accounts towards the end of that time I realised the end was in sight – if I didn't get my skates on the money would run out. I haven't let that kind of thing happen again but it's difficult to plan to be creative, it either comes or it doesn't. Still, I'm young enough that if everything went pear-shaped in my career I'm sure I could find something else. And I have a plan B.

What's your plan B?
I've got those two flats I mentioned earlier that I could sell. I bought one near Swiss Cottage as a home seven years ago and kept hold of it to let when I moved. The other one is a flat we bought earlier this year near Westbourne Grove for our nanny. She was looking for somewhere and we thought it made sense to buy it as an investment and let her rent it as part of her salary package.

What has been your best buy?
Richard and I both had our 30th birthdays this year and we decided to keep it low key. We just had a series of meals with family and friends and it was really lovely taking people out and getting together. So the pop music world is not all about materialism – my favourite way to spend money is to have warm experiences with people I love. But if you want me to cite a physical purchase, at the beginning of this year we bought a brilliant new super king size leather Chesterfield bed. It is so big all four of us can squeeze into it without touching each other and I love it.

And your worst buy?
Generally speaking, I'm quite a frugal shopper, but when I first became successful I wanted to know what it felt like to buy a really expensive dress. Designer clothes are usually wasted on me because I can get the same pleasure out of something that costs as little as £20, so I might as well go for the cheaper option. However, I bought this one for £1,000 and I have never even worn it – it's still got the label on. I don't really know why I did that except I just wanted to know what it felt like. Now I want to know what it feels like to have the money back.

Do you bank online?
The great thing about being with Coutts is they are on the end of the phone 24 hours a day. That's really helpful to me because I sometimes tour abroad and am unable to get to a British bank for long periods. I've got a code for online banking, but I've never used it because I can just as easily pick up the phone.

How do you tip? Are you an easy tipper or do they have to work hard with you?
I'm too frightened of confrontation, so I will always tip – even if the service has been really shoddy. I'm a British girl so I stick to the standard British 10pc, but I go to 15pc in restaurants and hair salons.

What has been your favourite holiday?
Last year we went to Italy and it was our first proper family holiday – the first time the three of us went away together for longer than two nights. We had 10 days on the Amalfi coast in Italy and it didn't cost as much as I thought because it's not a tourist destination – it's where the Italians go for their holidays. I think it only cost us £4,000.

Sophie is in Waitrose's online advent calendar. Waitrose donates 25p to Great Ormond Street Hospital for every UK resident who changes their home page to www.merrychristmas.co.uk for 24 hours, any day before Christmas

SOURCE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/fameandfortune/6832399/Sophie-Ellis-Bextor-Designer-clothes-are-wasted-on-me.html

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