London, April 5: British band One Direction treated a ill fan Hannah Booth with their special performance.
Booth, who is suffering from bone cancer, was told that she will get a chance to meet the band consisting Zayn Malik, Harry Styles, Liam Payne, Louis Tomlinson and Niall Horan.
The meeting was organised by Rays of Sunshine charity, which grants the wishes of sick children. The band performed on many songs for the 18-year-old last month.
"I thought I was just going to get a few minutes with the boys to shake their hand and have a picture taken with them. This is beyond anything I could have dreamed of. To be just.
Booth, who is suffering from bone cancer, was told that she will get a chance to meet the band consisting Zayn Malik, Harry Styles, Liam Payne, Louis Tomlinson and Niall Horan.
The meeting was organised by Rays of Sunshine charity, which grants the wishes of sick children. The band performed on many songs for the 18-year-old last month.
"I thought I was just going to get a few minutes with the boys to shake their hand and have a picture taken with them. This is beyond anything I could have dreamed of. To be just.
- 4/4/2013
- by Leon David
- RealBollywood.com
Eve Stewart is up for a Bafta and an Oscar for Les Misérables. The designer talks to Hannah Booth about rubber rosary beads – and why she's haunted by a mistake in The King's Speech
The art deco lobby of Freemasons' Hall in London is, before my eyes, being transformed into an olden-day version of Madrid railway station. A carpenter is hanging up a panel that reads: "Señoras | Caballeros". Elsewhere, hand-painted and artfully aged, a sign saying "Objetos Perdidos" is being mounted above a lost property desk, on which sit a period telephone and Spanish ticket stubs. And on a vintage luggage trolley laden with old suitcases, there's a wooden cello case bearing a faded tag that, on closer inspection, has an address and a shipping date, written in a spidery, old-fashioned scrawl.
The attention to detail is extraordinary, especially since much of it will pass largely unnoticed when the film...
The art deco lobby of Freemasons' Hall in London is, before my eyes, being transformed into an olden-day version of Madrid railway station. A carpenter is hanging up a panel that reads: "Señoras | Caballeros". Elsewhere, hand-painted and artfully aged, a sign saying "Objetos Perdidos" is being mounted above a lost property desk, on which sit a period telephone and Spanish ticket stubs. And on a vintage luggage trolley laden with old suitcases, there's a wooden cello case bearing a faded tag that, on closer inspection, has an address and a shipping date, written in a spidery, old-fashioned scrawl.
The attention to detail is extraordinary, especially since much of it will pass largely unnoticed when the film...
- 2/4/2013
- by Hannah Booth
- The Guardian - Film News
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