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128
IDOLS
FANTASIA: THE AMERICAN IDOL
LOS
ANGELES (AP) -- Fantasia Barrino's fantasy of pop stardom became a reality
Wednesday night when she was named the winner of American Idol. Barrino
grabbed runner-up Diana DeGarmo in a bear hug and twisted her around as tears
streamed down her face. "Thank you much," she sobbed. "I broke my shoe!" Then
she added: "I been through some things but I worked hard to get to where I'm
at." Barrino, a 19-year-old single mother from High Point, N.C., with a
powerful, gospel-tinged voice, topped DeGarmo, an effervescent 16-year-old
from Snellville, Ga. DeGarmo continued smiling through tears in defeat: "I'm
so proud to have come here with Fantasia. She's my girl and you guys will
treat her well." After the show, Barrino told reporters backstage that she
wanted the win for herself and for her two-year-old daughter, Zion "I want to
be able to take care of my own child, I want to be a good mommy and now I can
do it," she said. The judges of the Fox TV singing contest had pretty much
crowned Barrino the winner the previous night, when she dazzled them with a
powerful version of Gershwin's Summertime and two other songs. But judges
don't pick the winner - America does, through phone and text-message votes.
Host Ryan Seacrest said a record 65 million phone votes were cast, up from 24
million for last season's finale. Barrino receives a recording contract,
following in the footsteps of the first two winners, Kelly Clarkson and Ruben
Studdard. Her first single will be a song she and DeGarmo both tried out
Tuesday night: I Believe, written by Tamyra Gray, a contestant from season
one. "Both of you have done an amazing job," judge Paula Abdul said before the
results were announced. "You've made all three of us extremely proud." "Think
about it - you're the top two out of 70,000 people we saw," judge Randy
Jackson added. "You should stand proud." But typically acerbic judge Simon
Cowell said the whole point was "fame, stardom, a ton of money." To fill the
two-hour broadcast before the results were announced at the Kodak Theatre in
Los Angeles, Clarkson and Studdard sang The Impossible Dream with Barrino and
DeGarmo, and the two finalists did a feel-good version of the George Michael
and Aretha Franklin duet, I Knew You Were Waiting (For Me). Several other Idol
finalists performed on an outdoor stage in the sunshine, including La Toya
London, considered one of the strongest singers all along and a favourite to
reach the final two. Jasmine Trias, who stayed the contest longer than many
thought she should thanks to a sunny personality and help from her home state
of Hawaii, also performed. All 12 finalists will go on tour together this
summer, something they practiced for Wednesday with a lengthy medley of the
series' previous songs. Seacrest chatted with the judges in their dressing
rooms beforehand, and several celebrities were interviewed on the red carpet,
including Nicole Richie from the Fox reality show The Simple Life and Sharon
Osbourne. The American Idol finale may seem like the Super Bowl of karaoke,
but this year it truly reached the level of momentous sporting event
proportions. Thousands gathered at the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro,
N.C., to cheer for Barrino and at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta to support
DeGarmo. Gray, from the competition's first season, sang The Star-Spangled
Banner and the governors of both states had side bets: Georgia had to send
peaches to North Carolina if Barrino won, and North Carolina had to send
blueberries to Georgia if DeGarmo won.
Yuuya Yagira, the 14-year-old named best actor at this year's Cannes
TOKYO
(AP) -- Yuuya Yagira, the 14-year-old named best actor at this year's Cannes
Film Festival for his role in the Japanese film Nobody Knows, says he had
never received an award for anything in his life before. "It's my first trophy
or award ever. I couldn't be happier," Yagira told a news conference
Wednesday. "I want to become a fine actor." Yagira, the youngest actor ever to
receive the award, flew to France for the film's May 13 screening. But he
missed the festival's awards ceremony Saturday because he had more pressing
business: exams at his Tokyo junior high school. He was handed the crystal
trophy on Wednesday by Nobody Knows (Daremo Shiranai) director Hiraokazu
Koreeda. "It now seems real to me," said Yagira, who began his acting career
two years ago but hadn't previously been in a movie. In the film, which opens
in Japan in July, Yagira plays the eldest of four siblings who takes charge of
the family when their mother leaves. Asked where he plans to put his trophy,
Yagira replied: "Can I take it home?"
End of the article.