Freddy Mercury - Det sidste kapitel.

Freddy Mercury - Det sidste kapitel. 2022

6.80

Historien om det ekstraordinære sidste kapitel af Freddie Mercurys liv, og hvordan Queen efter hans død af AIDS iscenesatte en af historiens største koncerter, Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert på Wembley Stadium, for at fejre hans liv og udfordre fordommene omkring HIV/ AIDS. For første gang fortælles Freddies historie sammen med erfaringerne fra dem, der blev testet positive for hiv og mistede deres kære i samme periode. Læger, overlevende og menneskerettighedsforkæmpere fortæller om intensiteten af at leve gennem AIDS-pandemien og den moralske panik, den medførte. James Rogan Direktør

2022

Freddie Mercury: The Tribute Concert

Freddie Mercury: The Tribute Concert 1992

8.30

Den 24. november 1991 døde en af verdens støste musikalske talenter, Freddie Mercury, af AIDS. Fans verden over og kolleger i branchen var i dyb sorg, så Freddie’s bandvenner, Roger Taylor, Brian May og John Deacon satte derfor en af de største rockkoncerter op, hvor et væld af tidens bedste artister til Freddies minde synger Queen’s udødelige klassikere.

1992

Music for UNICEF Concert

Music for UNICEF Concert 1979

1

The Music for UNICEF Concert: A Gift of Song was a benefit concert of popular music held in the United Nations General Assembly in New York City on January 9, 1979. It was intended to raise money for UNICEF world hunger programs and to mark the beginning of the International Year of the Child. The concert was videotaped and broadcast the following day on NBC in the U.S. and around the world. The moderator was David Frost, with Gilda Radner and Henry Winkler also introducing some of the performers. Henry Fonda made a short appearance. Each performer signed a large parchment declaring support for UNICEF's goals. The concert was the idea of impresario Robert Stigwood, the Bee Gees, and David Frost, who originally conceived it as an annual event. Not all of the performances were truly live, with ABBA lip-synching their new song "Chiquitita" and the Bee Gees lip-synching their song "Too Much Heaven". It raised less than one million dollars at the time for UNICEF, although this figure did not include longer-term royalties from the songs and repeat performances.

1979