Bono
- Profession: Musician
- Place/Date of Birth: Dublin, Ireland, 10 May 2020
Speaking at the premiere in central London, the singer said he was a fan of the film’s director, Julie Taymor, and admired her work in the theatre and directing films such as Frida.
He said: "I wanted to learn from her."
The singer added: "The fact she let me go and play with her actors shows she’s not 100 per cent sound, but we got away with it."
The film, a love story set in the 1960s, features 33 songs by The Beatles including Hey Jude, I Am The Walrus, and All You Need Is Love.
Of the Fab Four, Bono said they "mean everything".
He added: "They built the road that bands like U2 travel on."
Painting of Bono up for auction - Sept 25 2007
A painting showing U2’s Bono receiving an honorary knighthood is to go under the hammer.
The oil painting by Irish artist David Nolan is expected to fetch up to 3,000 euro (about £2,090) in a sale of contemporary art on October 2 at James Adam auctioneers in Dublin.
The image is based on a picture taken by Press Association photographer Julien Behal, captured as Bono declared he accepted the knighthood on condition nobody called him "Sir".
The Irish rocker was awarded the honour in March in recognition of his contribution to music and humanitarian work in a ceremony at British Ambassador to Ireland David Reddaway’s official residence in Dublin.
Bono, like other Irish recipients of an honorary knighthood, is technically not entitled to be called "sir" as he isn’t a British citizen.
But on the day he received the honour, Bono was taking no chances.
The 46-year-old told reporters: "By the way, you can call me pretty much anything you want, except sir."
He added: "You can call me lord of lords or a demi-god..."
Fellow band members The Edge and Adam Clayton joined the singer’s wife Ali and the couple’s four children for the reception.
At the ceremony Mr Reddaway joked that Bono’s family and friends might be disappointed that there were no swords or kneeling involved.
But in a nod to his egocentric reputation, the star put his hand on the ambassador’s shoulder and remarked: "Please, I wasn’t expecting you to kneel."
Sarkozy calls Bono over Africa aid - June 4 2007
New French President Nicolas Sarkozy has phoned international rock star Bono to discuss development aid for Africa at the forthcoming G8 summit.
Sarkozy "shares Bono’s fight" as an advocate for African development, and understands that Europe’s and Africa’s futures are linked, the president’s spokesman David Martinon said.
The French leader, who plans to meet Bono at the summit starting on Wednesday in Heiligendamm, Germany, said that "if Africa faces a crisis, it’s Europe that will be affected," according to Martinon.
Bono, the frontman for U2, co-founded the group Debt Aids Trade Africa five years ago, to work with religious groups on global disease and hunger issues.
Pet Shop Boys Slam Bono - May 25 2007
The Pet Shops Boys have apparently taken a pop at Bono - saying they are not sure whether U2 feel comfortable with him using his celebrity powers.
The flamboyant pop duo have just returned from a year-long world tour - and have also voiced their doubts about benefit concerts.
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Born Paul David Hewson in Dublin 1960, Bono has gone on to become one of the biggest names in the international music industry.
The name Bono derives from the days prior to U2 and roughly translates from Latin as ‘good voice’. He was christened as such during his teenage years, initially after a hearing aid shop in Dublin – he sang so loudly that his friends used to say he was singing for the deaf. Despite it’s early origins and perhaps not so flattering connotations the name stuck.
It was in 1976 that Bono took his first step on the music ladder when he responded to an ad to form a rock band. Alongside The Edge, Dick Evans, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr., The Hype was formed – when Dick Evans left the group the remaining four changed the name to U2.
The band went onto release a catalogue of prestigious albums, such as The Joshua Tree and War, which alongside offering mainstream recognition, spoke of social and political themes. Bono’s often outspoken criticisms of the political unrest in Ireland earned him a bit of a reputation - to the point that Provisional IRA paramilitaries threatened to kidnap him following his ‘f*ck the revolution’ speech.
It was at roughly this time that Bono made a public announcement, via Rolling Stone magazine, about his motivations to become actively involved in social and political causes. Alongside his participation with Band Aid and Live Aid projects, he has performed in aid of Amnesty. In more recent years his campaigning has grown to involve active work for the eradication of third world debt and awareness of the plight of both poverty and AIDS in Africa.
His political work has taken him around the world as much as his musical career and in the past decade he has met a number of world leaders, including President George W Bush. He has also be influential in establishing a number of working models that aim to ease to plight of poverty, including DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa), EDUN and Product Red.
His work has not gone unnoticed. In 2003, 2005 and 2006 Bono was a nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize, he has twice been named as one of the ‘100 most influential people’ of the year by Time magazine – in 2005 he came top of the poll alongside Bill and Melinda Gates. In 2007 he was awarded an honorary Knighthood to the British Empire, whilst Portugal awarded him an Order of Liberty and Chile gave him an International Presidential medal of honour.
Updated May 2007
November 2007