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Camille O Sullivan



Last Updated: 11/19/2009

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State: Dublin
Country: IE
Signup Date: 7/18/2006

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Tuesday, May 19, 2009 
Hi folks we are touring the UK with the Dark Angel show finishing in few weeks time at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in Southbank London..yehah..should be good fun... Mow
Monday, May 18, 2009 
just got back from a lovely gig in Birmingham where it was a gorgeaus tribute show to Nick Drake..was bit nervous about it as it was with the original Producer Joe Boyd, string arranger extraodinaire Robert Kirby and Bass player cheeky Danny Thompson. Just to add to the madness the other guest performers were the lovely Vashti Bunyan, Martha Wainright, Beth Orton, Graham Coxon of Blur,Stuart Murdoch of Belle and Sebastian, Harper Simon, Robyn Hitchcock.I've loved his music for years and it was just so brilliant to listen to his music and those great singers and musicians-had to pinch myself.Hope it tours again...here is a bit of the madness. Have been immersed in Nick Drake music for days..lovely

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSIB2q2oG68   and     

 
Thursday, January 29, 2009 
Hi! We're delighted to announce Camille has been nominated for
Best Irish Female Music Artist in the Irish Music Meteor Awards
If you feel like voting (only open to irish mobile phones)
http://meteormusicawards.meteor.ie/index.aspx
 
Public voting commences 28 January 2009 and closes midnight on 11March 2009
Only one vote per nominee in each category from a given mobile number or URL will be counted on a daily basis
Voting is open to customers of all Irish mobile networks and will be charged at standard text rates.
No benefit to Multiple Voting & charges maybe incurred
Multiple daily votes for a particular nominee in each category will not benefit the nominee as it will be counted as one vote only for the nominee on each respective day.
Sunday, January 11, 2009 
Meow! A wee message from the dressing room of La Clique.... Just to say we 're delighted to be performing The Dark Angel in the 
Roundhouse Camden, London Wed 14th & Thurs 15th Jan
Tables and seated for relaxing and having a drink or two..
www.roundhouse.org.uk
and to be the cover of Time Out London this week!! grrrrrrrr! Meeeeooooow and woof- woof (yes dogs are also welcome x)
Monday, October 13, 2008 

 Tues & Friday Meow!

14th Tues 10pm (1 song)  goes out live

"Later Live with Jools Holland" BBC2

and then Friday is a repeat plus extra song...

17th Friday 11.35  (2 songs)

"Later with Jools Holland BBC2"

 

Thursday, October 02, 2008 

MEOW!!

Saturday midnight 23rd August Assembly Rooms @George ST, Music Hall (www.assemblyfestival.com 0131 226 0000)

 

Kitty's recent reviews...

Independent   «««««   "She treats every song as an intense emotional journey...hypnotic" "A highly emotional artist,  such an outpouring of passion you can't resist being drawn into her web"

The Guardian«««« Ravishing, - O'Sullivan is a superb performer and great singer... the star is her singing voice: a deep, sultry instrument that might have been created to express desolate love

Daily Telegraph" The new queen of Cabaret...When she sings it's as though her breath is soaked in paraffin; one spark, and the whole room would ignite"

The Scotsman ««««« "Queen Camille..a spellbinding show in which all lifes humour and misery collide..you want to be coming back for more"

Metro ««««« "We gave Camille five stars last year, after this performance we'd give her six if we could"

Fest «««««" Camille is a superstar...she doesn't so much command the stage, as positively own it...a truly outstanding talent, nothing short of a sensation"

 

Wednesday, June 25, 2008 

So we're off to perform Glastonbury this Friday ( Acoustic Tent 3.20pm. Somebody has been trying to show me how to put up a tent while I'm looking on bemused with wine glass in hand. I'm so looking forward to it- wearing wellies, roughing it, looking slightly crazy in an oversized anorak, seeing gigs and catching up with friends...the only nightmare is trying to find a way back to Cork to do gigs-tho It'll be great to back to my hometown. Must check weather report and find hip flask....

Friday, February 29, 2008 

Category: Music
..> ..>
The Dark Angel | Camille Print E-mail
..> .Australia Stage Online..>
Written by Eliza Eggler   
Saturday, 09 February 2008
Dark Angel | CamilleCamille O'Sullivan makes her way to the stage through a dimly lit auditorium. Wearing a long, black velvet coat, and with her hair pulled demurely back from her face, the impression is one of dignified elegance. Repeated notes from the piano accompany her and she floats gracefully on to the stage for a quiet and reflective opening song. She soon sheds the coat however, and her voice and personality unleash themselves like a roaring lion demanding your full attention - the effect is thoroughly exhilarating.

Camille is a dramatic and passionate singer and her reputation is well deserved. Her voice, which although not strictly 'beautiful', is a powerful and versatile instrument that lends itself perfectly to the dark, moody songs of Nick Cave, Tom Waits and Jacques Brel. Whether portraying a little girl, a seductress or a mad woman, her commitment to the character is total and each song captures a different mood and moment in time. Camille is very much a story teller and definitely a singing actress rather than an acting singer. Her show is highly theatrical and never dull, and she finds ways to make every moment entertaining. She spends a considerable amount of time dancing seductively around the stage, playfully lifting her skirt to reveal a decent pair of legs, and even making her shoes a point of interest. After opening a bottle of wine with her teeth, she spits the cork unceremoniously out of her mouth and takes a thirsty swig from the bottle as if to fortify herself. With each change of character comes a change of physicality, and this effort seems to cost her considerably as she falls puffing to the ground after several numbers, visibly exhausted by the exertion.

This 'Dark Angel' also has a great sense of humour which she happily shares with the audience between songs. Meowing and growling, she makes her way around the auditorium thrusting her ample bosom into the face of some unsuspecting gentleman and declaring in her lilting Irish accent: 'I like to connect with my audience!' This genuine and humorous approach is completely refreshing and Camille charms the audience, men and women alike, in an appealing and non threatening way by making light of her eroticism.

Because Camille's stage presence is so magnetic, I have to remind myself to also consider her fellow musicians. Her band, which consists of five others, provides a supportive yet unobtrusive musical backdrop. At one point I notice that the pianist (David Bates) is having so much fun that he is practically jumping out of his skin! The other musicians whilst being more reserved, nevertheless play beautifully, and skilfully create the colours of each differing tonal picture.

Seeing Camille perform is really not an opportunity to be missed. This woman will grab you from the first moment until the last and take you on a wonderful musical and theatrical journey. Her energy and commitment are really impressive and this is the most engaging piece of theatre I have seen in a long time. Not only does she wow with her ability as a singing actress, she also conveys a completely charming personality. If you are looking for original and vital theatre, this is definitely the show for you.


The Dark Angel
Camille O'Sullivan

Venue: The Studio | Sydney Opera House
Dates/Times: 6 – 9 February @ 8.15pm, 12 – 16 February @ 9.30pm
Tickets: From $20 to $49 or $20 to $39 concession
Bookings: 9250 7777 or www.sydneyoperahouse.com/thestudio

Monday, December 17, 2007 
Sunday, December 09, 2007 

Category: Music

Review: Camille O'Sullivan - Olympia Theatre, Dublin RSS feed for all posts posted to the  archive email subscription RSS feed for all reviews posted to this blog email subscription

Camille O'SullivanLast night was my first time attending a full concert by and I feel as if I've just had amazing sex for the first time. I don't mean anything furtive, adolescent or pimply. I mean the full no-holes-barred celebratory experience of bare bodies and souls entangling athletically and it all coming together in one triumphantly rhythmic moment of bliss, to be repeated as often as is physically possible.

You see, I'm not talking a one-night stand here. I'm committed. This is serious.

At a packed Olympia Theatre, Camille came on, louchely announced she was exhausted, lay on the floor, and had everyone immediately eating out of the palm of her hand. She's astonishingly commanding on stage, playful and seductive, with a ballsiness that is amazingly beguiling. Watching her take off and put on her shoes, or putting on her make-up - she transforms it into an experience akin to performance art.

She's an incredibly versatile performer, with not just the classic Brel and Brecht to satisfy our appetites, that rich material I've seen her perform in La Clique before. Ne Me Quitte Pas was simply beautiful. She sings everything from Dilly Keane's Look Mummy, No Hands to Kirsty McColl's In These Shoes? and a wonderfully bawdy version of Nina Simone's Sugar in my Bowl - but she is a truly peerless interpreter of Bowie. Suffragette City and Rock'n'Roll Suicide simply rocked. Her band is superb.

She does dark so well - Nick Cave's People Ain't No Good was mesmeric, as was Tom Waits' Misery is a River of the World, Everybody Row; then she shifted into Bowie's Five Years which had me weeping as if I'd never heard it before, segueing into a goose-bump-raising Dark Side of the Moon.

She's a really brave performer - she warped Mac the Knife tonally until she bent it into submission, triumphantly. Vocally, she strips herself bare, and flies high without a safety net; at the beginning of her first encore, Jacques Brel's Marieke, dedicated to her Irish father and (blessedly) French mother, who were present, she inhabits a scary tone-shifting vulnerable breathy place, until she digs right down to produce the passion to transform it into an astonishing cri de couer.

She is such a compelling live performer because, although I'm listening to her newly-bought albums now, she takes risks each time she performs, and I can quite see myself wanting to see her every show in Dublin from now on - if only to see how far out on a limb she's going to throw herself each time. And there's something really joyous about her - if there's one performer who signifies for me a vital and sparkling difference between the Ireland I left in 1993, and modern Ireland of 2007, it's Camille O'Sullivan.

dermot moore reviewer

http://bonhom.ie/2007/12/review-camille-osullivan-olympia-theatre-dublin.html