Sting’s Paris Bataclan concert sells out within an hour

November 10, 2016 - 17:35

Raoul Coutard, the renowned cinematographer who worked with directors including Jean-Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut during the French New Wave movement, died on Tuesday aged 92, his family said.

Flowers tied to a fence outside the Bataclan concert hall during All Saints’ day in Paris on November 1, 2016. — AFP/VNA Photo
Viet Nam News

PARIS — British singer Sting’s concert to reopen the Bataclan concert hall in Paris, where 90 people died in a jihadist attack last year, sold out within an hour.

Tickets were put on sale for Saturday’s concert, ahead of Sunday’s anniversary of the massacre, at 10am (0900 GMT).

Less than an hour later the Bataclan’s website announced that "all the seats for the Sting concert have been sold".

The venue’s owners Lagardere Live Entertainment said the survivors of the November 13, 2015 attack as well as their families had been invited to the concert.

A total of 130 people died in a wave of gun and suicide bomb attacks on the French capital that night.

Sting, who only agreed in September to do the concert, played the legendary venue in 1979 when he was lead singer of The Police.

The 65-year-old star said he would donate all the proceeds of the concert to two charities set to help survivors.

His new album 57th & 9th is being released on the eve of the Bataclan concert.

The venue will remain closed on the anniversary of the attacks, the owners said, when a plaque to commemorate the victims will be unveiled outside. AFP

 

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