LINK TO ARTICLE
Published Tuesday 4th October 11
Northampton Museum and Art Gallery is appealing for the loan of Spice Girls memorabilia to be part of a Spice Girls exhibition that is coming to Northampton next year.
Spiceworld: The Exhibition attracted over 50,000 wannabe fans when it opened in Leeds, Mel B's hometown, earlier this year. It tells the story of the 90s girl band's rise to super stardom and pays homage to all things 'spice', including genuine clothing worn by Sporty, Baby, Scary, Posh and Ginger.
Northampton museum is keen to give a local twist to the exhibition by including memorabilia from local fans.
Victoria Davies, Northampton Borough Council museum officer, said: "Spiceworld: The Exhibition proved a real hit in Leeds and I just know there will be some really huge Spice Girls fans closer to home. We would love to hear from them and maybe feature any memorabilia they may have in a special display that will be shown alongside the main exhibition."
Spice Girls fans who can help with the display or want to find out more about the main exhibition can call Victoria at Northampton Museum and Art Gallery on 838111.
Wednesday, 5 October 2011
Tuesday, 23 August 2011
Melanie C Memorabilia Display at Liverpool's Victoria Gallery & Museum
What:
Mixcase [Music: Memory: Traces]
Who:
Curated by Research Associates at University of Liverpool
(Collecting & Curating Popular Music Histories)
When:
22nd August - 17th December 2011
Where:
Victoria Gallery & Museum
Ashton Street
University of Liverpool
Liverpool
L69 3DR
Tel: 0151 794 2348
Email: vgm@liv.ac.uk
Mixcase [Music: Memory: Traces]
Who:
Curated by Research Associates at University of Liverpool
(Collecting & Curating Popular Music Histories)
When:
22nd August - 17th December 2011
Where:
Victoria Gallery & Museum
Ashton Street
University of Liverpool
Liverpool
L69 3DR
Tel: 0151 794 2348
Email: vgm@liv.ac.uk
Monday, 8 August 2011
Chance to buy SIGNED copy of 'Spiceworld: The Exhibition' Book
Tuesday, 12 July 2011
HUDDERSFIELD EXAMINER Article (05/07/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Record news for Spice Girls fan Liz West
AN exhibition of the Spice Girls, made possible by a Huddersfield woman, is a record-breaker. Spiceworld: The Exhibition smashed visitor numbers at the Leeds City Museum, where it closed at the weekend. And that’s great news for Liz West, of Lindley, who loaned much of her amazing Spice Girls collection to the museum. Since it opened in January, nearly 50,000 people have visited the exhibit at Leeds City Museum.
Now she is planning to move the exhibition to Londonderry next summer and then on to Northampton. The items in Spiceworld: The Exhibition are owned by collector Liz and include a pair of Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell.
The event had already created a world record for the largest number of Spice Girls items together in a collection. Liz said: “It feels surreal, but obviously I’m very proud that people have come along to see all the bits and pieces I have collected over the years. I’m still adding to it all the time and there will be more when it goes to Northern Ireland next year”.
The museum said the best-attended exhibition previously was Dr Rock’s Lost Gallery – involving minerals and crystals - which attracted 3,500 visitors in 2010. Curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: “The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz, which is well deserved for her amazing collection”.
The exhibition was the first time Ms West’s full collection had been on public display. She was just 11-years-old when Girl Power spiced up the world. She heard Wannabe on the radio and said she became hooked on the Spice Girls. Now the 25-year-old, who lives in Lindley, has amassed a collection of 4,000 pieces of Spice Girl memorabilia. The Leeds exhibition was the first time all had gone on show in the same place.
Liz was a fan first and a collector second, but the artist is now able to make a career out of her collection. She said: “I was always extremely keen for this museum to play host to my collection, mainly because of the impressive nature of the venue but also because Leeds is Mel B’s hometown. "Sadly Mel B wasn’t able to get along to see it because she is heavily pregnant”.
Melanie Brown was born in Harehills and lived in Burley. She married dancer Jimmy Gulzar in 1998. The couple later divorced, and she went on to marry movie producer Stephen Belafonte in 2007. The other members of the pop group were Victoria Beckham, Melanie Chisolm, Geri Halliwell and Emma Bunton.
Read More http://www.examiner.co.uk/news/local-west-yorkshire-news/2011/07/05/record-news-for-spice-girls-fan-liz-west-86081-28992920/#ixzz1RsyRjzpO
Record news for Spice Girls fan Liz West
AN exhibition of the Spice Girls, made possible by a Huddersfield woman, is a record-breaker. Spiceworld: The Exhibition smashed visitor numbers at the Leeds City Museum, where it closed at the weekend. And that’s great news for Liz West, of Lindley, who loaned much of her amazing Spice Girls collection to the museum. Since it opened in January, nearly 50,000 people have visited the exhibit at Leeds City Museum.
Now she is planning to move the exhibition to Londonderry next summer and then on to Northampton. The items in Spiceworld: The Exhibition are owned by collector Liz and include a pair of Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell.
The event had already created a world record for the largest number of Spice Girls items together in a collection. Liz said: “It feels surreal, but obviously I’m very proud that people have come along to see all the bits and pieces I have collected over the years. I’m still adding to it all the time and there will be more when it goes to Northern Ireland next year”.
The museum said the best-attended exhibition previously was Dr Rock’s Lost Gallery – involving minerals and crystals - which attracted 3,500 visitors in 2010. Curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: “The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz, which is well deserved for her amazing collection”.
The exhibition was the first time Ms West’s full collection had been on public display. She was just 11-years-old when Girl Power spiced up the world. She heard Wannabe on the radio and said she became hooked on the Spice Girls. Now the 25-year-old, who lives in Lindley, has amassed a collection of 4,000 pieces of Spice Girl memorabilia. The Leeds exhibition was the first time all had gone on show in the same place.
Liz was a fan first and a collector second, but the artist is now able to make a career out of her collection. She said: “I was always extremely keen for this museum to play host to my collection, mainly because of the impressive nature of the venue but also because Leeds is Mel B’s hometown. "Sadly Mel B wasn’t able to get along to see it because she is heavily pregnant”.
Melanie Brown was born in Harehills and lived in Burley. She married dancer Jimmy Gulzar in 1998. The couple later divorced, and she went on to marry movie producer Stephen Belafonte in 2007. The other members of the pop group were Victoria Beckham, Melanie Chisolm, Geri Halliwell and Emma Bunton.
Read More http://www.examiner.co.uk/news/local-west-yorkshire-news/2011/07/05/record-news-for-spice-girls-fan-liz-west-86081-28992920/#ixzz1RsyRjzpO
Wednesday, 6 July 2011
BBC NEWS WEBSITE Article (03/07/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spice Girls exhibition: doors close on record-breaking display
An exhibit of a record-breaking collection of Spice Girls memorabilia in Leeds has closed. Since it opened in January, nearly 50,000 people have visited the exhibit at Leeds City Museum. The items in Spiceworld: The Exhibition are owned by collector Liz West and include a pair of Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell.
The event held a world record for the largest number of Spice Girls items together in a collection. The museum said the best-attended exhibition previously was Dr Rock's Lost Gallery - involving minerals and crystals - with 3,500 visitors in 2010.
Curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: "The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz, which is well deserved for her amazing collection."
The exhibition was the first time Ms West's full collection had been on public display. She said: "I was always extremely keen for this museum to play host to my collection, mainly because of the impressive nature of the venue but also because Leeds is Mel B's hometown." Melanie Brown was born in Harehills and lived in Burley. She married dancer Jimmy Gulzar in 1998. The couple later divorced, and she went on to marry movie producer Stephen Belafonte in 2007.
The other members of the pop group were Victoria Beckham, Melanie Chisolm, Geri Halliwell and Emma Bunton.
Spice Girls exhibition: doors close on record-breaking display
An exhibit of a record-breaking collection of Spice Girls memorabilia in Leeds has closed. Since it opened in January, nearly 50,000 people have visited the exhibit at Leeds City Museum. The items in Spiceworld: The Exhibition are owned by collector Liz West and include a pair of Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell.
The event held a world record for the largest number of Spice Girls items together in a collection. The museum said the best-attended exhibition previously was Dr Rock's Lost Gallery - involving minerals and crystals - with 3,500 visitors in 2010.
Curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: "The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz, which is well deserved for her amazing collection."
The exhibition was the first time Ms West's full collection had been on public display. She said: "I was always extremely keen for this museum to play host to my collection, mainly because of the impressive nature of the venue but also because Leeds is Mel B's hometown." Melanie Brown was born in Harehills and lived in Burley. She married dancer Jimmy Gulzar in 1998. The couple later divorced, and she went on to marry movie producer Stephen Belafonte in 2007.
The other members of the pop group were Victoria Beckham, Melanie Chisolm, Geri Halliwell and Emma Bunton.
Sunday, 3 July 2011
YORKSHIRE EVENING POST Newspaper Article: (01/07/2011)
Leeds: Spice Girls exhibition sizzles to its finish
LINK TO ARTICLE
By Jonathan Brown
Published on Friday 1 July 2011 10:32
A record-breaking exhibition to spice up your life will come to a close on Sunday.
The world’s biggest collection of Spice Girls memorabilia was recognised by Guinness World Records during Spiceworld: The Exhibition’s run at Leeds City Museum, in Millennium Square, Leeds.
Collector Liz West, 26, who lives in Huddersfield, has amassed 2,066 items related to the band, which have been on show at the free-to-enter display since January.
She said: “There are still a few days left to see it if anyone has been meaning to but has not come along yet.
“The great reaction from everyone who has seen it has made me really proud and the icing on the cake was securing the Guinness World Record.”
The exhibition is the first time Ms West’s collection has ever been on display in its entirety in public.
Among the items on show are the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in the group’s first-ever live concert in Istanbul, Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s memorable performance at the 1997 Brit Awards and Leeds-born Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit complete with a crystal-studded belt.
The museum’s curator of exhibitions, Helen Langwick, said: “The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular.
“We are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz which is well deserved for her amazing collection.”
Spiceworld: The Exhibition also examines what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
Other items on display include outfits worn by Emma, Geri and Mel B on their Spiceworld tour as well as a gold and diamond-studded Chopard watch worn by Posh Spice, Victoria Beckham.
The director’s script of Spiceworld: The Movie and the multi-platinum CD awarded to the girls for selling over four million copies of their album, Spice, in America in 1997 are also on show.
The Spice Girls sold 80 million records worldwide following the impact of debut single, Wannabe, which topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996.
Contact: www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum for information.
LINK TO ARTICLE
By Jonathan Brown
Published on Friday 1 July 2011 10:32
A record-breaking exhibition to spice up your life will come to a close on Sunday.
The world’s biggest collection of Spice Girls memorabilia was recognised by Guinness World Records during Spiceworld: The Exhibition’s run at Leeds City Museum, in Millennium Square, Leeds.
Collector Liz West, 26, who lives in Huddersfield, has amassed 2,066 items related to the band, which have been on show at the free-to-enter display since January.
She said: “There are still a few days left to see it if anyone has been meaning to but has not come along yet.
“The great reaction from everyone who has seen it has made me really proud and the icing on the cake was securing the Guinness World Record.”
The exhibition is the first time Ms West’s collection has ever been on display in its entirety in public.
Among the items on show are the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in the group’s first-ever live concert in Istanbul, Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s memorable performance at the 1997 Brit Awards and Leeds-born Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit complete with a crystal-studded belt.
The museum’s curator of exhibitions, Helen Langwick, said: “The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular.
“We are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz which is well deserved for her amazing collection.”
Spiceworld: The Exhibition also examines what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
Other items on display include outfits worn by Emma, Geri and Mel B on their Spiceworld tour as well as a gold and diamond-studded Chopard watch worn by Posh Spice, Victoria Beckham.
The director’s script of Spiceworld: The Movie and the multi-platinum CD awarded to the girls for selling over four million copies of their album, Spice, in America in 1997 are also on show.
The Spice Girls sold 80 million records worldwide following the impact of debut single, Wannabe, which topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996.
Contact: www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum for information.
Wednesday, 29 June 2011
FINAL PRESS RELEASE - SPICEWORLD: THE EXHIBITION (29/06/2011)
Record-breaking Spiceworld exhibition coming to a close
The world record-breaking exhibition devoted to the Spice Girls on display at Leeds City Museum comes to a close this weekend. The collection of memorabilia and merchandise from collector Liz West devoted to the most successful girl band of all time finishes this Sunday (3 July) having been seen by almost 50,000 people since it opened in January.
The exhibition also played its part in setting a new Guinness World Record as the collection of 2,066 items related to the band on display has been officially recognised as the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. The special free exhibition at the Leeds City Council-managed museum off Millennium Square shows off a range of outfits worn by the group as well as accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world.
Spice Girls memorabilia collector Liz West said:
“It has been absolutely fantastic to have my collection on display in Leeds City Museum and there are still a few days left to see it if anyone has been meaning to but has not come along yet. The great reaction from everyone who has seen it has made me really proud and the icing on the cake was securing the Guinness World Record.”
The exhibition is the first time Liz’s collection has ever been on display in its entirety in public. Among the items on show are the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in the group’s first-ever live concert in Istanbul, Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s memorable performance at the 1997 Brit Awards (where Geri made her show-stealing appearance in the Union Jack dress) and Leeds’-own Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit complete with ‘Mel B’ crystal-studded belt. Other items include outfits worn by Emma, Geri and Mel B on their ‘Spiceworld’ tour, a gold and diamond-studded Chopard watch worn by Victoria, the director’s script from ‘Spiceworld: The Movie’ and the multi-platinum CD the band were awarded for selling over four million copies of the album ‘Spice’ in America in 1997.
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said:
“The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz which is well deserved for her amazing collection.”
Running until Sunday 3 July, ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ is free to enter and celebrates the success of the Spice Girls as well as examining what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
For further information on Leeds City Museum, visit the website at http://www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum/
Notes to editors:
The Spice Girls are Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton, Melanie Chisholm, Geri Halliwell and Victoria Beckham (née Adams) who quickly became known by the nicknames Scary, Baby, Sporty, Ginger and Posh.
Following the impact of debut single ‘Wannabe’ which topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996, the Spice Girls enjoyed phenomenal success selling over 80 million records worldwide, having nine UK number one singles, starring in their own feature film and creating the ‘girl power’ mantra which is credited with inspiring a generation of girls and women to achieve.
ENDS
For media enquiries please contact:
Roger Boyde,
Leisure media relations officer,
Tel 0113 247 5472
Email: roger.boyde@leeds.gov.uk
The world record-breaking exhibition devoted to the Spice Girls on display at Leeds City Museum comes to a close this weekend. The collection of memorabilia and merchandise from collector Liz West devoted to the most successful girl band of all time finishes this Sunday (3 July) having been seen by almost 50,000 people since it opened in January.
The exhibition also played its part in setting a new Guinness World Record as the collection of 2,066 items related to the band on display has been officially recognised as the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. The special free exhibition at the Leeds City Council-managed museum off Millennium Square shows off a range of outfits worn by the group as well as accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world.
Spice Girls memorabilia collector Liz West said:
“It has been absolutely fantastic to have my collection on display in Leeds City Museum and there are still a few days left to see it if anyone has been meaning to but has not come along yet. The great reaction from everyone who has seen it has made me really proud and the icing on the cake was securing the Guinness World Record.”
The exhibition is the first time Liz’s collection has ever been on display in its entirety in public. Among the items on show are the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in the group’s first-ever live concert in Istanbul, Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s memorable performance at the 1997 Brit Awards (where Geri made her show-stealing appearance in the Union Jack dress) and Leeds’-own Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit complete with ‘Mel B’ crystal-studded belt. Other items include outfits worn by Emma, Geri and Mel B on their ‘Spiceworld’ tour, a gold and diamond-studded Chopard watch worn by Victoria, the director’s script from ‘Spiceworld: The Movie’ and the multi-platinum CD the band were awarded for selling over four million copies of the album ‘Spice’ in America in 1997.
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said:
“The Spiceworld exhibition has proved really popular and we are especially proud to have played our part in a making a little bit of history with the Guinness World Record for Liz which is well deserved for her amazing collection.”
Running until Sunday 3 July, ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ is free to enter and celebrates the success of the Spice Girls as well as examining what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
For further information on Leeds City Museum, visit the website at http://www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum/
Notes to editors:
The Spice Girls are Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton, Melanie Chisholm, Geri Halliwell and Victoria Beckham (née Adams) who quickly became known by the nicknames Scary, Baby, Sporty, Ginger and Posh.
Following the impact of debut single ‘Wannabe’ which topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996, the Spice Girls enjoyed phenomenal success selling over 80 million records worldwide, having nine UK number one singles, starring in their own feature film and creating the ‘girl power’ mantra which is credited with inspiring a generation of girls and women to achieve.
ENDS
For media enquiries please contact:
Roger Boyde,
Leisure media relations officer,
Tel 0113 247 5472
Email: roger.boyde@leeds.gov.uk
Monday, 13 June 2011
METRO Article (May 2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Cast your mind back to the days of girl power with Spiceworld The Exhibition at Leeds City Museum until Sunday 3 July.
Plan your journey so you have time to take in everything on offer in this exhibition.
Whether you loved them or hated them, the Spice Girls were undoubtedly the most famous girl group in the world in the 1990s.
The girls may now have all gone their separate ways, but Spiceworld will bring them back together in an interactive exhibition celebrating the impact they had on the world.
Much of it has been put together with the help of local super-fan Liz West and her extensive collection of memorabilia.
The exhibition explores the group and how it was marketed, as well as looking into the BritPop culture of the time, from manufactured bands to the media furore surrounding the groups.
Items on show in the exhibition include the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in Spiceworld: The Movie and Mel B's trademark giraffe print catsuit.
If you ever sang along to Wannabe, or sang Two Become One, then this exhibition will be unmissable.
For tickets and more information visit Dig Yorkshire.
You can use Metro's Journey Planner to find out how to get to Leeds by public transport.
Cast your mind back to the days of girl power with Spiceworld The Exhibition at Leeds City Museum until Sunday 3 July.
Plan your journey so you have time to take in everything on offer in this exhibition.
Whether you loved them or hated them, the Spice Girls were undoubtedly the most famous girl group in the world in the 1990s.
The girls may now have all gone their separate ways, but Spiceworld will bring them back together in an interactive exhibition celebrating the impact they had on the world.
Much of it has been put together with the help of local super-fan Liz West and her extensive collection of memorabilia.
The exhibition explores the group and how it was marketed, as well as looking into the BritPop culture of the time, from manufactured bands to the media furore surrounding the groups.
Items on show in the exhibition include the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in Spiceworld: The Movie and Mel B's trademark giraffe print catsuit.
If you ever sang along to Wannabe, or sang Two Become One, then this exhibition will be unmissable.
For tickets and more information visit Dig Yorkshire.
You can use Metro's Journey Planner to find out how to get to Leeds by public transport.
THE QUEER SPHERE Review (12/06/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spiceworld The Exhibition at Leeds City Museum & Interview With The Creator, Liz West
A pop culture phenomenon and worldwide sensation, The Spice Girls now even have their own exhibition at the Leeds City Museum. Brought to us by Spice Girls super-fan and graduate of Glasgow School of Art Elizabeth West, the exhibition charts the rise and success of the fantastic fivesome through an impressive collection of memorabilia amassed over the years.
Ranging from Geri’s iconic union jack boots (right) to magazine covers from our friends over at Attitude Magazine the collection is truly impressive – though tragically missing Geri’s famous Union Jack dress (which sold for over £40,000 at a charity auction).
However, what really makes Spiceworld worth a visit are the interactive features such as speakers you pull a cord to make play your favourite track and a stage with a karaoke machine and costumes to dress up in if listening just isn’t enough for you.
Running 28th January – 3rd July there’s a only a few weeks left to go and visit Spiceworld The Exhibition, we heartily recommend a trip to this alternative collection for a slice of pop culture nostalgia and an insight into the still biggest selling female group of all time.
At TQS we were lucky enough to catch up with exhibition creator Liz West to ask her a few questions about her collection:
When did you first start collecting Spice Girls memorabilia?
I didn’t start collecting their merchandise immediately. It wasn’t until the release of their second album in 1997 that I started buying all the different versions of the singles.
Do you have the world’s largest collection?
Yes, I have the official Guinness World Record for the Largest Spice Girls Collection in the world.
How many pieces are in the collection?
Just over 4,000 individual items (spice girls and solo spice memorabilia).
What’s the most you paid for any one item?
Around £2,500 for a Geri worn dress.
Do you have a favourite piece?
Any of the 65 items of clothing or stage wear owned by the girls that i have are pretty special to me. I couldn’t decide between them.
How did the exhibition come about?
After graduating from the Glasgow School of Art in 2007 I had no money and couldn’t get a job, so decided to write to museums all around the UK proposing an exhibition of my collection which I would curate. Leeds City Museum took up my offer in 2009 after delivering the idea to the exhibitions panel. I had had two exhibitions previous to the Leeds show. One at Cusworth Hall, Doncaster and one at Clifton Park Museum both in 2008.
Wednesday, 20 April 2011
HUDDERSFIELD EXAMINER Article (19/04/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Lindley’s Liz West becomes a record breaker for her Spice Girls memorabilia exhibition
SHE is the world’s biggest Spice Girls fan – and now she’s a record breaker too. Liz West, of Lindley, is currently exhibiting more than 2,000 pieces of memorabilia devoted to the girl group. And the exhibition at Leeds City Museum has earned her a place in the record books.
The collection of memorabilia and merchandise was officially counted last weekend in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record. The 2,066 items was comfortably higher than the previous best of approximately 1,000 making it officially the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. Liz said: “It’s all been very exciting, I applied to have Guinness come in and see if it’s the biggest collection. “We spent a month counting everything and making check lists to make it easier for them as they went round, but it took them half a day to go through everything. “The exhibition has been going really, really well, it’s beyond expectations. “It is fantastic to break the record and I am pleased we did it at Leeds City Museum as part of the exhibition. “Everything went really well and a special thank you to all the Leeds Metropolitan University students and volunteers who took time out of their weekend to help.”
With only items related to the group able to qualify for the count, it meant the items on display from the group’s solo careers were not able to be considered. And her collection has proven to be a massive hit – so far more than 25,000 people have visited the exhibition at the museum off Millennium Square. Liz added: “Mel B keeps teasing us saying on her website she’s going to come and I really hope she does, I know her mum came along to see it." Liz’s exhibition includes a range of outfits worn by Victoria Beckham, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell, Melanie Brown and Melanie Chisholm, who quickly became known by the nicknames Posh, Baby, Ginger, Scary and Sporty. There are also accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world. Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: “We are delighted that Leeds City Museum has played its part in breaking a Guinness World Record. The exhibition has gone really well so far and we look forward to welcoming more visitors to it in the coming weeks.”
The exhibition runs until July 3 and admission is free. In the summer of 2012 it will go to the Tower Museum in Londonderry. Liz added: “If any museum wants to fill in the gap they’re welcome to contact me, it’d be great if it went to the Tolson Museum, but we can take it anywhere.”
Lindley’s Liz West becomes a record breaker for her Spice Girls memorabilia exhibition
SHE is the world’s biggest Spice Girls fan – and now she’s a record breaker too. Liz West, of Lindley, is currently exhibiting more than 2,000 pieces of memorabilia devoted to the girl group. And the exhibition at Leeds City Museum has earned her a place in the record books.
The collection of memorabilia and merchandise was officially counted last weekend in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record. The 2,066 items was comfortably higher than the previous best of approximately 1,000 making it officially the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. Liz said: “It’s all been very exciting, I applied to have Guinness come in and see if it’s the biggest collection. “We spent a month counting everything and making check lists to make it easier for them as they went round, but it took them half a day to go through everything. “The exhibition has been going really, really well, it’s beyond expectations. “It is fantastic to break the record and I am pleased we did it at Leeds City Museum as part of the exhibition. “Everything went really well and a special thank you to all the Leeds Metropolitan University students and volunteers who took time out of their weekend to help.”
With only items related to the group able to qualify for the count, it meant the items on display from the group’s solo careers were not able to be considered. And her collection has proven to be a massive hit – so far more than 25,000 people have visited the exhibition at the museum off Millennium Square. Liz added: “Mel B keeps teasing us saying on her website she’s going to come and I really hope she does, I know her mum came along to see it." Liz’s exhibition includes a range of outfits worn by Victoria Beckham, Emma Bunton, Geri Halliwell, Melanie Brown and Melanie Chisholm, who quickly became known by the nicknames Posh, Baby, Ginger, Scary and Sporty. There are also accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world. Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: “We are delighted that Leeds City Museum has played its part in breaking a Guinness World Record. The exhibition has gone really well so far and we look forward to welcoming more visitors to it in the coming weeks.”
The exhibition runs until July 3 and admission is free. In the summer of 2012 it will go to the Tower Museum in Londonderry. Liz added: “If any museum wants to fill in the gap they’re welcome to contact me, it’d be great if it went to the Tolson Museum, but we can take it anywhere.”
Friday, 15 April 2011
MY SPICE GIRLS COLLECTION BEATS GUINNESS WORLD RECORD
World record success for Spiceworld exhibition in Leeds
The exhibition devoted to the Spice Girls currently on display at Leeds City Museum has successfully become a world record holder.
The collection of memorabilia and merchandise from collector Liz West on show devoted to the most successful girl band of all time which makes up ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ was officially counted last weekend in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record.
The result of 2,066 items was comfortably higher than the previous best of approximately 1,000 making it officially the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. With only items related to the group able to qualify for the count, it meant the items on display from the group’s solo careers were not able to be considered.
Since the free exhibition opened at the Leeds City Council-managed museum off Millennium Square at the end of January, over 25,000 people have visited to see the range of outfits worn by the group as well as accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world.
Spice Girls memorabilia collector Liz West said:
“It is fantastic to break the record and I am really pleased that we did it at Leeds City Museum as part of the exhibition.
“Everything went really well with the count and a special thank you to all the Leeds Metropolitan University students and volunteers who took time out of their weekend to help.”
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said:
“We are delighted that Leeds City Museum has played its part in breaking a Guinness World Record. The exhibition has gone really well so far and we look forward to welcoming more visitors to it in the coming weeks.”
Running until Sunday 3 July, ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ is free to enter and celebrates the success of the Spice Girls as well as examining what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
For further information on Leeds City Museum, visit the website at http://www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum/
For media enquiries please contact:
Roger Boyde, Leisure media relations officer,
Tel 0113 247 5472, Email: roger.boyde@leeds.gov.uk
The exhibition devoted to the Spice Girls currently on display at Leeds City Museum has successfully become a world record holder.
The collection of memorabilia and merchandise from collector Liz West on show devoted to the most successful girl band of all time which makes up ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ was officially counted last weekend in an attempt to break the Guinness World Record.
The result of 2,066 items was comfortably higher than the previous best of approximately 1,000 making it officially the biggest number of Spice Girls items in a collection together anywhere in the world. With only items related to the group able to qualify for the count, it meant the items on display from the group’s solo careers were not able to be considered.
Since the free exhibition opened at the Leeds City Council-managed museum off Millennium Square at the end of January, over 25,000 people have visited to see the range of outfits worn by the group as well as accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls sourced from all over the world.
Spice Girls memorabilia collector Liz West said:
“It is fantastic to break the record and I am really pleased that we did it at Leeds City Museum as part of the exhibition.
“Everything went really well with the count and a special thank you to all the Leeds Metropolitan University students and volunteers who took time out of their weekend to help.”
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said:
“We are delighted that Leeds City Museum has played its part in breaking a Guinness World Record. The exhibition has gone really well so far and we look forward to welcoming more visitors to it in the coming weeks.”
Running until Sunday 3 July, ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ is free to enter and celebrates the success of the Spice Girls as well as examining what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
For further information on Leeds City Museum, visit the website at http://www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum/
For media enquiries please contact:
Roger Boyde, Leisure media relations officer,
Tel 0113 247 5472, Email: roger.boyde@leeds.gov.uk
ITV CALENDAR Report (14/04/2011)
LINK TO VIDEO
Spice up your life
5.30PM Thu Apr 14 2011
A woman from Huddersfield who's collected thousands of pieces of Spice Girls memorabilia has landed herself a place in the record books. After an official count up, Liz West's collection has been confirmed as the largest in the world. It's currently on display at the Leeds City Museum.
By: Tom Brown
Friday, 1 April 2011
SOSOGAY.COM Review (31/03/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Exhibition Review: Spiceworld The Exhibition
Rating: ****
Although I’m unashamedly a Spice Girls aficionado (I always wanted to be the sixth one as a child – with the combined sultry vampiness of Geri and the butch attitude of Mel C) I didn’t really think that an exhibition of years of collected Spice memorabilia could ever actually work – simply because there’s so much of the stuff. This was, after all, a girlband whose image appeared on everything from crisp packets to bedside lamps. An exhibition would simply be too cluttered, too lowbrow to actually work, right?
Wrong. Liz West’s collection, lovingly amassed over the years from the day Spice bric-a-brac first went on sale, has been painstakingly (and endearingly nerdily) catalogued. Everything you could possibly want to see is there, waiting to visually transport you back to the hours of Girl Power. Particularly impressive is the range of costumes that Liz has managed to hunt down, including several of Mel B’s Doctor Who-villain-style outfits. There are also magazine covers of the group across the walls from long-dead Nineties publications, alongside covers of the individual Girls during their later solo efforts. Throughout the exhibition, which takes about 35 minutes to see in full, there are constant ‘did you know?’-style sound-bites of trivia that can surprise even the most dedicated fan, giving the exhibition a scarily academic edge. To make up for this there’s also a dressing up box towards the end for all ages (see the picture at right for my own Halliwell effort).
Zig-a-zig-ah.
To sum up, this is a dedicated and detailed exhibition that gives a real sense the global scale of the Spice Girls phenomenon. We might now look back now with slight embarrassment at how five over-boisterous, vocally-passable lasses with rather awful dress sense conquered the planet. But they were the most successful music act of their day and arguably embody the era of Cool Britannia more than the grungy yelps of Oasis – and that’s something that should be celebrated. Granted, if you absolutely loathed them back then, you’re hardly likely to want to wander through acres of Spice gubbins today. But if you’ve got even the smallest inkling of nostalgia or just fancy a trip down memory lane to when things were enjoyably garish, then you’re sure to have a ball.
Spiceworld: The Exhibition runs at Leeds City Museum until 3 July 2011. Entry is free.
Exhibition Review: Spiceworld The Exhibition
Rating: ****
Although I’m unashamedly a Spice Girls aficionado (I always wanted to be the sixth one as a child – with the combined sultry vampiness of Geri and the butch attitude of Mel C) I didn’t really think that an exhibition of years of collected Spice memorabilia could ever actually work – simply because there’s so much of the stuff. This was, after all, a girlband whose image appeared on everything from crisp packets to bedside lamps. An exhibition would simply be too cluttered, too lowbrow to actually work, right?
Wrong. Liz West’s collection, lovingly amassed over the years from the day Spice bric-a-brac first went on sale, has been painstakingly (and endearingly nerdily) catalogued. Everything you could possibly want to see is there, waiting to visually transport you back to the hours of Girl Power. Particularly impressive is the range of costumes that Liz has managed to hunt down, including several of Mel B’s Doctor Who-villain-style outfits. There are also magazine covers of the group across the walls from long-dead Nineties publications, alongside covers of the individual Girls during their later solo efforts. Throughout the exhibition, which takes about 35 minutes to see in full, there are constant ‘did you know?’-style sound-bites of trivia that can surprise even the most dedicated fan, giving the exhibition a scarily academic edge. To make up for this there’s also a dressing up box towards the end for all ages (see the picture at right for my own Halliwell effort).
Zig-a-zig-ah.
To sum up, this is a dedicated and detailed exhibition that gives a real sense the global scale of the Spice Girls phenomenon. We might now look back now with slight embarrassment at how five over-boisterous, vocally-passable lasses with rather awful dress sense conquered the planet. But they were the most successful music act of their day and arguably embody the era of Cool Britannia more than the grungy yelps of Oasis – and that’s something that should be celebrated. Granted, if you absolutely loathed them back then, you’re hardly likely to want to wander through acres of Spice gubbins today. But if you’ve got even the smallest inkling of nostalgia or just fancy a trip down memory lane to when things were enjoyably garish, then you’re sure to have a ball.
Spiceworld: The Exhibition runs at Leeds City Museum until 3 July 2011. Entry is free.
Saturday, 26 March 2011
MELANIEBROWN.COM (11/02/2011)
LINT TO ARTICLE
Spice World Exhibition in my home town Leeds
"I am over the moon that this Spice Girls exhibition is up and running in my home town, Leeds. Liz, 25, who I’ve been speaking to for a while, is the one responsible for putting together almost 4,000 pieces of Spice Girls memorabilia. What a job she has done! Hurry up guys, cause it’s only open until July 3rd.
Love them or hate them, this interactive exhibition celebrates Brit Pop’s most successful girl group. Through the extensive collection of local fan Liz West, explore the music industry at the height of Brit Pop – manufactured bands, the media, the glamour, the pressure of celebrity status and of course the music and merchandise that so often made the Spice Girls front page news.
Take a journey from the stage door to the bright lights of a performance and see if you’ve got what it takes to be a star!
The memorabilia on show will include a number of eye-catching items, such as the iconic Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in ‘Spiceworld: The Movie’, Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s memorable performance at the 1997 Brit Awards (where Geri made her first appearance in the Union Jack dress) and Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit complete with ‘Mel B’ crystal-studded belt.
Other items among those which have never been seen together on public display before will include outfits worn by Emma, Geri and Mel B on their ‘Spiceworld’ tour, a gold and diamond-studded Chopard watch worn by Victoria, the directors’ script from ‘Spiceworld: The Movie’ and the multi-platinum CD the band were awarded for selling over four million copies of the album ‘Spice’ in America in 1997."
Thursday, 17 March 2011
MANCHESTERCONFIDENTIAL.COM Review (03/03/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Paul Clarke finds merchandise and memories at a local shrine to Girl Power
Zig-a-Zig-Ah.
That moronic battle cry of the Spice Girls was the sorry soundtrack of 1996 as Britain’s most successful girl group stormed the charts.
‘There is – of course - tons of tacky merchandise sold to gullible kids. There is a room dedicated to how the Spice Girls were ruthlessly marketed and it is depressing to find they made £5m each from marketing deals alone.
A new exhibition at Leeds Museum celebrates the achievements of the not so Fab Five, who have reformed since then to lukewarm response as their individual careers zig-a-zagged in different careers.
This cleverly staged show is partly a tribute to Leeds lass Mel B – aka Scary Spice – and because local uberfan Liz West has also allowed her collection of more than 3,600 pieces to form the backbone of this retrospective.
Liz has made the Holy Grail of all obsessive fans by scoring a museum show and make no mistake this is the sort of top drawer collection that would make the music snobs in High Fidelity gave a grudging nod of respect.
Liz has not just collected the usual marketing tat the Spices Girls were happy to hawk but it contains a fascinating range of clothes the girls actually wore. There’s a glass case full of Mel B’s typically tasteful outfits, some of Baby Spice’s more demure dresses and even the Union Jack boots Geri wore in the film SpiceWorld.
There is – of course - tons of tacky merchandise sold to gullible kids. Pester power rather the Spice’s laughable claim that personified girl power. In fairness to the curators there is a room dedicated to how the Spice Girls were ruthlessly marketed and it’s depressing to find they made £5m each from marketing deals alone.
That’s the dark heart of this exhibition because the rise of the Spice Girls was the moment millions of teenagers realised that talent didn’t matter if you were a wannabe. All you had to do was pout, wear pigtails, shout a lot in a Yorkshire accent, wear a trackie or just have ginger hair and you could make millions.
The real irony behind the Spice Girls is that it was a marketing juggernaut driven by male executives, who all made a bigger fortune than the girls.
There is a direct link between the marketing genius behind the band and the vacuous X Factor generation's desperate quest for their 15 minutes of plastic fame.
But that isn’t Liz West’s fault and she has amassed a collection that is staggering its range and quality. Everywhere you turn there are platinum discs, signed posters, or a piece of original Spice clothing.
The team at Leeds Museum have pulled out all the stops to create a sympathetic - and strangely honest – romp through the career of a cultural phenomena who have outsold every other girl band in history by a country mile.
Throw in a dressing up room for the kids and a Spice Girls karaoke complete with a stage to yell 'zig-a-zig-ah' to your heart’s content and it all adds up to a must see fun exhibition that celebrates rather than mocks super fandom.
Spiceworld – the Exhibition runs until July 3 and is free entry. Leeds Museum is holding a Guinness world record attempt on April 9 when they aim to set a new mark for the largest ever Spice Girls collection. You are invited to come along as a Spice Girl – or Boy - and join in a special sing-a-long.
Paul Clarke finds merchandise and memories at a local shrine to Girl Power
Zig-a-Zig-Ah.
That moronic battle cry of the Spice Girls was the sorry soundtrack of 1996 as Britain’s most successful girl group stormed the charts.
‘There is – of course - tons of tacky merchandise sold to gullible kids. There is a room dedicated to how the Spice Girls were ruthlessly marketed and it is depressing to find they made £5m each from marketing deals alone.
A new exhibition at Leeds Museum celebrates the achievements of the not so Fab Five, who have reformed since then to lukewarm response as their individual careers zig-a-zagged in different careers.
This cleverly staged show is partly a tribute to Leeds lass Mel B – aka Scary Spice – and because local uberfan Liz West has also allowed her collection of more than 3,600 pieces to form the backbone of this retrospective.
Liz has made the Holy Grail of all obsessive fans by scoring a museum show and make no mistake this is the sort of top drawer collection that would make the music snobs in High Fidelity gave a grudging nod of respect.
Liz has not just collected the usual marketing tat the Spices Girls were happy to hawk but it contains a fascinating range of clothes the girls actually wore. There’s a glass case full of Mel B’s typically tasteful outfits, some of Baby Spice’s more demure dresses and even the Union Jack boots Geri wore in the film SpiceWorld.
There is – of course - tons of tacky merchandise sold to gullible kids. Pester power rather the Spice’s laughable claim that personified girl power. In fairness to the curators there is a room dedicated to how the Spice Girls were ruthlessly marketed and it’s depressing to find they made £5m each from marketing deals alone.
That’s the dark heart of this exhibition because the rise of the Spice Girls was the moment millions of teenagers realised that talent didn’t matter if you were a wannabe. All you had to do was pout, wear pigtails, shout a lot in a Yorkshire accent, wear a trackie or just have ginger hair and you could make millions.
The real irony behind the Spice Girls is that it was a marketing juggernaut driven by male executives, who all made a bigger fortune than the girls.
There is a direct link between the marketing genius behind the band and the vacuous X Factor generation's desperate quest for their 15 minutes of plastic fame.
But that isn’t Liz West’s fault and she has amassed a collection that is staggering its range and quality. Everywhere you turn there are platinum discs, signed posters, or a piece of original Spice clothing.
The team at Leeds Museum have pulled out all the stops to create a sympathetic - and strangely honest – romp through the career of a cultural phenomena who have outsold every other girl band in history by a country mile.
Throw in a dressing up room for the kids and a Spice Girls karaoke complete with a stage to yell 'zig-a-zig-ah' to your heart’s content and it all adds up to a must see fun exhibition that celebrates rather than mocks super fandom.
Spiceworld – the Exhibition runs until July 3 and is free entry. Leeds Museum is holding a Guinness world record attempt on April 9 when they aim to set a new mark for the largest ever Spice Girls collection. You are invited to come along as a Spice Girl – or Boy - and join in a special sing-a-long.
CULTURE 24 Review (16/03/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spiceworld goes number one in Leeds City Museum display
By Ben Miller
Exhibition: Spiceworld – The Exhibition, Leeds City Museum, Leeds, until July 3 2011
In 1996, as the Spice Girls zinged into all-conquering life with saccharine chart-basher Wannabe, Liz West did her bit to help by buying two copies of the single.
“I must have had a collector’s instinct even as a 12-year-old child,” she confesses, claiming she just wanted to “support the Girls” and “help them be number one”.
“My collection really began when I went on a trip to London. I went to Hamleys, where they had a display of discounted Spice Girls Dolls.”
West hadn’t been able to afford the £20 cost of each feminist figurine in Woolworths, but the southern sale allowed her to buy four.
“It then became a challenge for me to find the fifth doll, Melanie C,” she adds, spending the next eight years trawling a “primitive” internet before eventually spotting her mini Sporty Spice.
“Visiting eBay made me realise how many different Spice Girls memorabilia products existed that I was not aware of in the 1990s. It has since become my mission to collect Spice Girls paraphernalia from every corner of the world.”
She was destined to assemble the largest collection dedicated to the famous five in the world, a haul so large she’s been limited to putting only a fraction of it on display so far in hugely popular exhibitions at Clifton Park in Rotherham, Cusworth Hall in Doncaster and the British Music Experience at London’s O2.
CDs, vinyl, Union Jack platform boots and signed photos of pouting future Beckhams abound, with more examples from the 3,400 items – including dozens of grinning, lurid dolls – available to view in an online version of the show.
“I wanted to get the collection out of storage and exhibit it for all to see,” says West.
“It’s pointless being hidden away when there are some amazing items in there to wonder at.”
Open Tuesday-Friday 10am-5pm (7pm Thursday, 11am-5pm Saturday and Sunday). Admission free.
Follow Liz West’s Spice Girl Museum on Twitter or visit the collection online.
Saturday, 19 February 2011
LEEDS GUIDE Review (Feb 2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Lauren Wright gives her verdict on the much talked about display of pop memorabilia
As a huge fan of the Spice Girls when I was growing up, I thought a Spice Girl exhibition would be a dream come true – and it didn’t disappoint.
It was a trip down memory lane full of the merchandise I had owned myself and even more of the merchandise I had wanted. Being only seven when the Spice Girls first came on the scene I hadn’t actually realised that it was only a couple of years from their first number one single to when Geri left the band. They accomplished so much in such a short space of time!
The exhibition is full of memorabilia, magazine covers, special edition CDs, clothes and shoes worn by the girls as well as the platinum awards they won. Various Spice Girl classics are being played throughout the exhibition and the Spice World film is also being shown – I was very tempted to sit down and watch it but had to restrain myself (I will definitely look for it on DVD though). The assortment of items is impressive to say the least; it is shocking to think that this is all one person’s collection.
As well as having all this on display the exhibition has a number of activities, so it’s good for keeping children of all ages entertained. There is a ‘VIP Manager’s Pass’ to pick up as you walk into the exhibition which can be filled in along the way, which is a step-by-step manager trail to see how the Spice Girls became global stars and to learn how to create a successful band – it’s a fun activity for children and makes the whole exhibition interactive.
There is also a section to accessorise your own pop star for an interview by colouring in a printed face and since all the sheets had been used by the time I got there (which I was very disappointed about!) this is obviously a popular activity. There is also a dressing up section with wigs, outfits and accessories, which is not just for the girls, as there was a little boy dressing up as Geri Halliwell in a ginger wig and finding it hilarious. And to top it off you could participate in ‘score the star’, which gives you the chance to sing along to the Spice Girls classics and be scored on a scale of one to 10.
This exhibition definitely took me back to my childhood and for the time I was there I was just as willing to participate in all the activities available as the children were (I make a great Geri Halliwell!). I would definitely recommend it to anyone who was (or still is) a Spice Girls fan and any parents with children who want something different to do on a Sunday afternoon – and after all, it is free!
Lauren Wright gives her verdict on the much talked about display of pop memorabilia
As a huge fan of the Spice Girls when I was growing up, I thought a Spice Girl exhibition would be a dream come true – and it didn’t disappoint.
It was a trip down memory lane full of the merchandise I had owned myself and even more of the merchandise I had wanted. Being only seven when the Spice Girls first came on the scene I hadn’t actually realised that it was only a couple of years from their first number one single to when Geri left the band. They accomplished so much in such a short space of time!
The exhibition is full of memorabilia, magazine covers, special edition CDs, clothes and shoes worn by the girls as well as the platinum awards they won. Various Spice Girl classics are being played throughout the exhibition and the Spice World film is also being shown – I was very tempted to sit down and watch it but had to restrain myself (I will definitely look for it on DVD though). The assortment of items is impressive to say the least; it is shocking to think that this is all one person’s collection.
As well as having all this on display the exhibition has a number of activities, so it’s good for keeping children of all ages entertained. There is a ‘VIP Manager’s Pass’ to pick up as you walk into the exhibition which can be filled in along the way, which is a step-by-step manager trail to see how the Spice Girls became global stars and to learn how to create a successful band – it’s a fun activity for children and makes the whole exhibition interactive.
There is also a section to accessorise your own pop star for an interview by colouring in a printed face and since all the sheets had been used by the time I got there (which I was very disappointed about!) this is obviously a popular activity. There is also a dressing up section with wigs, outfits and accessories, which is not just for the girls, as there was a little boy dressing up as Geri Halliwell in a ginger wig and finding it hilarious. And to top it off you could participate in ‘score the star’, which gives you the chance to sing along to the Spice Girls classics and be scored on a scale of one to 10.
This exhibition definitely took me back to my childhood and for the time I was there I was just as willing to participate in all the activities available as the children were (I make a great Geri Halliwell!). I would definitely recommend it to anyone who was (or still is) a Spice Girls fan and any parents with children who want something different to do on a Sunday afternoon – and after all, it is free!
OFFICIAL LEEDS CITY COUNCIL Press Release (18/02/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spiceworld Exhibition makes record-breaking start
The new exhibition devoted to the Spice Girls at Leeds City Museum is already proving a record-breaker.
In its first two weeks the exhibition based around memorabilia and merchandise from the most successful girl band of all time has attracted over 5,000 visitors – smashing all records for new exhibitions at the museum.
And news of its success has even made its way to Los Angeles, home of Leeds’ own Spice Girl Mel B. Such has been the number of messages she has received praising the exhibition, Mel replied on Twitter saying “Thank you for all your amazing pics from the Leeds Spice exhibition” and even hinting at a return to the city to see it in person by telling collector Liz West “I will make a point of taking a trip to you to see it all for myself.”
Since opening to the public on 28 January, over 5,400 people flocked to the museum off Millennium Square to visit the exhibition in its first two weeks. This compares to 3,500 who attended the first two weeks of the previous best attended exhibition, Dr Rock’s Lost Gallery which was on display last year.
Running until July, ‘Spiceworld: The exhibition’ is free to enter and celebrates the success of the Spice Girls as well as examining what it takes to be a modern celebrity.
The basis for the exhibition is the extraordinary collection of Yorkshire’s Liz West, who is the foremost collector of official Spice Girls memorabilia and merchandise in the country with almost 4,000 items of all kinds devoted to the band.
The exhibition at Leeds City Museum is the first time Liz’s collection has ever been on display in its entirety in public and features outfits worn by the band, accessories, platinum discs, books, magazines and dolls being sourced from all over the world.
Spice Girls memorabilia collector Liz West said:
“I am absolutely delighted that so many people have taken an interest in coming to the exhibition. Everyone who has seen it seems to like it so that is great to see. Obviously it would be amazing if Mel B came along to see it for herself – the offer of a full tour is always open whenever she likes!”
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said:
“The visitor numbers for the first two weeks have been really impressive and we are all really pleased. People of all ages are coming along to see it and that shows it has the broad appeal that we were hoping it would.
“The fact so many people have been in touch with Mel B to praise the exhibition is really nice to hear. We look forward to welcoming thousands more people to see it in the coming weeks and months.”
As part of the exhibition, wannabe popstars will have the chance to emulate their heroes at a special tribute day on Friday 25 February. Taking place from 10:30am-12:30pm and 1:30pm-3:30pm, fans can visit the museum dressed as their favourite music star and have their photo taken which will be added to the wall on fame in the exhibition. They can also follow in the footsteps of their heroes and perform for their friends and family in the SingStar interactive zone.
Spiceworld: The exhibition will run at Leeds City Museum from Friday 28 January to Sunday 3 July. Admission is free.
For further information on Leeds City Museum, visit the website at http://www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum/
Notes to editors:
The Spice Girls are Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton, Melanie Chisholm, Geri Halliwell and Victoria Beckham (née Adams) who quickly became known by the nicknames Scary, Baby, Sporty, Ginger and Posh.
Following the impact of debut single ‘Wannabe’ which topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996, the Spice Girls enjoyed phenomenal success selling over 80 million records worldwide, having nine UK number one singles, starring in their own feature film and creating the ‘girl power’ mantra which is credited with inspiring a generation of girls and women to achieve.
FAMILIES LEEDS Blog Review (31/01/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spicemania returns to LEEDS
Families Leeds reviews Leeds City Museum's new SpiceWorld Exhibition
Pull on your platform boots and check your lip stick. You're invited to go behind the scenes at a Spice Girls concert and take a trip down memory lane with one of the biggest pop bands of all time. Leeds City Museum are hosting a collection of over 3,000 items of Spice Girls memorabilia hoarded by fan Liz West over more than a decade. From key rings and branded chocolate bars to some of the most memorable outfits worn by the give Wannabees, it's all here for you to see. As you walk into the exhibition, you're invited to be either an artist or a manager, and take their journey with Baby, Sporty, Ginger, Posh and Leeds' own Scary. Given Mel B's roots here in Yorkshire the City Museum is the obvious choice for such an exhibition, and they're delighted to be hosting it.
"This is contemporary collecting at its best," says Helen Langwick, Curator of Exhibitions at Leeds City Museum. "Liz is a modern day version of the people in Victorian times who traveled the world collecting crocodiles. They are the reason we have museums and the collections of today, like this, are the history of tomorrow."
The Spice Girl's history is the history of a generation, the history of the 90s. Their Girl Power slogan made a generation of young women, my generation, believe they could be anything they wanted to be. Girl Power is everywhere as you walk around the exhibition - it's in the music, on the magazine covers and in the masses and masses of merchandise Spicemania produced. For Liz West, collector and Co-Curator of the Exhibition, seeing her collection in the museum is a huge achievement. But is there anything she hasn't got?
"I'm proudest of the outfits - especially the ones worn by Mel B," says Liz. "I'd obviously love to get hold of Geri's Union Jack dress, and I'd like a set of outfits worn by all five girls at the same time."
The exhibition runs at the museum until July and Liz is keen to take her collection to other museums across the country to share her love of Girl Power with more Spice fans. For now though, Helen and her team here in Leeds are delighted to play host.
"We hope to bring people in to see something they easily recognise, then hopefully they'll walk across the corridor to go to the Ancient World gallery and learn about something they didn't know about. "
It's an exhibition that has something for everyone. For the Spice Fan, there are facts, memories and music galore. For the sons and daughters of the Spice Fans out there, this is an interactive exhibition. Pull a cord to listen to a best selling track, dress up and take to the stage to sing Wannabee, or simply take a seat and enjoy the Spice World Movie. If you're not a fan when you walk in, you will be when you leave!
CULTURE VULTURES Blog Review (18/02/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spice Up Your Life
by Eleanor Snare
We don’t think that either of us could accurately predict what effect this exhibition would have on us. Both big Spice Girls fan in our yoof with our particular favourites – Geri, for Elly (naturally), and Sporty for Jess – this exhibition was at once utterly delightful and completely worrying. Jess unashamedly loved the Spice Girls when she was a youngun’, and for her walking into the exhibition was a little like stepping back a decade and a half.
The theme itself, ingeniously, has been expanded from just ‘the Spice Girls’, into a walk-through event where you choose either a Manager or Artist card at the beginning. Really, this is an exhibition about the music industry, about the manufacture of pop and Spice Girls-mania, and the cards you pick contain little, quite tongue-in-cheek questions for you to fill out as you explore the exhibition.
The sheer volume of stuff that has been collected over the years is astonishing. Aside from the maybe more obvious posters, CD editions, magazine covers and the like, also on show are some of the costumes the Girls wore for their stage shows. Mel B’s catsuits and Emma’s giant boots were there, and much of it custom made.
But this wasn’t just a “Spice Girls” exhibition. This was an homage to everything utterly rubbish about the 1990s. The first corridor you came to was all the magazine covers from the beginning to the end of the Spice Girls’ life. The way the girls’ faces change, the hair, the clothes: it brought back many memories of school, wearing your hair in a scrape back with two dangling bits down the side of the face even though you know it doesn’t suit you, because that was “the style”. Reliving some of those memories was an integral part of the exhibition. Geared towards interactivity, the exhibition has a dressing up area, an art table where you can design your own Spice Girl or album cover, and a karaoke stage to croon to rubbish music of the 90s or early 2000s.
There were two concepts that really stood out to us. Firstly, the collection of all the ephemera of the Spice Girls over the years, including after their split and subsequent solo careers, made very transparent just how manufactured the entire thing was. Shifts in personal image, calculated poses and quotations, rapid turnover of merchandise: when you’re a young gel hollering along to ‘Spice Up Your Life’, these things don’t really register. What was really sad was how much we bought into this. At the start of the exhibition they genuinely come across as likeable, normal girls. It’s only when you see fifty changing pictures of them in a row you realise just how choreographed even their photos are. They even had their own coloured pens to “tell them apart” for autographs. Although we’re used to the X Factor and Bieber-ites now, whose very existence is a long-game that has been planned, step by step, from the start, the Spice Girls really took the biscuit. They were the manufactured, shoddy pop starlets, who were dressed up like dollies and paraded around, who conquered the world. They laid the foundation for all the Britain’s Got Nowt Talent wannabes because they succeeded where so many others continue to fail.
Secondly, we were both shocked by the unadulterated fanaticism of this collector, Liz West. It’s something people often joke about, about keeping things in wrappers, vainly trawling eBay for that long-lost first pressing, but here it was, real as the nose on V. Beckham’s face (ha) and utterly, utterly bizarre. While both Jess and I owned some Spice Girls memorabilia – postcards, lollipops, kids’ stuff – the sheer volume of all these THINGS was astounding. A whole wall, entitled ‘Props Store’, was taken up with DVDs, videos, comics, books, electronics, dolls, sweets – all Spice Girls themed, and all in their original packaging. As Jess aptly put it: ‘Imagine pulling a guy, and then you bring him home to your flat, and then there’s this’. It’s an exposure of the young, feminine side of Comic Book Guy.
This isn’t a negative appraisal, however. In fact, there are a lot of obsessed fans out there whose collection of stamps, shrunken heads, Coronation tea-towels and the like, could make some incredibly interesting and surreal exhibitions. Maybe that’s the next step – send a call out to all those who collect, avidly and without stopping, the stuff of everyday life, and use it to show people things maybe they hadn’t realised before. This exhibition will be a trip down Memory Lane for some, and maybe with a sharp left turn down Honesty Drive for others.
Find out more about the exhibition on the Leeds City Museum website. The exhibition will be running for the foreseeable future. Find out more about the collection on Spice Girls Collection Online.
Spice Up Your Life
by Eleanor Snare
We don’t think that either of us could accurately predict what effect this exhibition would have on us. Both big Spice Girls fan in our yoof with our particular favourites – Geri, for Elly (naturally), and Sporty for Jess – this exhibition was at once utterly delightful and completely worrying. Jess unashamedly loved the Spice Girls when she was a youngun’, and for her walking into the exhibition was a little like stepping back a decade and a half.
The theme itself, ingeniously, has been expanded from just ‘the Spice Girls’, into a walk-through event where you choose either a Manager or Artist card at the beginning. Really, this is an exhibition about the music industry, about the manufacture of pop and Spice Girls-mania, and the cards you pick contain little, quite tongue-in-cheek questions for you to fill out as you explore the exhibition.
The sheer volume of stuff that has been collected over the years is astonishing. Aside from the maybe more obvious posters, CD editions, magazine covers and the like, also on show are some of the costumes the Girls wore for their stage shows. Mel B’s catsuits and Emma’s giant boots were there, and much of it custom made.
But this wasn’t just a “Spice Girls” exhibition. This was an homage to everything utterly rubbish about the 1990s. The first corridor you came to was all the magazine covers from the beginning to the end of the Spice Girls’ life. The way the girls’ faces change, the hair, the clothes: it brought back many memories of school, wearing your hair in a scrape back with two dangling bits down the side of the face even though you know it doesn’t suit you, because that was “the style”. Reliving some of those memories was an integral part of the exhibition. Geared towards interactivity, the exhibition has a dressing up area, an art table where you can design your own Spice Girl or album cover, and a karaoke stage to croon to rubbish music of the 90s or early 2000s.
There were two concepts that really stood out to us. Firstly, the collection of all the ephemera of the Spice Girls over the years, including after their split and subsequent solo careers, made very transparent just how manufactured the entire thing was. Shifts in personal image, calculated poses and quotations, rapid turnover of merchandise: when you’re a young gel hollering along to ‘Spice Up Your Life’, these things don’t really register. What was really sad was how much we bought into this. At the start of the exhibition they genuinely come across as likeable, normal girls. It’s only when you see fifty changing pictures of them in a row you realise just how choreographed even their photos are. They even had their own coloured pens to “tell them apart” for autographs. Although we’re used to the X Factor and Bieber-ites now, whose very existence is a long-game that has been planned, step by step, from the start, the Spice Girls really took the biscuit. They were the manufactured, shoddy pop starlets, who were dressed up like dollies and paraded around, who conquered the world. They laid the foundation for all the Britain’s Got Nowt Talent wannabes because they succeeded where so many others continue to fail.
Secondly, we were both shocked by the unadulterated fanaticism of this collector, Liz West. It’s something people often joke about, about keeping things in wrappers, vainly trawling eBay for that long-lost first pressing, but here it was, real as the nose on V. Beckham’s face (ha) and utterly, utterly bizarre. While both Jess and I owned some Spice Girls memorabilia – postcards, lollipops, kids’ stuff – the sheer volume of all these THINGS was astounding. A whole wall, entitled ‘Props Store’, was taken up with DVDs, videos, comics, books, electronics, dolls, sweets – all Spice Girls themed, and all in their original packaging. As Jess aptly put it: ‘Imagine pulling a guy, and then you bring him home to your flat, and then there’s this’. It’s an exposure of the young, feminine side of Comic Book Guy.
This isn’t a negative appraisal, however. In fact, there are a lot of obsessed fans out there whose collection of stamps, shrunken heads, Coronation tea-towels and the like, could make some incredibly interesting and surreal exhibitions. Maybe that’s the next step – send a call out to all those who collect, avidly and without stopping, the stuff of everyday life, and use it to show people things maybe they hadn’t realised before. This exhibition will be a trip down Memory Lane for some, and maybe with a sharp left turn down Honesty Drive for others.
Find out more about the exhibition on the Leeds City Museum website. The exhibition will be running for the foreseeable future. Find out more about the collection on Spice Girls Collection Online.
Saturday, 12 February 2011
Order your Spice Girls Exhibition catalogue HERE:
Friday, 11 February 2011
MYHOILGAY.COM Blog Review (08/02/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Gay Travel: Spice Girls Exhibition, Leeds, England.
Now be honest which was your favorite Spice Girl? Was it Sporty, Baby, Posh Ginger or Scary? Well its been 15 years since Girl Power came alive with their first hit ‘Wannabee’ went to number one in the UK. They have remained a popular band for gays and lesbians all over the world and you can still hear their tracks chosen on juke boxes in many a gay bar!
For die hard fans you need to travel to Leeds, in Yorkshire, England for a unique Spice Girls Exhibition. Leeds City Museum have chosen to celebrate Girl Power, with a special exhibition on the five pop princesses.
Spiceworld features an extensive collection of Spice Girls memorabilia, which has been loaned to the museum by Spice Girls super fan Liz West. Liz has nearly 4000 pieces of Spice Girls merchandise, including clothes worn by band members!
Gay and lesbian fans of the Spice Girls group have until July 3rd to see the exhibition, so plenty of time to arrange your travel to Leeds.
Gay fans traveling to Leeds will find the Spiceworld Exhibition is one of many attractions the city has to offer. The city has a vibrant gay scene which is concentrated in and around a couple of streets in the centre of the city. This is a city for clubbing and the gay club nights in the city are legendary. Time your trip with one of these ultimate gay club nights, to ensure you maximize your trip.
www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum
Gay Travel: Spice Girls Exhibition, Leeds, England.
Now be honest which was your favorite Spice Girl? Was it Sporty, Baby, Posh Ginger or Scary? Well its been 15 years since Girl Power came alive with their first hit ‘Wannabee’ went to number one in the UK. They have remained a popular band for gays and lesbians all over the world and you can still hear their tracks chosen on juke boxes in many a gay bar!
For die hard fans you need to travel to Leeds, in Yorkshire, England for a unique Spice Girls Exhibition. Leeds City Museum have chosen to celebrate Girl Power, with a special exhibition on the five pop princesses.
Spiceworld features an extensive collection of Spice Girls memorabilia, which has been loaned to the museum by Spice Girls super fan Liz West. Liz has nearly 4000 pieces of Spice Girls merchandise, including clothes worn by band members!
Gay and lesbian fans of the Spice Girls group have until July 3rd to see the exhibition, so plenty of time to arrange your travel to Leeds.
Gay fans traveling to Leeds will find the Spiceworld Exhibition is one of many attractions the city has to offer. The city has a vibrant gay scene which is concentrated in and around a couple of streets in the centre of the city. This is a city for clubbing and the gay club nights in the city are legendary. Time your trip with one of these ultimate gay club nights, to ensure you maximize your trip.
www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum
Friday, 4 February 2011
GAYLEEDS.COM Review (04/02/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spiceworld: The Exhibition
GayLeeds.com attended the opening of Spiceworld : The Exhibition at Leeds Museum last week. Based on local Spice Girls fanatic Liz West’s personal collection of Spice Girls memorabilia, the free exhibition allows you to follow your own journey to stardom through the history of the Spice Girls.
We were treated to Spice Girls covers by a local band, and food from the exhibition’s sponsor, Spice Quarter. After a few speeches, and a couple of drinks, GayLeeds and a gaggle of over excited gays toured the exhibition.
You might think that a collection by a local collector would be slightly underwhelming, but you’d be thinking wrong. Liz’s collection is massive, and there are an overwhelming amount of Spice Girls paraphernalia in this exhibition. Curator Helen Langwick told GayLeeds that there are more pieces in the exhibition than in the entire museum - that’s Spice Power!
There is just about everything that you can imagine or remember about the Spice Girls in this exhibition, including platinum and gold certification plaques, posters, magazines, tour passes and programmes and clothing. There’s even a Spice Girls Polaroid camera. (If there’s a particular piece of Spice Girls memorabilia you clearly remember owning in the 90s, even if no-one else does, it will be in this exhibition!) The exhibition also charts the girl’s solo careers and successes. The most interesting part of the exhibition is close to the end, where theres bookshelves stuffed with thousands of Spice Girls endorsed products.
We met collector Liz West, who is exactly what you’d expect from a Spice Girls fanatic - mental, but fabulous. She told us her favourite Spice Girl is Mel C, and told us all about her journey collecting all the pieces, and rivalry between other collectors. Her enthusiasm certainly rubs off - GayLeeds were soon in the dressing up box and taking, rather unprofessionally, to the Spice Girl karaoke stage. Yes, you can even dress up like your favourite Spice Girl and sing along to your favourite song!
Here at GayLeeds we might be slightly biased (considering we adore The Spice Girls) but this exhibition is definitely worth checking out. It’s a jam packed, fun, colourful trip down memory lane into one of music’s most loved and iconic group.
Spiceworld : The Exhibition is open now at Leeds Museum, and runs until July. Free entry.
Leeds City Museum, Millennium Square, Leeds, LS2 8BH. For more info visit the website.
Saturday, 29 January 2011
DIGYORKSHIRE.COM Review (27/01/2011)
The Spice Girls were a phenomenon of the 90s. For years they dominated the headlines, with sell out shows and number one hits. Each of the five ‘Spice Girls’ had a distinct style and character, from ‘Sporty Spice’ with her adidas tracksuits, to ‘Scary Spice’ with her leopard print attire. People all over the globe joined their fan club, attended their shows and idolised the girl group.
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spiceworld The Exhibition
Liz West’s love for the Spice Girls went a step further, resulting in a collection of over 3600 individual pieces to date. From multiple copies of each album, including releases from all over the world, to Geri’s famous Union Jack boots, it’s obvious that she’s a real super-fan. After all she’s been building her collection for over half her life!
Dresses and shoes worn by the girls, signed photographs, multiple copies of Spice World (the movie), scooter helmets, pens, umbrellas, mugs and tickets from their gigs are just a few of the items on display at Leeds City Museum.
Spiceworld The Exhibition chronicles the band’s history, from their formation in 1996 and release of their first album, right through to when five became four, and the individual singer’s solo careers. Facts about the girls are scattered around the exhibition, as well as CD players playing a selection of their hits.
There's an interactive element too - as you enter the exhibition you can choose whether you’d like to be an artist or manager. As you go around the exhibition, there are a set of questions, ranging from choosing a band name, to practicing your signature. Towards the end, the new ‘artists’ are encouraged to dress up and take to the stage to stretch their vocal chords, to see whether they have what it takes to be a real pop star.
This exhibition is great for youngsters and Spice Girls fans alike. Personally, it brought back fond memories from my childhood and was a great nostalgic experience. It’s fantastic this exhibition can be on display for all to see, in Mel B’s (Scary Spice) hometown.
Friday, 28 January 2011
YORKSHIRE EVENING POST Newspaper Article: (28/01/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Leeds Spice Girls exhibition opens
Published Date: 28 January 2011
Girl power has arrived at Leeds City Museum as Spiceworld: The Exhibition.
The exhibition features almost 4,000 pieces of official Spice Girls memorabilia and includes items from chocolate bars and lollies to lamps, cushions and bedding.
The display, which also features several dresses worn by the girls during their pop careers, comes from the private collection of superfan Liz West.
The exhibition has also been praised by Leeds's very own Spice Girl Mel B, who described it as "an honour".
Liz, 25, said: "To receive recognition from one of the girls is something I'll hold onto for a long time."
She is pictured with a pair of Union Jack boots worn by Geri Halliwell in the group's first live concert in Istanbul.
Spiceworld: The Exhibition is open until July 3 and is free to enter.
Thursday, 27 January 2011
MEL B Tweets about me! (27/01/2011)
"Liz thankyou for all your support and Positivity and for just that I will make a point of taking a trip to you to see it all for myself"
"Thank you for all your amazing pic's from the leeds spice exhibition,liz you really did such a good job,well done,from 1996 to 2011 wow"
"Have fun today to everyone that went to the spice exhibition in leeds,send me pic's!!"
@OfficialMelB
"Thank you for all your amazing pic's from the leeds spice exhibition,liz you really did such a good job,well done,from 1996 to 2011 wow"
"Have fun today to everyone that went to the spice exhibition in leeds,send me pic's!!"
@OfficialMelB
BBC LEEDS: Online Article (27/01/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Spice Girls collection mission for Liz West
As an exhibition of Spice Girls memorabilia opens in Leeds we talk to Liz West the owner of the collection.
Liz tells BBC Leeds how she has amassed almost 4000 items connected to the band.
Their debut single Wannabe topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996, the Spice Girls sold 80 million records and had nine UK number one singles.
The band's mantra was 'girl power' until they split in 2008.
Collector Liz who is originally from Barnsley but now lives in Huddersfield said: "For me interest started as soon as I heard them on BBC Radio 1 way back when, and then I saw the Wannabe film on Top Of The Pops.
"The Spice Girls introduced themselves and I thought 'Wow, what energy and attitude'.
Different personalities
"The girls all had different personalities so you could choose your favourite and that was important to me.
Liz West is on a mission to collect Spice Girls items
"I was - first and foremost - a fan. I collected postcards of the girls in school and then when Christmas came along everything I got was Spice Girls related.
"I was lucky because from the start I left things I bought in the box so I must have had a collectors' instinct at an early age. Sometimes I bought two copies of something so I could actually play with one.
Whole set
"The biggest thing I got in the early days was a set of dolls including one doll for each of the girls. Of course I wanted the whole set and to collect each doll. So when I got them all that was a big thing.
"My pocket money was spent on collecting and the family helped me to buy Spice Girls-related things.
"In fact for some Christmases I went round choosing things to the value I was allowed and then got them all wrapped up as my presents.
"I have 3750 items in the collection and it is all catalogued on a spreadsheet.
"I take every chance to buy new things. On a recent trip to New York I took a list with a lot of American releases I wanted, and I managed to track a few things down.
Buying spree
"Aged 18 I put the collection to sleep for a bit but then I discovered online sites and went on a buying spree that hasn't stopped.
"I regret that I didn't keep track of what I spent so I don't know what the total is. I'd quite like to know.
"I have the collection covered on insurance and in storage. A couple of the dresses are probably worth over a thousand pounds each. Lots of the pieces are not worth a great deal of money but together it's worth a lot.
"If I could keep hold of only one piece, it would be an item of stage clothing but I've got about 40 costumes so which one... I'll plump for a green tasselled dress worn by Gerri Halliwell on the Spice World tour in 1998. I saw her perform in that dress when I was a 12-year-old girl. So it is very special.
"The amount of stuff I have is incredible but I am on a real life-long mission to collect Spice Girls memorabilia."
The exhibition at Leeds City Museum in Millennium Square will be the first time Liz's entire collection has ever been on display.
The free exhibition runs from Friday 28 January until Sunday 3 July, 2011 at Leeds City Museum.
Spice Girls collection mission for Liz West
As an exhibition of Spice Girls memorabilia opens in Leeds we talk to Liz West the owner of the collection.
Liz tells BBC Leeds how she has amassed almost 4000 items connected to the band.
Their debut single Wannabe topped the charts in 31 countries in 1996, the Spice Girls sold 80 million records and had nine UK number one singles.
The band's mantra was 'girl power' until they split in 2008.
Collector Liz who is originally from Barnsley but now lives in Huddersfield said: "For me interest started as soon as I heard them on BBC Radio 1 way back when, and then I saw the Wannabe film on Top Of The Pops.
"The Spice Girls introduced themselves and I thought 'Wow, what energy and attitude'.
Different personalities
"The girls all had different personalities so you could choose your favourite and that was important to me.
Liz West is on a mission to collect Spice Girls items
"I was - first and foremost - a fan. I collected postcards of the girls in school and then when Christmas came along everything I got was Spice Girls related.
"I was lucky because from the start I left things I bought in the box so I must have had a collectors' instinct at an early age. Sometimes I bought two copies of something so I could actually play with one.
Whole set
"The biggest thing I got in the early days was a set of dolls including one doll for each of the girls. Of course I wanted the whole set and to collect each doll. So when I got them all that was a big thing.
"My pocket money was spent on collecting and the family helped me to buy Spice Girls-related things.
"In fact for some Christmases I went round choosing things to the value I was allowed and then got them all wrapped up as my presents.
"I have 3750 items in the collection and it is all catalogued on a spreadsheet.
"I take every chance to buy new things. On a recent trip to New York I took a list with a lot of American releases I wanted, and I managed to track a few things down.
Buying spree
"Aged 18 I put the collection to sleep for a bit but then I discovered online sites and went on a buying spree that hasn't stopped.
"I regret that I didn't keep track of what I spent so I don't know what the total is. I'd quite like to know.
"I have the collection covered on insurance and in storage. A couple of the dresses are probably worth over a thousand pounds each. Lots of the pieces are not worth a great deal of money but together it's worth a lot.
"If I could keep hold of only one piece, it would be an item of stage clothing but I've got about 40 costumes so which one... I'll plump for a green tasselled dress worn by Gerri Halliwell on the Spice World tour in 1998. I saw her perform in that dress when I was a 12-year-old girl. So it is very special.
"The amount of stuff I have is incredible but I am on a real life-long mission to collect Spice Girls memorabilia."
The exhibition at Leeds City Museum in Millennium Square will be the first time Liz's entire collection has ever been on display.
The free exhibition runs from Friday 28 January until Sunday 3 July, 2011 at Leeds City Museum.
Monday, 24 January 2011
YORKSHIRE EVENING POST Newspaper Article: (24/01/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Fan who masterminds Spice Girls exhibition wins plaudits from Mel B
Published Date: 24 January 2011
As a schoolgirl, Liz West loved nothing more than dancing around to her favourite Spice Girls hits.
But Liz, 25, was no ordinary Spice Girls fan – and has masterminded an extraordinary exhibition due to open at Leeds City Museum later this week. Over the years, Liz has collected a staggering 4,000 pieces of Spice Girls memorabilia, ranging from badges and pencil sharpeners to dresses worn by the girls, worth thousands of pounds. A whole series of items, including a pink and blue Spice Girls scooter endorsed by the girls at the height of their fame, will go on display at the museum as part of Spiceworld: The Exhibition. And Liz's exhibition now has the ultimate blessing – from Leeds's very own Spice Girl Melanie Brown, also known as Mel B.
The 35-year-old star, now living in Los Angeles, said: "I'm very excited that this Spice Girls exhibition is showing in my hometown of Leeds. It makes me even more grateful that not only people around the world, but the people of Leeds, are still showing so much support for the Spice Girls. "I really hope that everyone will like this exhibition. It is truly an honour to have such an extensive collection of our past be brought out for everyone to enjoy."
Liz's own fascination with Mel B and the rest of the Spice Girls started when they released first hit single Wannabe in 1996. Like most 11-year-old girls at the time, Liz bought their debut album Spice and memorised the words and dances to all the songs. She soon developed a thirst for collecting Spice Girls memorabilia, starting with items available for £1 at her local pound shop. Liz, now an artist and photographer, said: "I used to save my pocket money and if I wanted something more expensive, I just had to save up for a bit longer. "My family thought it was going to be a phase and didn't want me to spend my savings or a huge amount of pocket money because they thought it would be a flash in the pan. I was always quite determined it wasn't going to be." Liz's collection was boosted by the rise of online auction website eBay, where she successfully bid for some Spice Girls bargains.
After the band split up in 2001 after nine number one singles, three albums and a blockbuster film, Liz started collecting items from the girls' solo careers. Collecting memorabilia can be frustrating as well as rewarding – Liz once asked a shop worker for a carrier bag from Victoria Beckham's DVB Denim range and was turned down, despite the jeans costing hundreds of pounds. Liz said: "That made me really really angry. The carrier bag was so beautiful and I was desperate to add it to my collection. "It wasn't Victoria's fault and it was nothing to do with her but I was so angry. At that moment I thought about getting rid of the collection but I calmed down again in a few hours, as always."
Liz, a former student at Leeds College of Art, came up with the idea for the exhibition herself after completing a work placement at a museum and art gallery. She wrote to museums all over the country suggesting the idea and was delighted when Leeds City Museum agreed to meet her. She said: "I was over the moon when they agreed to hold the exhibition. I've really enjoyed organising it and putting it all together – it's something I definitely want to do again in the future. "I just hope that other people enjoy seeing it. For me as a schoolgirl, the girl power message really hit home. I love the strong, powerful female vibe – nobody since the Spice Girls has captured my attention quite so much."
The Spice Girls – also known as Melanie Brown (Mel B), Melanie Chisholm (Mel C), Victoria Beckham, Emma Bunton and Geri Halliwell – scored their first hit with Wannabe in 1996. They went onto enjoy a string of number ones, including Say You'll Be
There, 2 Become 1, Spice Up Your Life and Viva Forever. Geri Halliwell left the band in 1998, with the rest of the band splitting in 2001 to concentrate on motherhood and solo projects. Mel B, who was born in Harehills and grew up in Burley, now lives in LA with husband Stephen Belafonte and daughters Phoenix Chi, 11, and Angel, three.
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: "We are really excited about the Spiceworld exhibition starting at Leeds City Museum this week and it is fantastic to have the support of our own Mel B for it. "The exhibition is free so is the perfect way for all Spice Girls fans to see this amazing collection all together for the first time and for people of all ages to take a trip down memory lane." Spiceworld: The Exhibition opens to the public on Friday and runs until Sunday, July 3.
For more information, visit www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum.
Fan who masterminds Spice Girls exhibition wins plaudits from Mel B
Published Date: 24 January 2011
As a schoolgirl, Liz West loved nothing more than dancing around to her favourite Spice Girls hits.
But Liz, 25, was no ordinary Spice Girls fan – and has masterminded an extraordinary exhibition due to open at Leeds City Museum later this week. Over the years, Liz has collected a staggering 4,000 pieces of Spice Girls memorabilia, ranging from badges and pencil sharpeners to dresses worn by the girls, worth thousands of pounds. A whole series of items, including a pink and blue Spice Girls scooter endorsed by the girls at the height of their fame, will go on display at the museum as part of Spiceworld: The Exhibition. And Liz's exhibition now has the ultimate blessing – from Leeds's very own Spice Girl Melanie Brown, also known as Mel B.
The 35-year-old star, now living in Los Angeles, said: "I'm very excited that this Spice Girls exhibition is showing in my hometown of Leeds. It makes me even more grateful that not only people around the world, but the people of Leeds, are still showing so much support for the Spice Girls. "I really hope that everyone will like this exhibition. It is truly an honour to have such an extensive collection of our past be brought out for everyone to enjoy."
Liz's own fascination with Mel B and the rest of the Spice Girls started when they released first hit single Wannabe in 1996. Like most 11-year-old girls at the time, Liz bought their debut album Spice and memorised the words and dances to all the songs. She soon developed a thirst for collecting Spice Girls memorabilia, starting with items available for £1 at her local pound shop. Liz, now an artist and photographer, said: "I used to save my pocket money and if I wanted something more expensive, I just had to save up for a bit longer. "My family thought it was going to be a phase and didn't want me to spend my savings or a huge amount of pocket money because they thought it would be a flash in the pan. I was always quite determined it wasn't going to be." Liz's collection was boosted by the rise of online auction website eBay, where she successfully bid for some Spice Girls bargains.
After the band split up in 2001 after nine number one singles, three albums and a blockbuster film, Liz started collecting items from the girls' solo careers. Collecting memorabilia can be frustrating as well as rewarding – Liz once asked a shop worker for a carrier bag from Victoria Beckham's DVB Denim range and was turned down, despite the jeans costing hundreds of pounds. Liz said: "That made me really really angry. The carrier bag was so beautiful and I was desperate to add it to my collection. "It wasn't Victoria's fault and it was nothing to do with her but I was so angry. At that moment I thought about getting rid of the collection but I calmed down again in a few hours, as always."
Liz, a former student at Leeds College of Art, came up with the idea for the exhibition herself after completing a work placement at a museum and art gallery. She wrote to museums all over the country suggesting the idea and was delighted when Leeds City Museum agreed to meet her. She said: "I was over the moon when they agreed to hold the exhibition. I've really enjoyed organising it and putting it all together – it's something I definitely want to do again in the future. "I just hope that other people enjoy seeing it. For me as a schoolgirl, the girl power message really hit home. I love the strong, powerful female vibe – nobody since the Spice Girls has captured my attention quite so much."
The Spice Girls – also known as Melanie Brown (Mel B), Melanie Chisholm (Mel C), Victoria Beckham, Emma Bunton and Geri Halliwell – scored their first hit with Wannabe in 1996. They went onto enjoy a string of number ones, including Say You'll Be
There, 2 Become 1, Spice Up Your Life and Viva Forever. Geri Halliwell left the band in 1998, with the rest of the band splitting in 2001 to concentrate on motherhood and solo projects. Mel B, who was born in Harehills and grew up in Burley, now lives in LA with husband Stephen Belafonte and daughters Phoenix Chi, 11, and Angel, three.
Leeds City Museum curator of exhibitions Helen Langwick said: "We are really excited about the Spiceworld exhibition starting at Leeds City Museum this week and it is fantastic to have the support of our own Mel B for it. "The exhibition is free so is the perfect way for all Spice Girls fans to see this amazing collection all together for the first time and for people of all ages to take a trip down memory lane." Spiceworld: The Exhibition opens to the public on Friday and runs until Sunday, July 3.
For more information, visit www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum.
Saturday, 22 January 2011
HUDDERSFIELD DAILY EXAMINER Newspaper Article: (13/01/2011)
LINK TO ARTICLE
Girl Power takes over Leeds City Museum – Liz West’s collection of Spice Girl memorabilia to go on show
LIZ West was 11-years-old when Girl Power spiced up the world. She heard Wannabe on the radio and became hooked on the Spice Girls. Now the 25-year-old, who lives in Lindley, has amassed a collection of 4,000 pieces of Spice Girl memorabilia. And they’re all going on show for the first time – with some rare pieces included in the exhibition at Leeds City Museum.
For Liz, she was a fan first and a collector second, but the artist is now able to make a career out of her collection. Liz, originally from Barnsley, said: “I was listening to the Top 40 on the radio when Wannabe went to number one. It was such a catchy song which I could sing along to. “There were five different personalities which me and my friends could relate to. We made up dance routines but it was only by the time the second album came out I started buying the singles.” Liz started her collection with the band’s single Spice Up Your Life at the age of 12 in 1997. Two versions of the single were released and Liz bought both. She quickly bought the Spice Girls back catalogue and over the years has added mass produced and very rare items to her collection.
Included in the exhibition is the Union Jack boots famously worn by Geri Halliwell at their first ever live concert in Istanbul. Emma Bunton’s blue sequin dress from the band’s performance at the Brit Awards will go on show, along with Mel B’s trademark giraffe print catsuit and crystal-studded ‘Mel B’ belt. Outfits from the Spiceworld tour are included, a Victoria Beckham Chopard watch, the director’s script from Spiceworld: The Movie and a platinum disk the band were awarded selling four million copies of their album Spice in America in 1997. “I’ve no idea how much I’ve spent on it, if I ever worked it out I’d probably be quite shocked,” Liz added.
She has met three members of the Spice Girls. “I met Emma Bunton outside Radio Clyde One when I was a student in Glasgow,” Liz added. “She was adorable, absolutely stunning, very petite and friendly. There were only two fans waiting for her so I got a lot of time with her. “I met Mel C outside the Phoenix Theatre in London after she’d been in Blood Brothers and I met Mel B at Leeds Seacroft Tesco where she was doing a signing. “I’ve never met Geri or Victoria but I’d love to. “All my friends think it’s quirky collecting the items, but fun too.”
Liz first mooted the idea of the exhibition in 2007 and it’s taken until now to coordinate it. The free exhibition runs from Friday, January 28, until Sunday, July, 3 at Leeds City Museum.
YORKSHIRE EVENING POST Newspaper Article: (20/01/2011)
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Leeds's connection with all things Spice Girls
It's been 15 years since they burst onto the pop scene and celebrating the anniversary next week is the opening of an exhibition revelling in girl power.
We look at the special connection between Leeds and all things spice. Yes, it's hard to believe. What was once thought of as recent must now be viewed through the prism of nostalgia. The Spice Girls first arrived back in 1996, hooking legions of teenagers with their catchy debut
Wannabe. Up until the Millennium, Scary, Posh, Baby, Sporty and Ginger dominated pop music. They even cracked America with hit after hit, global tours, not to mention Spiceworld and countless money-spinning merchandising deals. When it all started to disintegrate in the year 2000 the attentions of the next generation suddenly switched to the products of reality TV shows. From Girls Aloud to Will Young and JLS, the Noughties produced a new breed of stars to scream at. But as they reach this milestone it's timely to see a new exhibition celebrating their success is to be unveiled at Leeds City Museum. It's also apt as Leeds has strong connection to the girls. Melanie Chisholm, better known as Mel C, would frequently pop into Churwell, near Morley to visit her dad Alan Chisholm. After splitting with the Scouser's mum in the 1980s he moved to Leeds. And when the Spice Girls became huge, he later moved to a quiet cul-de-sac in the suburb thanks to multi-millionaire sporty shelling out for him to have a new house.
Meanwhile Mel B was born and raised in the city. Before moving to Horsforth when their daughter hit the big time, mum and dad, Andrea and Martin, lived in a three-bedroomed terrace in Burley. Throughout their ascent to megastardom the house was frequently at the epicentre of attention for the girls. When they reunified in 2008 the Yorkshire Evening Post chatted with the girl band about their vivid Leeds memories.
Gesturing to the girls, Geri said: "Do you remember all of us sleeping in your bed in Kirkstall? It must have been 10 or 12 years ago, we were recording up there, we didn't even have a record deal then."
Mel B said: "Oh yes, it was my mum's house."
Geri continues: "We were top-and-tailing in this tiny house in Kirkstall, mucking in together, eating chips and, erm, what do you call those things....?"
"Scraps!" laughed Mel B.
"That's right, scraps, love those, " said Geri.
"Oh and bread cakes!" chips in Emma.
Mel B said: "We didn't go out in Leeds though, it wasn't quite as happening 10 or 15 years ago as it is now."
"But I seem to remember we did have a great house party there, " recalls Emma.
"Leeds has totally made me who I am today, " said Mel B. "Apart from being with this lot and travelling the world – your childhood experiences mould you completely."
Lifelong supporter Liz West has brought the museum exhibition together featuring over 4,000 pieces of memorabilia from back in the heyday, but she's just one of legions of fans who will always worship girl power...
* SpiceWorld: The Exhibition, from Jan 28 to July 3, Leeds City Museum, Millennium Square, Leeds, free entry, open Bank holiday Mondays, Tue, Wed and Fri, 10am to 5pm, Thu 10am to 7pm, Sat and Sun 11am to 5pm, Tel. 0113 214 1560 www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum
WHEN Scary Spice dropped into the children's wards of St. James's Hospital in Leeds some of the parents thought it was little more than a PR stunt.
Mel B, spedning Christmas in her home city in December 1997, said she wanted to raise the spirits of babies and kids separated from their parents.
When she came to visit 20-month-old Rhiann Watson, her mum and dad, Samantha and Neil, initially thought they were just models in a photo opportunity, albeit one which produced a heart-melting image.
"It just wasn't like that at all." said Mr Watson. "She sat with us all for a good 20 minutes or so chatting away and seemed genuinely interested in our situation.
"She even chatted away with Rhiann's big sister and when she ran away from her she went chasing after playing games, it was lovely and really did give us a boost."
But the experience was bittersweet for the Watson family. Doctors told them that little Rhiann, who had suffered kidney failure, probably only had 12 weeks to live.
Thankfully she pulled through and after a kidney transplant is now 14-years old and, suffice to say, a lifelong Spice Girls fan.
UNFORTUNATELY student Sophie Larner-Vincent, 18, of Kirkstall, can't recall the lengths her late grandfather went to in 1998 to ensure his beloved grandaughter got to see the Spice Girls in concert.
Mr Ron Short, who sadly passed away five years ago, knew how much little Sophie, then just six years old, adored the fab five.
"I had everything," she recalls. "I had every single CD they released, I had the dolls and anything with them on it I wanted to have.
"It's just a shame I can't actually remember seeing them in concert or what granddad did for me."
And just what was Mr Short prepared to do for her? Well, after an exhaustive search for tickets to see the girls at Manchester Arena he discovered the only way he could guarantee Sophie a place in the audience was to join the Spice Girls fan club. AT 62.
Thankfully the Yorkshire Evening Post heard of his plight and, after featuring in the paper with Sophie, a kind reader came forward with two tickets.
Sarah Dawson, now 24, of Churwell, Leeds, has been a Spice Girls fan since she was 10 years old. "The first time I saw them they were on Top Of The Pops singing Wannabe, and from that moment on I loved them." she said.
"All my friends liked them too, but I was obsessed. I bought all their singles and albums, all the official merchandise. I even had a life-size cardboard cut-out of Ginger Spice in her Union Jack dress in my room that my mum and dad bought me for Christmas.
"Part of the reason I loved them so much was the outrageous clothes they wore. Although they all looked very different, each Spice Girl had something to offer in the fashion department for a 10-year-old.
"When Scary and Ginger started wearing big platform boots, called Buffalo boots, I wanted a pair too. In fact I begged my mum to buy me some but the originals were from a store in Covent Garden in London. We couldn't go all the way there for a pair so I settled for some cheap imitation ones in black and white instead.
"Even though, with hindsight, Posh Spice had the best wardrobe, I wanted to look like Ginger Spice, with her outrageous clumpy boots, bright red hair and crop tops. She looked a bit like a cartoon character and I wanted to be her.
"I really missed Geri when she left. When the others talked about girl power, you could tell it was a nice catchy slogan, but Geri looked like she lived and breathed it.
"I saw the Spice Girls twice in concert, the first time was in 1998 on their big world tour, before Ginger left, and they were great.
"They reunited almost 10 years later in 2007. This time I was 21, and in my growing-up years I had realised they were a manufactured pop band. But on stage that second time, they were actually a lot better than I expected. I think a part of me will always love the Spice Girls, and I've never thrown away my Geri cardboard cut-out – though she lives in the loft now."
Leeds's connection with all things Spice Girls
It's been 15 years since they burst onto the pop scene and celebrating the anniversary next week is the opening of an exhibition revelling in girl power.
We look at the special connection between Leeds and all things spice. Yes, it's hard to believe. What was once thought of as recent must now be viewed through the prism of nostalgia. The Spice Girls first arrived back in 1996, hooking legions of teenagers with their catchy debut
Wannabe. Up until the Millennium, Scary, Posh, Baby, Sporty and Ginger dominated pop music. They even cracked America with hit after hit, global tours, not to mention Spiceworld and countless money-spinning merchandising deals. When it all started to disintegrate in the year 2000 the attentions of the next generation suddenly switched to the products of reality TV shows. From Girls Aloud to Will Young and JLS, the Noughties produced a new breed of stars to scream at. But as they reach this milestone it's timely to see a new exhibition celebrating their success is to be unveiled at Leeds City Museum. It's also apt as Leeds has strong connection to the girls. Melanie Chisholm, better known as Mel C, would frequently pop into Churwell, near Morley to visit her dad Alan Chisholm. After splitting with the Scouser's mum in the 1980s he moved to Leeds. And when the Spice Girls became huge, he later moved to a quiet cul-de-sac in the suburb thanks to multi-millionaire sporty shelling out for him to have a new house.
Meanwhile Mel B was born and raised in the city. Before moving to Horsforth when their daughter hit the big time, mum and dad, Andrea and Martin, lived in a three-bedroomed terrace in Burley. Throughout their ascent to megastardom the house was frequently at the epicentre of attention for the girls. When they reunified in 2008 the Yorkshire Evening Post chatted with the girl band about their vivid Leeds memories.
Gesturing to the girls, Geri said: "Do you remember all of us sleeping in your bed in Kirkstall? It must have been 10 or 12 years ago, we were recording up there, we didn't even have a record deal then."
Mel B said: "Oh yes, it was my mum's house."
Geri continues: "We were top-and-tailing in this tiny house in Kirkstall, mucking in together, eating chips and, erm, what do you call those things....?"
"Scraps!" laughed Mel B.
"That's right, scraps, love those, " said Geri.
"Oh and bread cakes!" chips in Emma.
Mel B said: "We didn't go out in Leeds though, it wasn't quite as happening 10 or 15 years ago as it is now."
"But I seem to remember we did have a great house party there, " recalls Emma.
"Leeds has totally made me who I am today, " said Mel B. "Apart from being with this lot and travelling the world – your childhood experiences mould you completely."
Lifelong supporter Liz West has brought the museum exhibition together featuring over 4,000 pieces of memorabilia from back in the heyday, but she's just one of legions of fans who will always worship girl power...
* SpiceWorld: The Exhibition, from Jan 28 to July 3, Leeds City Museum, Millennium Square, Leeds, free entry, open Bank holiday Mondays, Tue, Wed and Fri, 10am to 5pm, Thu 10am to 7pm, Sat and Sun 11am to 5pm, Tel. 0113 214 1560 www.leeds.gov.uk/citymuseum
WHEN Scary Spice dropped into the children's wards of St. James's Hospital in Leeds some of the parents thought it was little more than a PR stunt.
Mel B, spedning Christmas in her home city in December 1997, said she wanted to raise the spirits of babies and kids separated from their parents.
When she came to visit 20-month-old Rhiann Watson, her mum and dad, Samantha and Neil, initially thought they were just models in a photo opportunity, albeit one which produced a heart-melting image.
"It just wasn't like that at all." said Mr Watson. "She sat with us all for a good 20 minutes or so chatting away and seemed genuinely interested in our situation.
"She even chatted away with Rhiann's big sister and when she ran away from her she went chasing after playing games, it was lovely and really did give us a boost."
But the experience was bittersweet for the Watson family. Doctors told them that little Rhiann, who had suffered kidney failure, probably only had 12 weeks to live.
Thankfully she pulled through and after a kidney transplant is now 14-years old and, suffice to say, a lifelong Spice Girls fan.
UNFORTUNATELY student Sophie Larner-Vincent, 18, of Kirkstall, can't recall the lengths her late grandfather went to in 1998 to ensure his beloved grandaughter got to see the Spice Girls in concert.
Mr Ron Short, who sadly passed away five years ago, knew how much little Sophie, then just six years old, adored the fab five.
"I had everything," she recalls. "I had every single CD they released, I had the dolls and anything with them on it I wanted to have.
"It's just a shame I can't actually remember seeing them in concert or what granddad did for me."
And just what was Mr Short prepared to do for her? Well, after an exhaustive search for tickets to see the girls at Manchester Arena he discovered the only way he could guarantee Sophie a place in the audience was to join the Spice Girls fan club. AT 62.
Thankfully the Yorkshire Evening Post heard of his plight and, after featuring in the paper with Sophie, a kind reader came forward with two tickets.
Sarah Dawson, now 24, of Churwell, Leeds, has been a Spice Girls fan since she was 10 years old. "The first time I saw them they were on Top Of The Pops singing Wannabe, and from that moment on I loved them." she said.
"All my friends liked them too, but I was obsessed. I bought all their singles and albums, all the official merchandise. I even had a life-size cardboard cut-out of Ginger Spice in her Union Jack dress in my room that my mum and dad bought me for Christmas.
"Part of the reason I loved them so much was the outrageous clothes they wore. Although they all looked very different, each Spice Girl had something to offer in the fashion department for a 10-year-old.
"When Scary and Ginger started wearing big platform boots, called Buffalo boots, I wanted a pair too. In fact I begged my mum to buy me some but the originals were from a store in Covent Garden in London. We couldn't go all the way there for a pair so I settled for some cheap imitation ones in black and white instead.
"Even though, with hindsight, Posh Spice had the best wardrobe, I wanted to look like Ginger Spice, with her outrageous clumpy boots, bright red hair and crop tops. She looked a bit like a cartoon character and I wanted to be her.
"I really missed Geri when she left. When the others talked about girl power, you could tell it was a nice catchy slogan, but Geri looked like she lived and breathed it.
"I saw the Spice Girls twice in concert, the first time was in 1998 on their big world tour, before Ginger left, and they were great.
"They reunited almost 10 years later in 2007. This time I was 21, and in my growing-up years I had realised they were a manufactured pop band. But on stage that second time, they were actually a lot better than I expected. I think a part of me will always love the Spice Girls, and I've never thrown away my Geri cardboard cut-out – though she lives in the loft now."
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