Ginger Spice Expresses ‘Girl Power’ Through Children’s Book
Ginger Spice has trampled the special anticipation of every tween girls globally; putting a seal on any outlook for a Spice Girls reunion do again.
“It probably won’t happen ever again,” Geri Halliwell confessed. “I’m still absolutely blown away that we did more than one show. So, right now I’m thinking this is it. This is the last time you will ever get to see this girl power, the five Spices onstage as one.”
Bearing in mind the crowd frenzy produced by the present—and in next to no time finished—Spice Girls Comeback World Expedition, Halliwell did indicated that, should communal uproar ever again arrive at such a fever pitch for the girl group, she would not be utterly reluctant to hit the road for a second time.
“What this reunion taught me is you can never say never,” Halliwell mentioned. “If you had asked me 10 years ago whether there’d ever be a Spice Girls reunion concert, I’d have gone, ‘No f–king way!’ ”
We may well remember her for being the persona non grata in Spice World. She gave the ultimate sign of the start of the demise for the group’s first go-round, abruptly turning the five-some into a quartet back in 1998. She was, conversely, one of the principal brains behind the recent get-together.
Notwithstanding her obvious dislike to reorganizing onstage with Posh, Baby, Scary and Sporty, Halliwell hailed the tour as “amazing…an experience of a lifetime. I couldn’t have asked for it to be better, actually.”
Halliwell also disclaimed the up-to-the-minute wave of information alluding to unbearable internal strife between the individual. The girl band’s current proclamation that they would discontinue their world tour by four dates initiated hearsays, stating that rift within the group was at fault.
“Actually, it’s gone on longer than we planned because we thought we were only going to go to the end of January. After February, everybody had commitments—kids had to go back to school and that. So, we had to leave places out that we would have loved to have gone to.”
The tour would end Feb. 26 in Toronto.
Following that, Ginger Spice at least, is warming up her artistic power in a dissimilar facility. She’ll pursue the famous path Madonna has established and publish the first in a series of children’s books, centering a character named Ugenia Lavender, due this May.
Although the synopsis or a title for the book has yet to be revealed, predictably, Halliwell describes her work as “a rebirth of girl power.”
“I love writing. It’s my passion. It’s something I feel was very complementary to my life as a mother, to become a writer.“
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