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Sporty Spice ready to take "final bow"
11/12/2007 8:00 PM, Reuters
Spice Girl Melanie Chisholm is glad
she overcame her reluctance and agreed to a reunion of the hit
group.
Nearly a decade after the five-member group became four --
when Geri Halliwell left Chisholm, Melanie Brown, Emma Bunton
and Victoria Beckham -- and seven years since the release of
their third and supposedly final album, the Spice Girls are
back with a greatest hits album and a world reunion tour.
But Chisholm, a.k.a. Sporty Spice or Mel C., said it was
not the beginning of a new chapter, but rather "our final bow"
to celebrate a career that has seen the group sell more than 55
million albums and rack up 10 No. 1 singles around the world.
"We all hoped (the reunion) would be successful, but we're
all quite overwhelmed by the actual response," Chisholm told
Reuters in a telephone interview from Los Angeles, where the
group is rehearsing for the tour, which starts in Vancouver on
December 2 and is scheduled to play 18 cities in nine
countries.
"That has just made us more determined to make the show the
best show any British pop band has ever put on," she said.
But Chisholm admits she was reluctant to be part of the
reunion, which she said the group began talking about after
they were asked to perform at one of the 2005 Live 8 concerts
to fight global poverty.
"For years I always thought I would never go back. It's a
very personal thing to me. I had a lot of things to deal with
after the Spice Girls, I had a lot of personal issues, and I
have been very happy being a solo artist," said Chisholm, 33,
who has released four solo albums.
"I had to really think about my decision, but after
spending time with the girls and now getting into the show I am
so glad this is the decision I had made," she said, adding that
Halliwell -- a.k.a. Ginger Spice -- did try to convince her by
telling her the group would reunite with or without her.
"That was a phone call that I received, whether it was true
or not I don't know," Chisholm said, laughing.
Sporty, Ginger, Posh (Beckham), Scary (Brown) and Baby
(Bunton) made it big in 1996 with their hit single "Wannabe"
off the album "Spice." This was followed with 1997's
"Spiceworld," which also spawned a movie of the same name.
But their success was short-lived when Halliwell walked out
on the band in 1998, only four years after The Spice Girls was
created, and the remaining band members went their separate
ways after releasing the album "Forever" in 2000.
The greatest hits album will be released on Tuesday in the
United States and Canada.
Beckham has maintained the highest profile since the band
broke up, helped by her superstar soccer-playing husband David,
while Brown received headlines recently with a high-profile
paternity case that confirmed Hollywood star Eddie Murphy as
father of her newborn baby girl.
(Editing by Arthur Spiegelman and Eric Beech)
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