U2 Mandela film song wins Golden Globe
A song by Irish rock group U2 composed for the film "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom" has won a Golden Globe award, the film's producer Anant Singh said in a statement on Monday.
(L-R) Musicians Larry Mullen Jr., Bono, Adam Clayton and The Edge of U2, winners of Best Original Song for ‘Ordinary Love’ from ‘Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom,’ pose in the press room during the 71st Annual Golden Globe Awards held at The Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 12, 2014 in Beverly Hills, California. Kevin Winter/AFP
“Congratulations to Bono and U2. They composed an amazing song that truly captures the love story of Madiba and Winnie [Madikizela-Mandela],” Singh said.
“We thank them for their contribution to ‘Mandela: Long Walk To Freedom’ and for their commitment to Madiba and South Africa.”
During the band’s acceptance speech at the awards ceremony in Beverly Hills, California, on Sunday, the band reflected on what former president Nelson Mandela meant to it.
U2 guitarist The Edge said: “We have been working for president Mandela since the 70s, since we were teenagers and when we did our very first concert against the apartheid movement, so it has taken us 35 years to write this song”.
Lead singer Bono described the film as “a kind of a dysfunctional love story”.
“This man [Mandela] turned our life upside down, right side up. A man who refused to hate, not because he didn’t have rage or anger, but he thought love would do a better job.”
Mandela died aged 95 at his home in Houghton, Johannesburg, on December 5.
– Sapa
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