Lithuanian Hotels Roll out Red Carpet for Film Festival

Guests pose on the red carpet during the opening ceremony of Vilnius International Film Festival at the Hotel Pacai in Vilnius, Lithuania. (AFP)
Guests pose on the red carpet during the opening ceremony of Vilnius International Film Festival at the Hotel Pacai in Vilnius, Lithuania. (AFP)
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Lithuanian Hotels Roll out Red Carpet for Film Festival

Guests pose on the red carpet during the opening ceremony of Vilnius International Film Festival at the Hotel Pacai in Vilnius, Lithuania. (AFP)
Guests pose on the red carpet during the opening ceremony of Vilnius International Film Festival at the Hotel Pacai in Vilnius, Lithuania. (AFP)

With Lithuania's cinemas still shut due to the pandemic, local movie-lovers will be able to enjoy a cherished film festival in a novel way -- from the comfort of a hotel room.

Organizers of the International Vilnius Film Festival, which began last week, are inviting residents of the capital to check into one of its hotels to watch the films beamed to their rooms.

"The pandemic took a toll on mental health and people need entertainment. It also gives some support to the hard-hit hotel industry," festival CEO Algirdas Ramaska told AFP.

"Some 200 rooms were booked in hotels for an opening night and they are almost sold out for weekends," he said, before greeting guests in dinner jackets and dresses for their tailor-made festival experience.

The hotel rooms are decorated with festival signs and there is a hand-written postcard from the organizers. Prices for the experience, which runs until April, vary from $95 to $350 per night.

Vilnius businesswoman Kristina Sermuksnyte-Alesiuniene said she would visit three different hotels in the coming weeks. "I did not miss a single Vilnius film festival in the last decade and cannot miss this one. And this year it offers once-in-a-lifetime experience," she told AFP in her room, as she settled in to watch the opening ceremony online.

Lithuanian actor Gabija Siurbyte, another festival fan, said the experience will be helpful towards returning to the habit of leaving home to watch movies when the pandemic ends.

"It felt so good to open a wardrobe for a dinner dress and put on heels again," she said at hotel PACAI, a converted 17th-century palace located in the heart of Vilnius's baroque old town.

Last year's edition of the festival had to switch to an online-only format and organizers had been hopeful that the 26th edition in 2021 could be different.

But cinemas in Lithuania have been shut since November.

The festival was opened with "People We Know Are Confused," a drama produced by Dagne Vildziunaite about life in Vilnius as a sign of much needed solidarity. "The feeling is rather strange as we would like to have a usual festival. But we decided to move ahead with the premiere in a show of solidarity to the festival and actors," she told AFP.



Rod Stewart to Play Legends Slot at Glastonbury Next Year

Rod Stewart performs on stage during his One Last Time concert at Royal Arena Copenhagen, Denmark June 9, 2024. (Ritzau Scanpix/Torben Christensen via Reuters)
Rod Stewart performs on stage during his One Last Time concert at Royal Arena Copenhagen, Denmark June 9, 2024. (Ritzau Scanpix/Torben Christensen via Reuters)
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Rod Stewart to Play Legends Slot at Glastonbury Next Year

Rod Stewart performs on stage during his One Last Time concert at Royal Arena Copenhagen, Denmark June 9, 2024. (Ritzau Scanpix/Torben Christensen via Reuters)
Rod Stewart performs on stage during his One Last Time concert at Royal Arena Copenhagen, Denmark June 9, 2024. (Ritzau Scanpix/Torben Christensen via Reuters)

Rocker Rod Stewart will play the legends slot at Glastonbury 2025, the first act confirmed for next year's edition of the British music festival.

His Sunday afternoon performance will be the 79-year-old singer's first at Worthy Farm in southwest England since he last took to the festival's Pyramid stage in 2002.

"I’m proud, ready and more than able to pleasure and titillate my friends at Glastonbury in June," Stewart said in a statement.

One of the biggest selling artists of all time, Stewart follows the likes of Lionel Richie, Diana Ross and Shania Twain last year to play the legends slot.

Stewart has a spate of European and North American tour dates scheduled for next year but earlier this month, he announced he planned to stop performing "large-scale world tours".

"But I have no desire to retire. I love what I do, and I do what I love. I’m fit, have a full head of hair, and can run 100 meters in 18 seconds at the jolly old age of 79," Stewart wrote in an Instagram post.

Stewart, known for 1970s hits "Maggie May", "Sailing" and "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?", released his latest album "Swing Fever", a collaboration with pianist Jools Holland, earlier this year. The record topped the UK albums chart.

The Glastonbury festival was started by dairy farmer Michael Eavis in 1970 and over the decades has become a sprawling and often muddy five-day event in June, with some of the biggest names in music performing for tens of thousands of revelers.

Next year's edition will take place from June 25-29.