This month, Nadine covers QX Magazine, a free LGBTQ publication.
It includes a brand new interview and photoshoot. In the interview she covers women in music and Grindr emojis aswell as talking about her show at the Clapham Grand next week.
Check out the gallery links below for the digital scans and high quality photoshoot pictures!
If you missed it last Friday, watch Nadine cameo in Soft Border Patrol, a Northern Irish mockumentary sitcom in the style of a reality television programme based around the subject of the Republic of Ireland–United Kingdom border in a post-Brexit world.
I’ve also added a load of screen captures in the gallery, some cracking moody/annoyed facial expressions!
We’re putting on *The* Show of a Girls Aloud party & gonna make a Whole Lotta History and that’s a Promise.
We present the voice of our fave girl
band, the one and only Nadine Coyle on stage for a very special LIVE
show playing all your fave Girls Aloud HITS, alongside 90’s & 00’s
pop-tastic DJ sets from Push The Button & We Love Pop.
The fierce, funny and fabulous GALS ALOUD will also be performing alongside Nadine Coyle – LIVE at our Sound Of The Underground Party. This hilarious drag tribute show pays homage to the highs, lows, and hits of the greatest girl band of the millennium.
EXPECT:
Nadine Coyle LIVE onstage
90s & 00s DJs
GALS ALOUD – Tribute Show
Sing Something Kind Of Oooooh in our Girls Aloud Karaoke Room
Cappuccino To Go Cocktails
Call The Shot – Shots
Love Machine – Off’s
No Good Advice Booth
Can’t Speak French Lessons
All The Girls Aloud Face Masks & Cardboard Cut Outs
The Grand Goes Pop! has already brought
you monthly sold out parties with the likes of 90s & 00s pop
superstars from B*Witched, Vengaboys & S Club.
Push The Button is a celebration of the last 4 decades of POP (from 1990 onwards) – they play ALL THE HITS: synths, guitars, keytars, drum machines, girl bands, boy bands, impossible princesses – it’s a glamophonic electronic d-d-disco baby!
Nadine Coyle has joined forces with BBC Children In Need and Asda to launch a campaign that will raise money to help disadvantaged children and young people through play.
The former Girls Aloud star said she is thrilled to support the 2018 Power Of Play campaign, and is the initiative’s new Play Ambassador.
The singer recently visited the Limes Community Centre in Walthamstow, north-east London, to find out how funding from the charity is helping disabled children with opportunities to play.
The centre, which encourages its young attendees to try new things, develop skills and explore their senses through different play-related activities, is partially funded by Children In Need, receiving a grant of just over £75,000 from the charity across three years.
The funding enables them to pay for a Child and Family Support Co-ordinator, who plans and delivers play activities.
At the centre, Coyle met Aleenah, who has no sight in her right eye due to Peter’s Syndrome, a rare condition which means the eye does not fully develop in the womb.
The Limes has been invaluable to the eight-year-old, as having access to its sensory room has helped her be more relaxed with light, and her sensitivity levels have improved.
Coyle, 33, said the centre has a “beautiful atmosphere” and is a “very happy place” for all those to use it and benefit from it.
She added that there should be more such facilities available across the country to help those in need.
Dr Amanda Gummer, a research psychologist specialising in child development, said: “Play is vital for healthy child development – it’s how children make sense of their world and develop all sorts of important skills.
“Children’s natural curiosity and imagination help them learn about the way the world works, and playing with friends teaches them the social skills they need throughout their lives. Active play promotes physical development and well-being and a balanced approach to play promotes healthy, holistic child development.”
Coyle has worked with Children In Need several times throughout her career, and said the Power Of Play campaign was the “perfect” project for her.
As part of the campaign, Asda also hopes to inspire parents to play games with their children in an attempt to get them away from their computer screens, something that Coyle has struggled to do with her own daughter.
Coyle noticed a change in four-year-old Anaiya, her daughter with partner Jason Bell, when she was playing on her iPad.
The singer said: “She loved watching videos of other people opening presents and playing with toys.
“It put her in a bad mood, so we stopped it completely.”
Asda customers will be able to pick up a play planner, take part in in-store fundraising activities or purchase Pudsey clothing and ears, with all donations going to Children In Need.
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