This week’s episode of Queen The Greatest Live showcases the band’s iconic opening to their 1986 Magic Tour. This would be Freddie Mercury’s last set of live concerts with Brian May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon, before his HIV diagnosis and death
The latest episode of Queen the Greatest live looks back at Freddie Mercury’s ever-changing stagewear during the late Seventies into the early Eighties. This time around three classic live performances of Roger Taylor’s Sheer Heart Attack are revisited with the singer’s costume
Freddie Mercury’s former fiancée Mary Austin inherited 50 percent of the late singer’s estate following his death in 1991. And since his parents have died this has risen to three-quarters, with the rest owned by his sister Kamara. Yesterday his old flame,
Before he came out, Freddie Mercury had a long-time partner called Mary Austin, who at one point he intended to marry. The former lovers remained close friends for the rest of the Queen singer’s short life before he tragically lost his battle
This week’s episode of Queen the Greatest Live continues examining the band’s flamboyant stage wear. As usual, Freddie Mercury is centre-stage in footage this time taken from Christmas Eve 1975. The band had just released their fourth studio album A Night At
After a sensational 21 years as Queen’s frontman, Freddie Mercury tragically lost his battle with AIDS in November 1991. The following spring, Brian May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon brought together an incredible group of music legends from Elton John and David
The drummer said: “At the beginning, many years ago, there was this big thing, you know, that we wanted Zandra Rhodes to do everything. Well, she made me a costume. I wore it once. It was so bloody hot I never wore
The Los Angeles Dodgers are hoping nothing serious happened to their All-Star first baseman, Freddie Freeman, after he exited his World Baseball Classic game Tuesday with a hamstring injury. Freeman, who plays for Canada, was at bat when he hit a pop-up
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A Japanese cult leader who famously claimed he could channel the spirit of any living or dead person has passed away at the age of 66. Ryuho Okawa, leader and CEO of the “Happy Science” cult, was rushed to hospital after collapsing