Article Options
Popular Articles
  1. NAACP picks young activist as its new president
  2. Obama seals nomination: 'This is our moment'
  3. Ike survivors may wait weeks for hot meals, baths
  4. Obama chooses Lincoln’s Bible for inauguration
  5. Guest editorial...Celebrating Christmas
No popular articles found.
Popular Authors
  1. Courier Newsroom
  2. Associated Press
  3. Christian Morrow
  4. Deborah M. Todd
  5. C. Denise Johnson
No popular authors found.

Black America Book


SUBSCRIBE TODAY

Subscribe by Credit Card Online
 
Subscribe

 »  Home  »  National  »  Rihanna taking no wardrobe risks for Malaysia show
Rihanna taking no wardrobe risks for Malaysia show
By Associated Press | Published  01/6/2009 | National | Unrated
Rihanna taking no wardrobe risks for Malaysia show
by Sean Yoong
Associated Press Writer

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — The good girl gone bad has promised to be good for one night.

R&B sensation Rihanna will shun skimpy outfits when she performs in Malaysia next month, the concert's organizers said Tuesday, becoming the latest international star affected by the Muslim-majority country's strict rules on performers' dress.

 
COVERING UP — In a November 2008 file photo Rihanna performs during a concert suburban Taguig, south of Manila, Philippines. Rihanna will shun skimpy outfits when she performs in Malaysia in February, the concert's organizers said Tuesday.(AP Photo/Aaron Favila)

Recent concerts by Gwen Stefani and Avril Lavigne faced protests by conservative Muslim Malaysians over immodest clothes. Stefani eventually made what she called "a major sacrifice" at her show by donning attire that revealed little skin.

Under government guidelines, a female performer must be covered from the top of her chest, including her shoulders, to her knees.

The organizers of a Pussycat Dolls concert in 2006 were fined nearly $3,000 after the U.S. girl group was accused of flouting decency regulations.

The Malaysian organizers of Rihanna's Feb. 13 stop on her "Good Girl Gone Bad" tour voiced hopes that protests would not mar the Grammy-winning singer's show.

Rihanna's management is "aware of the country's regulations and the difficulties of doing a show," Razman Razali, managing director of Pineapple Concerts, told The Associated Press.

However, a district branch of the opposition Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, which blasted Lavigne's on-stage moves as "too sexy" last year, said in an online commentary that Rihanna was "sexier and more dangerous" than Lavigne.

Concert ticket Web site Axcess said sales for Rihanna's show in a 16,000-capacity Kuala Lumpur stadium were selling briskly Tuesday, just hours after newspapers announced the event.

Rihanna, 20, has had a slew of hits since bursting onto the music scene in 2005, including "Umbrella," ''Pon de Replay" and "Unfaithful."