This is the singer's first venture into the restaurant business.
Ed Sheeran performs at the Latitude Festival in Southwold, England. Picture: Getty ImagesBritish pop star Ed Sheeran will soon be making ladies swoon with cocktail-making skills instead of his usual guitar strumming.
Sheeran and his manager Stuart Camp are hoping to turn Spanish diner Galicia into a restaurant and live music bar. The West London venue is situated on Portobello Road, a swanky haven for tourists, and should be operational as of next month. The duo reportedly bought the property for £1.5 million last year. Their vision is to create a venue with a “cool member’s club vibe” in a shabby-chic style that focuses on quality music.reports Sheeran is considering renaming the revamped spot after his hit singleSheeran follows in the footsteps of numerous other celebrities who have ventured into the restaurant business, including Lady Gaga, Drake, Jon Bon Jovi, Jay-Z, Robert De Niro, and Justin Timberlake.
South Africa Latest News, South Africa Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
You could meet Ed Sheeran in Cape Town! Here's how!If you love Ed Sheeran, then this is the competition for you.
Read more »
SUPERFANS: You can WIN a chance to meet Ed Sheeran in Cape Town and here's how!SUPERFANS: You can WIN a chance to meet edsheeran in Cape Town and here's how! BigConcerts C24EdInCapeTown
Read more »
OP-ED: The UCT and Wits strategies on #FeesMustFall were different for good reasonsAdam Habib’s analysis of UCT events regarding disruptive protest action deserves to be challenged.
Read more »
OP-ED: Towards a systemic approach for eradicating poverty and inequalityAhead of the 25th commemoration of South Africa’s attainment of democracy, it is all the more important to address conceptual issues around poverty and inequality since we now hold the unflattering status as the most unequal country in the world.
Read more »
OP-ED: 25 years of democracy, Part 4: Decline of the liberation projectTo exercise one’s right to vote is described by many as a civic duty and not to exercise it is seen as a failure to discharge a responsibility that could alter what is wrong in the country. Much has changed since the first elections of 1994 and the liberation and democratic project is in crisis. These problems are unlikely to be remedied by the vote.
Read more »
OP-ED: Environmental management needs to be democratisedIn a time of environmental devastation and the need for paradigm shifts in order to govern for change, how does one address government officials on what to do, without going around the old, familiar circuits of polemic that leads to relational breakdown?
Read more »
OP-ED: Squatting on the margins – farmworkers find themselves in housing policy No Man’s LandThe Extension of Security and Tenure Act deters farmers from providing housing on farms. It provides for retiring farmworkers, who have worked and lived at least 10 years up to their retirement on the same farm, to remain living in their farmhouse for the rest of their lives. It requires an onerous and expensive eviction process to get people who do not work on the farm, off the farm.
Read more »
OP-ED: Confirmed: Zuma’s spooks spied on SaveSAIt’s not really surprising to find out that the state’s intelligence machinery spent a fair amount of time between 2016 and 2018 illegally monitoring civil society organisations like Save South Africa, Casac and Right2Know.
Read more »
OP-ED: The Big Debate: Land Reform – Just an Electoral Ruse?Errol April is an MK veteran who grew up on the Cape Flats. Fruit farming is a long stretch from what he knows: explosives and bombs. But since the government made available 211 hectares of prime agricultural land in the Southern Cape wine region to him in 2013, April has proved his doubters wrong.
Read more »
OP-ED: Happy March 8th: Women languish in abusive lengthy pre-trial detention in MadagascarIn Madagascar, a broken justice system means that people, even women with children, end up spending months or years in detention before being charged with any crime.
Read more »