The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Abba fans’ Afro ban

Avatar show’s audience are told: Dress up – but not in ‘culturally insensitiv­e’ 70s wigs

- By Sabrina Miller

WITH their sequins, bell bottoms and vertiginou­s platform boots, Abba were the epitome of 1970s cool.

But fans wanting to get into the spirit of the era have been banned from wearing socalled disco wigs as they are ‘culturally insensitiv­e’, The

Mail on Sunday has learned.

Audience members attending the Abba Voyage shows, which feature holograms performing the band’s greatest hits, have been told not to wear the Afro-style hairpieces because they are ‘not appropriat­e’.

In an email to ticket-holders, promoters say: ‘Many of our guests will want to get in the spirit of the show by dressing up for their visit. [But] please do not wear so-called “Afro” wigs.

‘These wigs are culturally insensitiv­e and not appropriat­e to be worn as fancy dress. If any guests are wearing this style of wig they will be respectful­ly asked to remove them as a condition of entry to the arena.’

Some fans have tweeted in support of the ban, with one writing: ‘I kind of love that Abba Voyage said that white people better not come in Afro wigs.’

But the owner of Mad Hatters fancy-dress shop, which has hired 1970s-themed outfits to fans attending the show, said it was a shame.

Jennifer Barlow, 46, said: ‘When I went to Abba Voyage recently, I saw a lot of people in fancy dress. Nobody wants to upset anyone or be offensive. But when people dress up, they are doing it as a homage to the band and to the 1970s era. It’s a shame that we are now so frightened to offend people that we are taking life too seriously.’

The ban on wigs has been buried in the ‘Frequently asked questions’ section of the show’s website since it opened at the former Olympics site in Stratford, East London, in May 2022. But the informatio­n is now being emailed to tickethold­ers, under the subject heading ‘Some important informatio­n’.

Abba Voyage features virtual versions of Agnetha Faltskog, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson and Anni-Frid (‘Frida’) Lyngstad as they were in their 1979 heyday.

Over 90 minutes, the so-called ‘Abbatars’, backed by a live band, perform 22 of the Swedish supergroup’s hits – including Dancing Queen, Mamma Mia and Waterloo, their debut song which won the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest, setting them on the road to stardom.

They had eight consecutiv­e No1 albums and sold 385million records worldwide.

The Voyage show is set to run in London until January 2024. Producers then plan to tour the show around the world.

The producers of Abba Voyage refused to comment on the wig ban. Some commentato­rs have said white people who wear Afro wigs are making a joke out of a hairstyle that has deep cultural significan­ce for the black community.

 ?? ?? 70s HEYDAY: Abba’s Anni-Frid, left, and Agnetha winning Eurovision in 1974, and the warning sent to fans
70s HEYDAY: Abba’s Anni-Frid, left, and Agnetha winning Eurovision in 1974, and the warning sent to fans

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