Ed O’Neill
voices cranky
octopus Hank.
UP
TO
51 %
DECREASE OF
SPIDER VEINS*
We can’t wait for...
It’s been 13 years since Pixar’s runaway hit
Finding Nemo wowed children and adults alike.
Now fans of the underwater adventure can rest
easy, as the next instalment, Finding Dory , is
heading downstream in June! Ellen DeGeneres,
who voices the supremely forgetful Dory, is set
to take the lead as Dory hunts for her long-lost
parents along
the California
coastline. Modern
Family’s Ty Burrell
as well as Willem
Dafoe and Diane
Keaton also lend
their voices.
FINDING DORY
FINDING DORY
IN CINEMAS
JUNE 1 6
Nemo and
Dory are back!
surprise
AUSTRALIA’S
GOT TALENT
MONDAY,
MARCH 7, 7.30PM
& SUNDAY,
MARCH 13, 8PM,
NINE
The singer has
a special treat
in store forAGT
viewers if he
makes it to
the finals
Fletcher Pilon
I
t was always going to be diffi cult for Fletcher
Pilon to sing Infi nite Child, the song he wrote for
his 10-year-old brother Banjo who was killed in
a car accident seven months ago. But Fletcher
managed to muster up the courage to perform it
at the auditions for Australia’s Got Talent.
Now through to the semi-fi nals, Fletcher tells
Woman’s Day about the surprise he has in
store for viewers if he makes it to the end.
“If I make it to the top fi ve, I will be
re-doing my audition performance, so
it’s going to be quite emotional,” says
the 14 -year-old, who admits he’s nervous
about revisiting those emotions again.
“I received such positive feedback after
the fi rst time, so I hope I can make everyone
proud again,” he says of judges Sophie
Monk, Kelly Osbourne, Eddie Perfect and
Ian “Dicko” Dickson, who were moved
to tears by his poignant performance.
“If I make it through, I think it will be
a good opportunity to improve on my
fi rst audition. Plus, it will be a nice thing to do
for Banj and my family,” he explains.
“I tend not to play Infi nite Child very often,
because it’s hard to continuously put myself into
that state, and I never want it to become just
another song – I want to keep the emotion there.”
And should he win AGT, the humble teen
has big plans for his future. “It’s a pretty
surreal thing to think about,” he says
coyly. “And when you think about it,
$250,000 is a lot of money for six
minutes of singing! I think I’d try to
treat the situation as sensibly as I can
and use it as another step in my journey.”
AGT host
Dave Hughes
congratulates
Fletcher.
Fletcher’s song
Infi nite Child
is dedicated
to his late
brother Banjo.