Desperate plea for ‘a need to be kind’ after Liam Payne’s tragic death

Desperate plea for ‘a need to be kind’ after Liam Payne’s tragic death

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Following the passing of Liam Payne, Boyzone’s Keith Duffy said tonight that more should be done to help young musicians’ mental health.

Duffy, 50, called the tragedy an “eye-opener to everybody in the music business” as he reflected on what it was like to be in a boyband in the 1990s.

The actor said, “Boybands have been known to be used as puppets and a marketable commodity that have a shelf life, but fame comes along with that,” at the world premiere of the new docu-series Boyzone: No Matter What tonight.

And I believe everyone in the music industry will be opened up by the tragic passing of that youngster from One Direction. Making money from young musicians in a band is all well and good. Promoting their brand and their music is all well and good. Someone needs to manage their mental state. Someone needs to be watchful and reassured that they are okay. They need to be kind. “

Shane Lynch, Keith Duffy and Ronan Keating attend the World Premiere of Boyzone: No Matter What
Shane Lynch, Keith Duffy and Ronan Keating attend the World Premiere of Boyzone: No Matter What (WireImage)

Payne’s death has led to the murder of five people, all of whom are facing manslaughter charges. The One Direction singer, who was allegedly thrown from a hotel balcony in Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires, on October 16, died from “polytrauma.”

Duffy, from Donaghmede, Dublin, remembered Payne’s life and career at the premiere for the show, which explores the” fame, fall-outs and tragedy “of Boyzone, who formed in 1993 before splitting seven years later.

The event, held in Camden, north London, saw Duffy reunite with Ronan Keating and Shane Lynch. After becoming sick of the “toxic” music industry and settling in rural Ireland, Mickey Graham decided against attending the reunion.

Stephen Gately died in 2009 at the age of 33 shortly after the band staged a comeback. His tragedy is depicted in Boyzone: No Matter What, a Sky and Streaming service that launched on February 2.

Keating, 47, said filming the three-part series was like” therapy”. He continued, “We had to put in hours and hours and hours to film this, and it took us hours to actually enter that headspace.”

“So the first hour might be quite light, but after two, three, four, five, six hours of talking about it, it’s incredible, it’s like therapy. You enter both your life and your experiences with greater depth.

Source: Mirror

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