On a mission to make Earth happy

Published Apr 10, 2015

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He sings and the world claps and dances, his style is emulated by youngsters everywhere, but lately Pharrell Williams has been using his influence to galvanise the masses to support environmental causes.

It was announced on Thursday that he has become the style director for Woolworths, a collaboration that will see the superstar and the business align their values and actions to make a difference to people and the planet.

“We hope Pharrell will help us make sustainability cool for the next generation of South Africans and help us create a better future for our children,” said Ian Moir, chief executive of Woolworths.

It is a cause that Williams has wholeheartedly embraced.

In an exclusive interview in Los Angeles for Independent Media, Williams revealed that he became an eco activist because he began to realise the importance of the environment.

“You realise that this is your home,” he said.

“If you can tend your lawn, field or garden, you can tend the earth because it is the biggest lawn we have.

“It’s this big rock; it’s the only thing we have. It’s our biosphere, it’s where we live… we have to think about it,” said the musician and designer, who was not wearing the vintage Vivienne Westwood “Mountain” hat he made famous, but rather a dark green cap.

“To have a corporation like Woolworths understand that and for them to have the kind of matching initiative in South Africa, in the middle of that precious gem and continent… I have to be a part of that,” he said.

Williams is spoilt for choice when it comes to the number of people knocking on his door to work with him, so what does it take for him lend his name to a corporation or collaborate with an artist?

He said he first examines their intentions and then he asks himself whether he can contribute.

“If I don’t feel like there is much I can add to it, I don’t want to get in anyone’s way,” he said.

The creative director of Bionic Yarn, which makes ecologically sustainable yarns and fabrics from recycled plastics, he has helped forge eco collaborations with clothing manufacturers.

The biggest of these is RAW for the Oceans, an initiative that recycles ocean waste into G-Star denims.

Addressing an event at the UN in New York last month to celebrate International Day of Happiness, Williams highlighted the importance of tackling climate change. He asked supporters to sign a petition to put pressure on world leaders to commit to climate action.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos in January, he joined Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Al Gore, in announcing a Live Earth music event on June 18 to demand action on climate change.

He serves as Creative Director of the event, which takes place across seven continents – including Antarctica.

Cape Town is one of the cities hosting a “Live Earth” concert, about which Williams said: “Expect energy and intention. There will be music that will be played with intention so you will feel it. You feel the intention.”

At Davos, Williams called for the support of everyone who believes in clean lakes, rivers and oceans, who cares where their products come from, and is giving to make sure every kid gets the best shot at a great education, an issue he regards as near to his heart.

Although Williams’ mother, Dr Carolyn Williams, was a school teacher, he has admitted not doing very well at school at first and said that words of encouragement from his teachers kept him interested in learning.

“Don’t give up,” he advised youngsters. “Keep looking for that one spot that makes you interested in learning.

“It’s super simple. If you figure out what you love to do, what you would do for free, that is usually where it starts...

“Then you ask yourself, ‘Is there a way to actually service humanity while you doing it?’ If you can, then that is a dream job.

“And if you are helping humanity at the same time, now God loves you too.”

Williams feels that process starts as early as primary school. And if the Woolworths fund-raising programme, MySchool, “is going to offer that, I want to be part of it”, he said.

Currently one of the judges in the eighth season of singing competition The Voice and with a new album out titled G I R L, Williams is a busy man and he would not have it any other way. “I don’t want to take any of it for granted,” he says. “I would rather stay focused on the work. He says he appreciates his success “because I know where it comes from. It comes from the seed which is the work, being curious about what you do and being appreciative to be able to collaborate with people… that is where all of this comes from,” he said.

He said he was humbled by the success of Happy, the song from the Despicable Me 2 soundtrack, and had no inkling it would become such a global phenonenon. It was the best-selling single of last year, peaked at number one in the music charts of more than 20 countries and sold 12 million copies.

“You never know that,” he said, “because it’s not up to you. It’s up to the people. That is why I’m always saying ‘thank you’ and ‘I am so grateful’. I really mean it,” he said.

“To be supported in that way, and to the magnitude that I felt, is humbling.”

As we shake hands at the end of the interview, he said something which will excite his many fans here: “I am looking forward to coming to South Africa.”

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How you can help the campaign

Woolworths says its Good Business Journey is the driving force behind the partnership with Pharrell Williams. Launched in 2007, it is a commitment to ethical trade, sustainable farming and production methods, and social responsibility.

There are four ways for customers to get involved and to show their support:

CREATE WITH US:

Sustainable T-shirt Design Competition

Woolies has collaborated with Bionic Yarn, which creates fabric out of plastic waste, to create a range of limited edition, sustainable T-shirts. Design students are invited to submit designs for these T-shirts that celebrate sustainability.

Pharrell will select his favourite designs and these will be produced and sold in Woolies stores across the country. Winners will each receive R25 000 in prize money.

GIVE WITH US:

Raising over R100 million for education

Pharrell and MySchool will be calling on customers to help raise R100 million for schools in need across South Africa through swiping their MySchool/MyVillage/MyPlanet cards. The more you swipe, the more you donate – the more you make a difference to schools around the country. You get to choose which schools benefit.

SING WITH US:

Share the stage with Pharrell

School singing groups are invited to practise their songs and get ready to compete to win the opportunity to perform live with Pharrell Williams during his MySchool concert tour of South Africa. Entrants will be shortlisted and chosen by Pharrell to appear alongside him on stage in September as part of an exclusive concert for WRewards members only.

WIN WITH US:

See Pharrell live at a private concert

Woolies WRewards/MySchool/ credit cardholders stand the chance to win a ticket to an exclusive, one-night-only private Pharrell Williams concert. Every swipe of a card is an automatic entry in the competition, and every item you purchase when swiping counts as another entry.

Use the tag #PHARRELLWITHWOOLIES

* Nontando Mposo was flown to Los Angeles courtesy of Woolworths.

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