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May 08 2007 06:43 AM ET
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Daughter of Annie Lennox sees house party crashed

Annielennox_6 An attempt by the 16-year-old daughter of singer Annie Lennox to host a quaint ‘get-together’ while dad Uri Fruchtmann was out of town recently went horribly awry, after more than 100 of her classmates caught wind of Lola Lennox-Fruchtmann’s plans via MySpace and crashed the party at Uri’s $4 million North London home.  According to the Daily Mail, party-goers urinated on the carpets, spray-painted graffiti on the walls, and ripped apart books — among other things.

There was a fight in the garden, someone had deliberately filled the sink with detergent and let it run over so it flooded the place.  There was vomit on the stairs, and cigarette burns on the carpets, cans and bottles strewn inside and out.  The place was like a bomb site.

Annie’s marriage to Uri ended in divorce in 2000 after 12 years of marriage;  The couple also have another daughter, 13-year-old Tali.  Despite the separation, Annie and Uri agreed collectively to share the bill for repairing the damages caused by Lola’s party and have grounded their daughter indefinitely.   

Source:  The Daily Mail

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The first time I had ever heard of this type of thing happening was in the late 1980s on the “Phil Donahue,” show. It seems to be some sort of bizarre adolescent ritual–on the primal level.

- HollyCate on

This happened to me and my siblings in high school as well. Oh, I totally feel for her daughter! We were also grounded for what seemed like an eternity.

- madison on

I hope one of the first things to go was her computer along with that MySpace account! I can’t imagine how livid they must have been. Imagine your home being disrespected like that? Vomit on the stairs, urine in the carpets, your garden torn to shreds because of a fight? Oy vey. I don’t chalk it up to ordinary adolescence because my friends and I, nor anyone we knew, ever did anything like that in high school! I’m sure she’s learned her lesson though. I’m also sure they’re making her help with that clean-up effort.

- Jessica on

Myspace is probably one of the most dangerous things teens are getting into these days. It’s not alcohol or drugs but it’s exposing them to some pretty nasty stuff. It’s also exposing them to predators more rapidly than in chat rooms because their personal details are sprawled out there for anyone to see. It’s almost like a shopping list.

There’s a bizarre flirty myspace culture where young girls play at being sexy and teasing without anyone controlling their behaviour.

Two Australian girls left a suicide note on their myspace page a few days before their bodies were found hanging from a tree in bushalnd near their home. Some will blame it on the music they listened to (they were emo-punk kids) but I think myspace has more to answer for in providing a forum of one-up-manship and provoking commentary from complete strangers.

Don’t get me wrong, myspace has some great functions, such as letting kids and fans get close to their favourite bands, etc… but it’s also very harmful particuarly when parents have no idea what’s going on.

- Lilybett on

yeah, I get creeped out when I hear of these incidents. It seems so wantonly destructive and mean-spirtited (to say the least!!) The worst thing is for parents to not take this type of thing extremely seriously!!!

- HollyCate on

sounds like the parents aren’t blaming one another and are instead handling it as co-parents and friends.

I feel sorry for the girl, but the punishment is fair.

- Kat on

I don’t feel sorry for the daughter. She shouldn’t of had any one come over because we all know that it means trouble.

- Lola on

“When you’re that successful, things have a momentum, and at a certain point you can’t really tell whether you have created the momentum or it’s creating you.”(Annie Lennox)

- dnco on

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