Amy Winehouse's Father Blocks Copenhagen Play

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A Copenhagen play on the life of late British singer Amy Winehouse has been blocked by the singer's father, the Danish copyright collecting society said Monday.

The show, titled "Amy", was due to open at the Royal Danish Theater in January but was canceled because KODA, a society that administers music copyrights in Denmark, withdrew its permission to use Winehouse's songs in the play.

"It is Amy Winehouse's father who has thrown a spanner in the works," KODA spokesman Nicolaj Hylten-Cavallius told AFP.

Mitch Winehouse had contacted the society via his music publisher within the past few weeks, he said.

KODA had previously green-lighted the performance, but its decisions are always subject to change if the rights holder withdraws permission, he added.

Grammy-winner Amy Winehouse died of alcohol poisoning at her London home in July last year, aged 27.

In October, shortly after the play was announced, Mitch Winehouse called the Scandinavian show "a load of rubbish" and insisted it was only a money-making exercise, according to the Yahoo! UK news website.

Emmet Feigenberg, artistic director for the Royal Danish Theater, responded that "the performance won’t be any cash cow," and would be performed only around 13 times on one of the theater’s smallest stages, according to the website.

"We are very sorry about it ... and do not know what to put in place of the play," David Pepe Birch, a spokesman for the Danish Royal Theater, told AFP.

Written in Danish by an ensemble of 11 people called "Det Roede Rum" ("The Red Room"), the play was to depict Winehouse's relationship with drugs and alcohol and her marriage to Blake Fielder-Civil.

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