Future Nostalgia Tour
Tour by Dua Lipa | |
Location |
|
---|---|
Associated album | Future Nostalgia |
Start date | 9 February 2022 |
End date | 28 November 2022 |
Legs | 4 |
No. of shows | 91 |
Supporting act(s) |
|
Producers | Ceremony London |
Attendance | 1,310,602[a] |
Box office | $101.3 million[b] |
Dua Lipa concert chronology |
The Future Nostalgia Tour was the second concert tour and first arena tour by English and Albanian singer Dua Lipa, in support of her second studio album, Future Nostalgia (2020). It began on 9 February 2022 at the FTX Arena in Miami and ended on 28 November of the same year at Tirana's Skanderbeg Square. The tour visited cities across North America, Europe, South America and Oceania.
The tour was divided into four sections and an encore. It was produced by creative studio Ceremony London, promoted by Live Nation and sponsored by Truly Hard Seltzer. Lipa wore custom outfits by Balenciaga, Marine Serre, John Galliano and Mugler during the show. The Future Nostalgia Tour was met with highly positive reviews from critics, who praised Lipa's stage presence, vocals and the pace of the show. It also experienced commercial success; on the 2022 Billboard year-end boxscore chart, it was ranked the world's 18th highest-grossing tour of the year, grossing $89,302,575 from 71 shows.
The first European dates of the Future Nostalgia Tour were announced in December 2019, and were scheduled to take place from April to June of the following year. These shows were postponed several times due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Lipa announced North American and Oceanian dates in September 2021, as well as extra European dates and Latin American dates in November and December respectively. She announced the final show of the tour would take place in Tirana in November 2022, commemorating the 110th anniversary of Albanian independence.
Background and development
In January 2018, whilst still on the road with her Self-Titled Tour, Lipa began working on her second studio album.[2] Inspired by the time spent touring with her band, she aimed to create a record that mixed live instrumentation with electronic production, and that could "sit alongside some of [her] favourite classic pop songs".[3] Lipa's management confirmed in October the following year that a global arena tour would begin in April 2020.[4] The singer's second studio album, Future Nostalgia, was released on 27 March 2020. The first European dates of the Future Nostalgia Tour were officially announced on 2 December 2019, with ticket sales beginning four days later.[5][6] The album's title track was also released in conjunction with the announcement.[7] British DJ Buck Betty and American singer Lolo Zouaï were initially announced as opening acts for these dates.[8]
Postponements and resumption
On 23 March 2020, Lipa announced the postponement of the tour due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but confirmed plans to add worldwide dates.[9] The following day, the tour was rescheduled for January and February 2021 and shows in Copenhagen, Stockholm and Oslo were cancelled.[10][11] On 23 October, the tour was rescheduled for a second time to September and October 2021.[12] Ticket sales for the Future Nostalgia Tour increased by 70 percent following Lipa's livestream concert, Studio 2054, in November.[13] On 28 June 2021, the tour was rescheduled for a third and final time to April, May and June 2022, with several new European shows announced.[14][15]
Lipa announced shows in North America and Oceania in September 2021, with Megan Thee Stallion, Caroline Polachek and Zouaï as opening acts in the former.[16][17] Extra dates in Los Angeles, Auckland, Sydney and Melbourne were added due to high demand.[18][19] Four new European dates were added in November, with Angèle, Griff and Tove Lo announced as the new opening acts.[20] Lipa announced Latin American dates in December; an extra Buenos Aires show was added after tickets for the first sold out in less than an hour.[21][22] The Montreal and Toronto shows were postponed until July 2022, and shows in Milwaukee and Elmont were added.[23][24] A show in São Paulo was announced in May 2022.[25] In November 2022, Lipa announced that the final show of the tour would take place in Tirana on 28 November, commemorating Albanian Flag Day and the 110th anniversary of Albanian independence.[26] The tour began on 9 February 2022 in Miami. It was produced by Ceremony London and promoted by Live Nation, with Truly Hard Seltzer as its official sponsor.[27]
I'm so thrilled to tour again and see my angels in person! How amazing that we all get to dance and celebrate together once again. When I was writing Future Nostalgia, I imagined the songs being played in clubs on nights out with your mates. I'm so excited that this fantasy is finally coming true. I can't wait to experience these songs with you together live!
— Lipa on her excitement for the tour[28]
Staging
The Future Nostalgia Tour staging was designed by Es Devlin Studio. It consisted of a main stage, as well a smaller stage near the middle of the arena connected by a runway. Lipa's band, consisting of a keyboardist, drummer, guitarist, bassist and four backup singers, appeared on a slightly lower stage on the wings of the main one.[29][30] The LED screen was described as a "huge bowl", which showed visuals created by Luke Halls Studio.[31] Lipa and her team aimed to create a show inspired by the album's title, creating multiple "worlds influenced by the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s". The staging also featured a "nightclub ceiling" which lowered over Lipa and her dancers at a point during the show, in order to create a more intimate setting for the audience.[32] Glow Inflatables created a series of inflatable stars, moons and clouds which were suspended above the stage to create an "intergalactic" atmosphere, as well as a giant replica of a lobster.[33]
Concert synopsis
The concert began with the house lights lowering as "Body Funk" (2017) by Purple Disco Machine began playing over the speakers and the stage backdrop cut to static before revealing the words "In Stereocolor: Future Nostalgia" with Miami Vice-styled graphics. A 1980s aerobics-themed video montage that introduced the ten dancers that included two roller skaters was then played as the first notes of "Physical" began playing. Lipa then strutted on stage to a ballet barre in centre stage to perform the song.[34][35][36] She wore a custom Balenciaga neon-yellow catsuit that featured a lingerie-inspired corseted bodice, built-in pants and heeled boots, a textured floral pattern and matching elbow-length opera gloves while she also had rhinestones on her eyelids and wore diamond-embellished Eéra earrings.[34][37][38][39] The outfit was inspired by the label's summer 2022 red carpet collection.[40] Her dancers wore royal blue outfits, also by the design house, with some sporting long sleeve spandex outfits and others wearing baggy tracksuits made from cotton terry jersey.[40] During the song's performance, they performed 1980s aerobic choreography and Lipa vamped down the runway of the stage.[34][41]
Following this, there was a seamless transition into "New Rules" where Lipa and her dancers performed choreography similar to that of the song's accompanying music video, including strutting down the runway using umbrella props in the style of Singin' in the Rain (1952).[35][29][42] The big screen during the song featured flamingos and retro cars, also similar to the song's music video alongside a personalized screen for the city the concert took place.[37][42] In the following song "Love Again", Lipa performed square dance choreography and lassoing technique similar to those used in the song's music video.[43] The backdrop for the song had a Martian space western theme.[42] For "Cool", Lipa performed with a mic stand centre stage in the shadow a CGI disco ball as two dancers in light-up rollerblades skated around her. Lipa sang "Pretty Please", "Break My Heart" and "Be the One" before sprinting off stage for a costume change. Simultaneously, an interlude featuring an elevator music-like muted version "IDGAF" and a graphic novel theme titled "Under the Sea" that included a lobster attack was played.[34][35][36][42]
Going into the second act, Lipa changed into a shimmery, sequin-studded silver and white one piece bodysuit with a one-armed top and briefs-style bottoms. "We're Good" was the first song performed in the act, which she sang in front of a giant lobster prop. A menu was featured on the side screen that included fake menu items such as the "Dua thermadore". The song was followed by "Good In Bed" and "Fever". The former song featured a technicolor barrage of cherries for the backdrop.[34][38][43][42] Lipa attached a white, flowing train to her outfit to perform "Boys Will Be Boys" with a spotlight on her, which led into a Club Future Nostalgia interlude for the third act.[35][37][43] The interlude included a bombastic carnaval-like parade with the performers dancing down the runway.[42] Lipa changed into a Marine Serre outfit that included a pink lace bra and black skin-tight jacket alongside matching black high-waisted underwear, sneakers and hot pink tights with the brand's signature crescent moon motif for the third act.[38][40] For the third act of the European leg, Lipa wore a Dior outfit by John Galliano.[44] The performances for this act took place at the end of the runway stage under low neon lights that looked like a night club.[41][42] She performed "One Kiss" and "Electricity" with her backup dancers.[34] "Hallucinate" followed where Lipa and her dancers performed warehouse rave-influenced choreography, jumping around a secondary stage in the set.[34] The final song of the third act was "Cold Heart" where Lipa duetted with a pre-recorded video of Elton John while sitting on the stage with her dancers.[29][45]
In the final act, Lipa wore a sparkling black Mugler catsuit covered in 120,000 crystals with beige mesh cutouts as well as sheer and opaque body-defining panels.[38][39][40][46] The outfit was similar to that of Cher's "If I Could Turn Back Time" outfit, and was paired with matching black gloves.[34][39] The dancers wore also wore outfits by the fashion house, some in similar body suits to the singer and some with a cut out black top and matching trousers.[40] For this act, a glittering moon and stars were brought down and the singer performed "Levitating" while hovering above the general admission crowd on a moving platform before waving goodbye and running off stage.[35][29][42] She was surrounded by hanging iridescent planets and stars with a galaxy image on the big screen.[37] In the encore, the singer belted an aggressive take of the album's title track where she whipped her hair around and walked the runway while teal and dark purple laser lights were used.[34][43][36] The show closed with Lipa thanking her opening acts and introducing her band followed by a performance of "Don't Start Now" which opens with the singer reclaiming a dance move she performed during promotion for her eponymous debut studio album that caused her to be bullied online for it being "lazy" and "uninspired" as well as become a meme for the dance. Lipa stated that she looks back at the dance from a different perspective with "fondness" as, although the bullying caused her a lot of grief, it caused her to work harder and grow into the artist she wanted to become.[47] Confetti cannons go off during the performance.[37] The show lasted for approximately 90 minutes.[34][35] As the audience left the venue, "I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)" (1987) by Whitney Houston was played over the PA system.
Critical reception
The Future Nostalgia Tour was met with highly positive reviews from critics.[48] E! Online named the tour one of 15 "must-see" concerts in 2022.[49] In a review from Rolling Stone, Celia Almeida praised Lipa's stage presence stating she's a "superstar" that's "every bit the female alpha she proclaimed herself to be on the album’s title track" while also mentioning that the show is "a powerful reminder of Lipa's pop savvy".[34] For Consequence, Mary Gibson stated that "Lipa delivered exactly the kind of lively, dynamic show fans have been aching for".[35] Adam Graham of The Detroit News praised the "rich" production that "worked like clockwork" and complimented Lipa's stage presence saying her "confidence and her control of the stage was the best stage trick of the night".[29] The Columbus Dispatch's Margaret Quamme commended the "loose, joyous" choreography that lets the "glossy, admittedly shallow disco-tinged" set list breathe.[50] Emmalyse Brownstein of Miami New Times commended singer's vocals stating they sound "just like her studio recordings" while also praised Lipa's "impressive" stage presence for commanding the stage and leading the dancers.[37] The Tennessean reviewer Dave Paulson praised the concert for being "beyond well-rehearsed, and synchronized down to the millisecond", while also appreciating the singer's stage presence stating she is "self-assured" and "a cool, consistent presence than a diva aiming to set the stage ablaze".[41]
In The Charlotte Observer, Théoden Janes complimented Lipa's performance, which he praised for hitting "pretty much all of her marks" in "terms of her command over her vocals and her command over her body".[43] Edward Pevos of MLive named it "one of the most well-paced shows we've seen many years" while praising Lipa for commanding "the stage like a seasoned pro".[30] Writing for The Oakland Press, Gary Graff said Lipa ticked "off all the boxes we expect from these kinds of shows".[51] Writing for The Boston Globe, Maura Johnston said the show "leaned into that kitchen-sink mode feeling of the present while also offering an escape" while describing Lipa as "a charismatic performer with a striking look" that "commanded the stage".[45] Dan DeLuca of The Philadelphia Inquirer praised the tight choreography and Lipa's "more-than-capable" vocals.[36] In a more negative review from OnMilwaukee, Matt Mueller praised the "spectacle" show production but criticized Lipa's performance and stage presence, saying that at times her backup dancers stole the show.[42]
For Expresso, after Lisbon's show, Rita Carmo, also complimented the show, stating "Don't they make pop stars like they used to? Wrong. Dua Lipa proved tonight, in Lisbon, that she has the fiber of someone who came to stay in a musical territory used to chewing and throwing away. In just over five years, the British artist, of Albanian origin, went from a proposal that was perhaps too alternative to widespread acclaim, achieving the feat of pleasing both the masses and those who look at these pop things with some cynicism".[52]
Commercial reception
Pitchfork named the Future Nostalgia Tour one of the most anticipated tours of 2022.[53] The tour debuted at number five on the February 2022 issue of Billboard's Top Tours Boxscore chart with a total gross of $13,523,248 and a total attendance of 138,638, from 11 shows.[54] The following month, it dropped down to number seven with a total gross of $25,027,606 and a total attendance of 239,855 from 17 shows.[55] The first leg grossed $40,100,000 and sold 394,000 tickets, an increase of 346% in ticket sales and 1,479% in gross-per-show compared to when Lipa toured the US in support of her debut album. In every city except Milwaukee, ticket sales topped 11,000; Milwaukee's Fiserv Forum had a scaled down capacity and only sold 6,312 tickets. The highest grossing show of the leg was the show of 1 March 2022 in New York City grossing $2,100,000 while the following night in Washington D.C. had the highest ticket sales with 16,068 tickets sold.[1] The shows in Inglewood had a gross of $3,228,158 and an attendance of 30,270, causing it to chart at number 29 on the March 2022 issue of Billboard's Top Boxscores chart.[55] On the 2022 Billboard year-end boxscore chart, the Future Nostalgia Tour was ranked the world's 18th highest-grossing tour of the year, grossing $89,302,575 from 71 shows.[56]
Set list
This set list is representative of the show on 9 February 2022 in Miami.[35] It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.
Act 1
Act 2
|
Act 3
Act 4 Encore
|
Notes
- Angèle joined Lipa to perform "Fever" at the concerts on 1 March in New York City, 2 and 3 May in London, 15 May in Paris and 9 June in Barcelona.[57][58][44]
- "Sweetest Pie" was added to the set list between "Good in Bed" and "Fever" at the concerts on 15, 17, and 20 March 2022 in Denver, Tulsa, and Phoenix, respectively; Megan Thee Stallion joined Lipa to perform the song on all three dates.[59][60]
- Starting from the concert on 9 June, "Levitating" and "Future Nostalgia" were swapped on the set list with "Levitating" being performed before "Don't Start Now".[61]
Shows
Date (2022) | City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 February | Miami | United States | FTX Arena | Caroline Polachek Lolo Zouaï |
14,557 / 14,557 | $1,558,815 |
11 February | Orlando | Amway Center | 13,611 / 13,611 | $1,335,652 | ||
12 February | Atlanta | State Farm Arena | 12,110 / 12,110 | $1,235,805 | ||
14 February | Nashville | Bridgestone Arena | 11,458 / 11,458 | $1,073,938 | ||
16 February | Charlotte | Spectrum Center | 11,930 / 11,930 | $1,049,500 | ||
18 February | Boston | TD Garden | 13,941 / 13,941 | $1,471,026 | ||
19 February | Philadelphia | Wells Fargo Center | 14,019 / 14,019 | $1,445,941 | ||
21 February | Elmont[c] | UBS Arena | 13,736 / 13,736 | $1,209,755 | ||
23 February | Milwaukee | Fiserv Forum | 6,312 / 6,312 | $572,936 | ||
25 February | Detroit | Little Caesars Arena | 13,114 / 13,114 | $1,278,918 | ||
26 February | Columbus | Schottenstein Center | 13,850 / 13,850 | $1,290,961 | ||
1 March | New York City | Madison Square Garden | 15,461 / 15,461 | $2,054,407 | ||
2 March | Washington, D.C. | Capital One Arena | 16,068 / 16,068 | $1,652,588 | ||
4 March | Newark | Prudential Center | 14,480 / 14,480 | $1,613,984 | ||
5 March | Buffalo | KeyBank Center | 11,685 / 11,685 | $957,124 | ||
8 March | Minneapolis | Target Center | 11,987 / 11,987 | $1,060,862 | ||
9 March | Chicago | United Center | 15,880 / 15,880 | $1,781,908 | ||
12 March | Houston | Toyota Center | 12,889 / 12,889 | $1,470,541 | ||
13 March | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 15,018 / 15,018 | $1,563,038 | ||
15 March | Denver | Ball Arena | Megan Thee Stallion Caroline Polachek |
13,420 / 13,420 | $1,511,817 | |
17 March | Tulsa | BOK Center | 11,399 / 11,399 | $1,021,952 | ||
20 March | Phoenix | Footprint Center | 14,030 / 14,030 | $1,385,791 | ||
22 March | Inglewood[d] | The Forum | Caroline Polachek Lolo Zouaï |
30,270 / 30,270 | $3,228,153 | |
23 March | ||||||
25 March | Paradise[e] | T-Mobile Arena | 15,812 / 15,812 | $1,582,420 | ||
27 March | San Jose | SAP Center | Lolo Zouaï[f] | 13,619 / 13,619 | $1,499,676 | |
29 March | Portland | Moda Center | 12,560 / 12,560 | $1,097,984 | ||
31 March | Seattle | Climate Pledge Arena | 15,277 / 15,277 | $1,545,361 | ||
1 April | Vancouver | Canada | Rogers Arena | 15,332 / 15,332 | $1,548,489 | |
15 April[g] | Manchester | England | AO Arena | Griff | 15,609 / 15,609 | $904,584 |
17 April[h] | Birmingham | Utilita Arena | 14,353 / 14,353 | $897,522 | ||
18 April[i] | Leeds | First Direct Arena | 12,477 / 12,477 | $728,682 | ||
20 April[j] | Dublin | Ireland | 3Arena | 28,371 / 28,371 | $2,382,420 | |
21 April[k] | ||||||
23 April[l] | Newcastle | England | Utilita Arena | 10,041 / 10,041 | $888,742 | |
24 April[m] | Glasgow | Scotland | OVO Hydro | 13,282 / 13,871 | $852,960 | |
26 April[n] | Nottingham | England | Motorpoint Arena Nottingham | 8,099 / 8,099 | $453,116 | |
27 April[o] | Cardiff | Wales | Motorpoint Arena Cardiff | 9,042 / 9,042 | $616,655 | |
29 April[p] | Liverpool | England | M&S Bank Arena | 10,698 / 10,698 | $563,299 | |
2 May[q] | London | The O2 Arena | Griff Angèle |
39,030 / 39,300 | $2,441,870 | |
3 May[r] | ||||||
6 May[s] | Antwerp | Belgium | Sportpaleis | Griff | 42,550 / 42,550 | $2,241,927 |
7 May | ||||||
9 May[t] | Hamburg | Germany | Barclays Arena | 12,117 / 12,117 | $752,236 | |
10 May[u] | Berlin | Mercedes-Benz Arena | 14,051 / 14,051 | $895,575 | ||
12 May[v] | Cologne | Lanxess Arena | 16,703 / 17,000 | $963,595 | ||
15 May[w] | Paris | France | Accor Arena | Griff Angèle |
17,001 / 17,001 | $850,191 |
17 May[x] | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Ziggo Dome | Griff | 33,642 / 33,642 | $1,699,256 |
18 May | ||||||
20 May | Zürich | Switzerland | Hallenstadion | 14,025 / 14,025 | $917,768 | |
22 May[y] | Munich | Germany | Olympiahalle | 13,343 / 13,343 | $717,595 | |
23 May[z] | Vienna | Austria | Wiener Stadthalle | 13,679 / 13,679 | $730,051 | |
25 May[aa] | Milan | Italy | Mediolanum Forum | 23,119 / 23,119 | $982,013 | |
26 May | ||||||
28 May | Bologna | Unipol Arena | 14,286 / 14,286 | $708,702 | ||
30 May | Lyon | France | Halle Tony Garnier | 11,862 / 11,862 | $670,558 | |
1 June[ab] | Barcelona | Spain | Palau Sant Jordi | 18,342 / 18,342 | $915,141 | |
3 June[ac] | Madrid | WiZink Center | 16,976 / 16,976 | $897,714 | ||
5 June | Braga | Portugal | Altice Forum | 10,481 / 10,481 | $560,288 | |
6 June | Lisbon | Altice Arena | 18,758 / 18,758 | $933,470 | ||
9 June[ad] | Barcelona | Spain | Parc del Fòrum | — | ||
11 June[ae] | Bratislava | Slovakia | Tehelné pole | — | ||
19 June[af] | Kaunas | Lithuania | Žalgiris Arena | DJ Jovani[ag] | 15,656 / 15,656 | $1,107,464 |
26 June[ah] | Oslo | Norway | Oslo Spektrum | Tove Lo | 10,051 / 10,051 | $818,464 |
28 June[ah] | Stockholm | Sweden | Gröna Lund | — | ||
30 June[ai] | Roskilde | Denmark | Roskilde Dyrskueplads | — | ||
25 July[aj] | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | Caroline Polachek Lolo Zouaï |
16,135 / 16,135 | $1,496,834 |
27 July[ak] | Toronto | Scotiabank Arena | 15,880 / 15,880 | $1,531,634 | ||
29 July[al] | Chicago | United States | Grant Park | — | ||
31 July[am] | Montreal | Canada | Parc Jean-Drapeau | — | ||
4 August[an] | Pristina | Kosovo | Germia Park | — | ||
10 August[ao] | Budapest | Hungary | Óbudai-sziget | — | ||
8 September | São Paulo | Brazil | Arena Anhembi | Vickilicious[77] | 35,388/ 35,388 | $2,730,187 |
11 September[ap] | Rio de Janeiro | Barra Olympic Park | — | |||
13 September[aq] | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Campo Argentino de Polo | Vickilicious | 110,100 / 110,100 | $6,531,601 |
14 September[aq] | ||||||
16 September | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Bicentenario | Vickilicious DJ Polach |
28,052 / 28,052 | $2,060,731 |
18 September | Bogotá | Colombia | Salitre Mágico | Vickilicious | 31,981 / 31,981 | $2,154,428 |
21 September | Mexico City | Mexico | Foro Sol | 64,267 / 64,267 | $4,012,783 | |
23 September | Monterrey | Estadio Banorte | 21,731 / 21,731 | $2,110,522 | ||
25 September[ar] | Dover | United States | The Woodlands of Dover International Speedway |
— | ||
2 November | Auckland | New Zealand | Spark Arena | Tkay Maidza | 23,565 / 24,097 | $2,284,500 |
3 November | ||||||
5 November | Brisbane | Australia | Brisbane Entertainment Centre | 11,568 / 11,568 | $1,183,684 | |
8 November | Sydney | Qudos Bank Arena | 33,195 / 33,195 | $3,087,940 | ||
9 November | ||||||
11 November | Melbourne | Rod Laver Arena | 28,360 / 28,360 | $2,898,216 | ||
12 November | ||||||
14 November | Adelaide | Adelaide Entertainment Centre | 8,945 / 8,945 | $915,388 | ||
16 November | Perth | RAC Arena | 14,828 / 14,828 | $1,457,119 | ||
28 November | Tirana | Albania | Skanderbeg Square | Elvana Gjata | 200,000 | Free entry |
Cancelled shows
Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 May 2020 | Copenhagen | Denmark | Royal Arena | COVID-19 pandemic in Europe | [5] [11] |
12 May 2020[ah] | Stockholm | Sweden | Avicii Arena | ||
13 May 2020[ah] | Oslo | Norway | Spektrum | ||
23 June 2022[as] | Helsinki | Finland | Hartwall Arena | Russian invasion of Ukraine | [81] |
1 July 2022[at] | Gdynia | Poland | Gdynia-Kosakowo Airport | Inclement weather | [82] |
Personnel
Credits adapted from DublinLive,[83] Dincwear[84] and the BIMM Institute.[85]
Band:
- Dua Lipa – lead vocals
- Georgie Ward – keyboards
- Duayne Sanford – drums
- Matty Carroll – bass
- Alex Lanyon – guitar
- Ciara O'Connor – backing vocals
- Izzy Chase – backing vocals
- Naomi Scarlett – backing vocals
- Matt Maijah – backing vocals
Dancers:
- Zacc Milne – dancer
- Sammi Lee Jayne – dancer
- Demi Rox – dancer
- Sharon June – dancer
- Robyn Rae Laud – dancer
- Fatou Bah – dancer
- Didde-mie Lykke From – dancer
- Lamaar Manning – dancer
- Kane Horn – dancer
- Thanh Jason Nguyen – dancer
- Darion Reyes – skate roller
- Bobby West – skate roller
- Alex Clark - swing
- Ben Hukin - Swing
See also
Footnotes
- ^ Attendance figures for the Future Nostalgia Tour from the 4 legs.[1]
- ^ Sales figures for the Future Nostalgia Tour from all of the legs.[1]
- ^ Promoted as Belmont Park
- ^ Promoted as Los Angeles
- ^ Promoted as Las Vegas
- ^ Caroline Polachek cancelled her appearances at the shows on 27 March 29 March, 31 March, and 1 April 2022 in San Jose, Portland, Seattle, and Vancouver, respectively, after she was hospitalized due to an ankle injury and unable to walk.[66]
- ^ The concert on 15 April 2022 in Manchester was previously scheduled for 1 June 2020, 21 January 2021, and 16 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 17 April 2022 in Birmingham was previously scheduled for 10 June 2020, 13 January 2021, and 28 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 18 April 2022 in Leeds was previously scheduled for 4 June 2020, 22 January 2021, and 21 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 20 April 2022 in Dublin was previously scheduled for 18 June 2020, 8 January 2021, and 18 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 21 April 2022 in Dublin was previously scheduled for 19 June 2020, 9 January 2021, and 19 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 23 April 2022 in Newcastle was previously scheduled for 13 June 2020, 3 January 2021, and 13 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 24 April 2022 in Glasgow was previously scheduled for 15 June 2020, 4 January 2021, and 11 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 26 April 2022 in Nottingham was previously scheduled for 30 May 2020, 12 January 2021, and 27 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[67][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 27 April 2022 in Cardiff was previously scheduled for 7 June 2020, 19 January 2021, and 15 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 29 April 2022 in Liverpool was previously scheduled for 29 May 2020, 6 January 2021, and 10 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[67][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 2 May 2022 in London was previously scheduled for 26 May 2020, 15 January 2021, and 24 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 3 May 2022 in London was previously scheduled for 27 May 2020, 16 January 2021, and 25 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 6 May 2022 in Antwerp was previously scheduled for 2 May 2020, 4 February 2021, and 1 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 9 May 2022 in Hamburg was previously scheduled for 15 May 2020, 25 January 2021, and 3 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 10 May 2022 in Berlin was previously scheduled for 17 May 2020, 26 January 2021, and 9 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 12 May 2022 in Cologne was previously scheduled for 5 May 2020, 27 January 2021, and 7 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 15 May 2022 in Paris was previously scheduled for 4 May 2020, 8 February 2021, and 30 September 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 17 May 2022 in Amsterdam was previously scheduled for 7 May 2020, 3 February 2021, and 5 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 22 May 2022 in Munich was previously scheduled for 20 May 2020, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]
- ^ The concert on 23 May 2022 in Vienna was previously scheduled for 19 May 2020, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5]
- ^ The concert on 25 May 2022 in Milan was previously scheduled for 30 April 2020, 10 February 2021, and 12 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 1 June 2022 in Barcelona was previously scheduled for 28 April 2020, 14 February 2021, and 15 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ The concert on 3 June 2022 in Madrid was previously scheduled for 26 April 2020, 16 February 2021, and 17 October 2021, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][10][12]
- ^ This concert was a part of Primavera Sound.[68]
- ^ This concert was a part of Love Stream Festival.[69]
- ^ The concert on 19 June 2022 in Kaunas was previously scheduled for 21 June 2022, being rescheduled due to an unforeseen scheduling conflict.[70]
- ^ Originally, Tove Lo was supposed to be the opening act. However, it was learned several hours before the show that DJ Jovani would be the opening act instead with no reasons stated.[71]
- ^ a b c d When the tour was initially postponed, the shows in Oslo and Stockholm were formally cancelled after they were unable to be rescheduled, with tickets being completely refunded.[5][11] When the tour was pushed back to 2022, new shows in the cities were announced where attendees needed to buy new tickets.[20]
- ^ This concert was a part of Roskilde Festival.[72]
- ^ The concert on 25 July 2022 in Montreal was previously scheduled for 22 February 2022, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[23]
- ^ The concert on 27 July 2022 in Toronto was previously scheduled for 23 February 2022, being rescheduled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[23]
- ^ The concert on 29 July 2022 in Chicago is part of Lollapalooza.[73]
- ^ The concert on 31 July 2022 in Montreal is part of Osheaga Festival.[74]
- ^ This concert was a part of Sunny Hill Festival.[75]
- ^ This concert was a part of Sziget Festival.[76]
- ^ This concert is a part of Rock in Rio.[78]
- ^ a b The concerts in Buenos Aires on 13 and 14 September were originally scheduled to take place on the Hipódromo Argentino de Palermo, but were moved due to high demand.[79]
- ^ This concert is a part of Firefly Music Festival.[80]
- ^ Due to sanctions pertaining to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the concert on 23 June 2022 in Helsinki was planned to be moved to a venue alternate to the Hartwall Arena. After a replacement was unable to be found, the concert was cancelled.[81]
- ^ The concert on 1 July 2022 in Gdynia was supposed to be a part of Open'er Festival. Lipa arrived in Gdynia, but the festival was suspended due to severe storm and all the present people were evacuated. After a few hours, the festival was resumed, but several performances, including Lipa's, were cancelled.[82]
References
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- ^ Herman, James Patrick (10 October 2019). "TaP Management Expands With Hailee Steinfeld Signing, New West Coast Office (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Archived from the original on 10 October 2019. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
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- ^ Copsey, Rob (13 January 2020). "Dua Lipa's support acts for her 2020 UK and Europe tour announced". Official Charts Company. Archived from the original on 15 February 2020. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
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- ^ a b Citations regarding the Latin America shows:
- "Dua Lipa Anuncia Su Gira 'Future Nostalgia Tour' Por Latinoamérica" [Dua Lipa Announces Its 'Future Nostalgia Tour' Tour Through Latin America]. AllAccess (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 10 December 2021. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
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- ^ a b c d Citations regarding the reschedule of the Montreal and Toronto shows:
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- ^ a b Citations regarding the added Milwaukee and Elmont shows:
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- ^ Citations regarding Lipa reclaiming her dance on the Future Nostalgia Tour:
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