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The Labyrinth (tour)

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The Labyrinth
Tour by Leona Lewis
Associated albumSpirit
Echo
Start date28 May 2010
End date6 July 2010
Legs1
No. of shows20 in Europe
Leona Lewis concert chronology

The Labyrinth was the debut concert tour by British pop singer Leona Lewis. Beginning on 28 May 2010, it showcased songs from her debut album, Spirit (2007). and her second album, Echo (2009). Dates in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland were completed with Australian singer Gabriella Cilmi serving as the support act for the majority of dates.

Background

The tour was announced on 12 November 2009, with the confirmation of dates in Ireland and United Kingdom.[1] Lewis' record label apparently said that money was no object.[2] Fashion designer Antonio Berardi designed Lewis's specially commissioned ethical wardrobe for the tour, costing £175,000.[3] Gabriella Cilmi supported Lewis on the majority of the tour,[4] with Hermione Hennesy supporting Lewis's Belfast dates and Alex Gardner supporting Lewis in Birmingham on 10 June.[5]

On 29 April 2010, it was announced on Lewis's official website that the tour would be called The Labyrinth. Speaking of the choice of title she said "I'm a big David Bowie fan and I loved the movie The Labyrinth growing up, it really has inspired me so much. I feel it kind of represents my life in a surreal way too, trying to find my way through a maze!" [6] She then said of the show "I had such a fun night at my recent show at the Hackney Empire and it's given me a real taste for it. Over the last few years I've had some amazing experiences and sung in some really interesting places but it's going to be great to be able to perform all my own material on my very own tour. It's a dream come true."[7]

On 10 May 2010 a North American leg was announced in the form of 20 shared dates on Christina Aguilera's Bionic Tour.[8] However, on 25 May 2010, it was announced that Aguilera's tour had been delayed till 2011 due to the singer's film and album schedulings.[9] It was since reported that Lewis's record label boss Simon Cowell was hoping to secure Lewis as special guest act for another artist in North America.[10]

Set list

Leona Lewis performing at her show in 2010
  1. "Intro"&"Brave"
  2. "Don't Let Me Down"
  3. "Better in Time"
  4. "Whatever It Takes"
  5. "Take a Bow"
  6. Video interlude: "Ride a White Swan" (T. Rex cover)
  7. "I See You"
  8. "Can't Breathe"
  9. "Forgive Me"
  10. "Happy"
  11. "Could It Be Magic" (Barry Manilow cover)
  12. "I Got You"
  13. "Cry Me a River" (Justin Timberlake cover)
  14. "The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face"
  15. "Homeless"
  16. Video interlude: "They Don't Care About Us" (Michael Jackson cover) .
  17. "Outta My Head"
  18. "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" (Eurythmics cover)
  19. "Run"
Encore
  1. "Bleeding Love"

Source: Teen Today[11]

Additional notes

Opening acts

  • Gabriella Cilmi (United Kingdom excluding Birmingham, 10 June and all Dublin and Belfast dates)
  • Alex Gardner (Birmingham, 10 June)
  • Hermione Hennesy (all Dublin and Belfast dates)

Shows

List of concerts, showing date, city, constituent country, venue, opening act, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
Date City Constituent country Venue Opening act Attendance Revenue
28 May 2010 Sheffield England Sheffield Arena Gabriella Cilmi
31 May 2010 Liverpool Echo Arena
2 June 2010 Nottingham Trent FM Arena
4 June 2010 Manchester Manchester Evening News Arena
6 June 2010
8 June 2010 Birmingham LG Arena
10 June 2010 Alex Gardner
12 June 2010 London The O2 Arena Gabriella Cilmi
14 June 2010
16 June 2010
18 June 2010
20 June 2010 Glasgow Scotland Scottish Exhibition and Conference Centre
22 June 2010
24 June 2010 Newcastle England Metro Radio Arena
27 June 2010 Dublin Republic of Ireland The O2 Hermione Hennesy
29 June 2010
1 July 2010 Belfast Northern Ireland Odyssey Arena
3 July 2010
5 July 2010 Cardiff Wales Cardiff International Arena Gabriella Cilmi
6 July 2010

Box office data

According to Lewis's tour promoters (SJM Concerts, CAA and Modest! Management), dates in Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, the first three London Shows and Glasgow were sold out.[12]

Box office score data

Venue City Tickets sold / available Gross revenue
Manchester Evening News Arena Manchester 24,156/ 25,360 (95%) $1,448,460
O2 Arena London 53,919/ 60,800 (89%) $3,229,460
The O2 Dublin 15,574/ 15,574 (100%) $918,057
TOTAL 93,649 / 101,734 (92%) $5,595,977

Reception

Following the first concert in Sheffield, Sarah Crabtree from the Sheffield Star said: "Amidst a fairytale forest stage-set inspired by her favourite film The Labyrinth, she showcased the awesome talent that propelled her to stardom four years ago, and even pulled off some nifty dancing. Her incredible voice – when given free rein centre stage, pared back and powerful, emotive, sometimes haunting – was breathtaking. Sheffield was the first night of 18 dates on her first ever arena tour and it would be understandable if the debutante was nervous as she appeared, looking every inch the British Beyonce, in a tight black dress, over-the-knee boots and hooded cloak, beneath a gothic ruin swirling in mist. [...] One of Leona's great vocal strengths has always been her ability to convey powerful emotion, and she was at her brilliant best when the songs allowed her to do just that – to really sing, to deliver the lyrics clearly without too much backing, and to do so without distraction. She covered Justin Timberlake's "Cry Me a River" beautifully, sitting quietly, almost a capella. And a funked-up, clubby segment including stonking dance track "Outta My Head", a cover of "Sweet Dreams" by the Eurythmics, and a nod to Michael Jackson finally got the crowd on its feet and proved Leona's more than just a ballad singer. [...] And before belting out "Bleeding Love" she told her fans: "This is my first tour and my first night and I'm so glad I got to share it with you. This is a dream for me."[13]

Pete Paphides from The Times gave the tour three out of five stars, saying: "With a live show apparently inspired by the Jim Henson fantasy flick Labyrinth, to the slow beats of "Brave", Lewis wandered through a bevy of semi-naked men in horned helmets — her black veil and slightly troubled gaze calling to mind an outrageously lavish Scottish Widows commercial. [...] A sense of the truly unexpected probably wasn't what Lewis's fans had turned up for, less still the sexually charged theatricality that comes as standard at, say, a Rihanna or Lady Gaga show. [...] A fairytale woodland scene festooned with lights served as the backdrop for a moderately pretty acoustic version of Justin Timberlake's "Cry Me a River". By this stage, one might have been forgiven for setting aside any idle hopes that Lewis might throw efficiency to the wind and truly lose herself in what she was singing. [...] She sang her biggest hit "Bleeding Love" in an outfit that seemed to have been inspired by Big Purple One from the Quality Street tin."[14]

Bernadette McNulty from The Daily Telegraph gave the tour three out of five stars, saying "For her long-awaited debut tour, Leona Lewis was inspired by her favourite childhood film, Labyrinth. The 1986 fantasy adventure, starring David Bowie, provides rich pickings for the set designers, but it's the plotline that offers a glimpse into the mindset of the 2006 X-Factor winner – the teenage heroine escapes from a puppet-infested maze by declaring to her captor: "My will is as strong as yours, and my kingdom is as great ... you have no power over me!" [...] Her vocals were near inaudible on anything below her top range, yet the audience's proprietorial [sic] affections meant that they applauded her efforts but stayed glued to their seats. The inertia really set in when the middle section of ballads gassed the arena like a dry-ice cloud of emotion. Dressed as a fairy-tale princess, her childlike innocence was affecting, and she can certainly convey a trembling, pining heart. [...] Just when it felt like we were permanently trapped in a maze of polished but stilted performances, a trapdoor opened, strobes flashed and Lewis emerged in strikingly symbolic high-waisted leggings. The effect was startling: she seized control of the music and the audience, ordering them to their feet as she imperiously motored through her final hits. This tantalising glimpse of Lewis's hidden power suggests that if she wants her to career to really have legs she should wear the trousers more often.[15]

DVD/CD release

Credits and personnel

Taken and adapted from The Labyrinth Official Tour Programme.[16]

Performers
Management
Music
Choreography
Aerial Performers
Stage and Costumes

References

  1. ^ Moodie, Clemmie; Lawler, Danielle]] (12 November 2009). "Leona Lewis not interested in giant minders despite fan attack". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 12 November 2009.
  2. ^ Kadri, Anisa (18 July 2009). "Leona Lewis plans mega tour". Digital Spy. Retrieved 12 November 2009.
  3. ^ "Leona Lewis Splashes £175,000 On Ethical Clothing". Music Rooms. 27 May 2010. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  4. ^ anon. (14 April 2010). "Gabriella Cilmi to support leona lewis". 4Music. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  5. ^ "Introducing Alex Gardner!". Leona Lewis Music. 9 June 2010. Retrieved 6 July 2010.
  6. ^ "Tour Exclusive". Leona Lewis Official Website. Sony Music Entertainment. 29 April 2010. Archived from the original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  7. ^ Thompson, Jody (12 November 2009). "Leona Lewis announces first ever UK and Ireland arena tour". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  8. ^ Prince, David J. (10 May 2010). "Christina Aguilera Announces 'Bionic' Summer Tour Dates". Billboard. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  9. ^ Sisario, Ben (24 May 2010). "Christina Aguilera Postpones Tour". The New York Times Blog. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  10. ^ "Simon Cowell Helping Leona Lewis Secure New US Tour". Angry Ape. 26 May 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  11. ^ Olly (29 May 2010). "Leona Lewis The Labyrinth Tour round-up: pics, audio, video and goss". Teen Today. Archived from the original on May 30, 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
  12. ^ SJM Concerts (28 March 2010), "Leona Lewis Tour Dates: 7 Sold Out", News of the World, 28 March 2010, p.52 (1K)
  13. ^ Crabtree, Sarah (29 May 2010). "Review: World class Leona Lewis at Sheffield Arena". Sheffield Star. Sheffield. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
  14. ^ Paphides, Pete (29 May 2010). "Leona Lewis at Sheffield Arena". The Times. London. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
  15. ^ McNulty, Bernadette (2 June 2010). "Leona Lewis, Liverpool Echo Arena – review". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  16. ^ Syco Music (2010), Leona Lewis – The Labyrinth (1st ed.), London{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)