Jennifer Lawrence surprised listeners with a spirited performance of Shania Twain’s classic “Any Man of Mine” during a recent podcast appearance, and the country star herself couldn’t help but respond. Lawrence’s energetic singing caught Twain’s eye on social media, and the “Man! I Feel Like a Woman” singer shared her delight with fans.
Shania Twain reacts to Jennifer Lawrence singing ‘Any Man of Mine’
In an episode of The Good Hang podcast with Amy Poehler on Jan. 20, Jennifer Lawrence revealed her favorite karaoke go-to: Shania Twain’s 1995 hit “Any Man of Mine.” Poehler shared she didn’t know the song, prompting Lawrence to offer her own rendition on the spot. Lawrence delivered a passionate vocal take, singing lines like “And if I change my mind, a million times, I want to hear him say, Yeah, yeah, yeah!” into the microphone.
Poehler was impressed, exclaiming, “Oh my God, you’re good,” to which Lawrence playfully responded, “I know, really good.” The moment was clipped and shared online, catching the attention of Shania Twain herself.
Twain couldn’t get enough of the video and made sure everyone knew it. She made her way into the Instagram comments, cheering on Jennifer Lawrence’s high-energy moment. She wrote, “The passion! The energy! The microphone grab!! Obsessed. Love ya Jennifer… and you Amy!” The singer later took the love over to X (formerly Twitter), calling the clip “so perfect.”
For those not in the know, “Any Man of Mine” first came in 1995 as the second single from The Woman in Me, the album that turned Twain into a global star. She’s looked back on that era many times over the years, even celebrating the album’s 25th anniversary on social media in 2020, reminding fans just how massive that moment was in her career.
The country megastar has been enjoying a resurgence in popularity in recent years, and a new generation of fans is curious about her past.
Given how many of her classic ballads touch on the topic of heartbreak, we suppose it’s no surprise that yes, Shania is divorced.
Shania Twain performs during the opening ceremony on Day One of the 2017 US Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center on August 28, 2017 in the Flushing neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)
And in the style of sad country songs everywhere, her first marriage ended because of an affair.
Shania Twain Divorced Mutt Lange After She Caught Him Cheating
Yes, Shania parted ways with legendary music producer Mutt Lange after she caught him having an affair with her best friend, Marie-Anne Thiébaud.
Bur Shania had the last laugh, as she’s currently married to Marie-Anne’s former husband, Frederic Thiébaud.
Shania Twain and her husband Frederic Thiebaud attend the “Who you gonna call” photocall during the 16th Zurich Film Festival at Kino Corso on September 26, 2020 in Zurich, Switzerland. (Photo by Andreas Rentz/Getty Images for ZFF)
“Forgiveness is in the family of letting go. But forgiveness, more specifically for me anyway, is not about forgetting necessarily,” she said.
“It’s about understanding the other person, and that might mean that they’re wrong … Maybe you believe forever that whatever they did was wrong,” Shania continued, adding:
“Do I hate my ex-husband for making a mistake? No. It’s his mistake. Not my mistake.”
Shania Twain performs during halftime of Super Bowl XXXVII between the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the Oakland Raiders on January 26, 2003 at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, California. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)
Shania Twain Says She’s Moved On From Painful First Marriage
“So sad for him that he made such a great mistake that he has to live with. And I don’t know what that is, but it’s not … That’s not my weight,” she continued.
“My father’s a better example, OK, because this is someone that I totally forgive.”
Shania has spoken previously about the abuse she endured as a child and her long journey toward forgiving her stepfather.
Shania Twain attends the American Heart Association’s Go Red for Women Red Dress Collection 2020 at Hammerstein Ballroom on February 05, 2020 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for American Heart Association)
In an earlier interview on the “Armchair Expert” podcast, Shania said that when they both learned their spouses had cheated, her now-husband handled the news much better than she did.
“He was so thoughtful about it all … It was not cool with him, but he was smarter about it,” she said.
“I was uncontrollably fragile over it, which I had never felt before ever because I thought for once I was stable,” Shania added.
Shania Twain and her husband Frederic Thiebaud attend the “Who you gonna call” photocall during the 16th Zurich Film Festival at Kino Corso on September 26, 2020 in Zurich, Switzerland. (Photo by Thomas Niedermueller/Getty Images for ZFF)
“I really believe that I’m safe. So that really devastated me I think more than any other instability I’ve ever felt,” Twain added at the time.
Fortunately, Shania found her happy ending, and she and Frederic are still going strong.
To paraphrase one of Twain’s best-known songs, Frederic is clearly still the one!
Looking like it was a script plucked straight out of the 70’s , maybe even the 50’s, the richly entertaining mid-range drama, Easy’s Waltz goes down easy indeed as an engrossing character study of the kind of Vegas lounge singer that ought to be in that museum on the strip that is full of salvaged signs of the Las Vegas that has been torn down and replaced by much glitzier new age models. That is probably an apt description of Easy (Vince Vaughn) himself, a guy just trying to make ends meet running a restaurant on the outskirts and performing nightly, a Vic Damone-ish style singer, really talented with the phrasing of a lyric and dedicated to delivering for the few faithfuls who actually come to see him perform.
It is his night job, as he also has to look out for the staff, the waitresses, and make sure ends meet. Into his life comes mover and shaker Mickey Albano (Al Pacino) who sees something in Easy that he can exploit and so convinces him he belongs instead at the Wynn Hotel on the strip and he can make it happen. He becomes a mentor and soon Easy is getting the bigger break he never thought would happen. Easy is the kind of Vegas fixture who could see the big time happening just “over there” in the glitzy distance of the world’s most famous gambling town, but the Sinatra era is dead. This is now a place where stars do “residencies”, but there are still lounges and Easy fits right in.
The complication for him is devotion to his younger, troubled brother Sam (Simon Rex) who acts as his “manager” but is generally a screw-up. It doesn’t change and Sam’s stupid moves affect his relationship with Mickey, landing him in increasing trouble. Mickey is a smooth old-style operator but don’t cross him or he will show up with his goon squad for some beating-up time. Easy also has to deal with his mother (Mary Steenburgen), a tough cookie he is paying to keep her above water. His visit to her is the kind of single scene where an Oscar winner like Steenburgen knocks it out of the park. We instantly know this woman, and it isn’t pretty.
Easy’s Waltz, and that title is one that instantly suggests this is going to be the kind of character-based movie Hollywood studios used to thrive on but now barely touch. This independently made film which had it World Premiere as a Special Presentation at the Toronto Film Festival tonight, marks the feature writing/directing debut of Nic Pizzolatto who proved in the first season of True Detective he has the chops for this sort of thing, and proves it again here with a richly entertaining Vegas-y movie that feels decades older that the era of The Hangover and Leaving Las Vegas.
It is an actors dream. Vaughn has one of his best roles here, a guy who can interpret everything from “Little Drummer Boy” to classics like “Edge Of Seventeen” to Darin and Anka in their prime, and get to the essence, but for is own good perhaps he shouldn’t drift from his longtime comfort zone by playing a game he doesn’t know so well. And it is nice to see Pacino get a decent part here. I have seen him in basically throwaway or smallish role in other films this Fall season including Julian Schnabel’s In The Hand Of Dante and Gus Van Sant’s Dead Man’s Wire, but here his Mickey Albano may be Michael Corleone-light, but nonetheless lethal when he has to turn on a dime. At 85 he still has it. However, in a sadly poignant role as the down-on-his-luck Sam, Simon Rex really shows he has the dramatic chops to nearly steal the picture from a couple of ol pros like Vaughn and Pacino. He is terrific.
Most of the female parts, other than Steenburgen’s memorable if brief turn, including Kate Mara, Cobie Smulders, and Vegas veteran singer Shania Twain don’t have as much to do to make much of an impression, a distinctive problem the 1960 Ocean’s 11 also felt. This waltz is for the boys.
Producers are : Christopher Lemole, Tim Zajaros, Margot Hand, and Pizzolatto. It is looking for distribution.
Title: Easy’s Waltz
Festival: Toronto Film Festival – Special Presentations
Sales Agent: CAA
Director/Screenplay: Nic Pizzolatto
Cast: Vince Vaughn, Simon Rex, Kate Mara, Cobie Smulders, Shania Twain, Tim Simons, Fred Melamed, Sophia Ali, Mary Steenburgen, and Al Pacino.
Several of the biggest Las Vegas residencies are set to come to an end in January, February, and March of next year. The performers in question are some of the biggest names in rock & roll and country music. So who are these huge music artists saying good bye to Sin City? We’re glad you asked! Read on!
First up, the Eagles have just opened their Las Vegas shows, quickly selling out their live performances. With the enduring popularity of Don Henley and the Grammy-winning band, fans are eager to catch them after more than 50 years of touring. Even though they just began one of the biggest Vegas residencies in recent times, there is already an exit strategy.
In response to high demand, the Eagles extended their stay at the Sphere. Their shows were originally scheduled for just eight nights in September and October, but additional dates have been added, extending them through January of next year. Their last show is set for the 25th.
Up next, Shania Twain is an international country star who has been a Sin City favorite for a long while. You may remember she announced an end to her residency back in January of 2022, and yet here we are again. Will this really be the end? Twain is reportedly in talks to open a venue in Nashville. Her latest full-length album is Queen Of Me, which she released last year and followed with a massive worldwide tour.
However, Twain is really planning to wrap up her Come On Over shows on February 8th at PH Live in Planet Hollywood. But before she goes, fans will get the opportunity to hear her perform hits like “Don’t Be Stupid (You Know I Love You),” “From This Moment On,” “You’re Still The One,” “Honey, I’m Home,” “That Don’t Impress Me Much.” Tickets to the final run of shows are available now.
Meanwhile, the last of the big Las Vegas residencies to wrap up comes in March. Garth Brooks has revealed the final three weekends of his Las Vegas residency, Garth Brooks/Plus ONE, at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. These concluding performances will take place from February 21 to March 9, 2025.
“I can’t believe it’s almost over,” Garth shared. “The Caesars gig has been my favorite. No set list, no rules—just the music and the audience come first. I’m really going to miss this experience.” Garth Brooks/Plus ONE offers fans an intimate look at Garth’s artistry. Each show is unique, featuring varying instrumentation and the occasional special guest, ensuring that every night is a memorable, one-of-a-kind experience for both Garth and his audience.
Country music is welcoming a new character, and that’s Post Malone. So far Post has released two amazing country-pop songs with iconic country singers like Blake Shelton. He also recently announced a full country album, F-1 Trillion, coming August 16.
I love y’all so very much and I’m so excited to get out and play new music for you.
Post Malone said in a press release.
Post Malone can pretty much ace any genre – R&B, Pop, Rap, and now Country! We are so excited to see where the new album takes us this summer and perhaps hear some other features sprinkled throughout the album. You can pre-save F-1 Trillionhere and get tickets to the tour here. Which city are you showing up for?
Image Source: Live Nation
As much as we love our country cowboys, we are eager for Post to link up with some of our favorite female country artists.
Dolly Parton
What’s country music without Dolly Parton? Dolly has played a significant role in the history of the genre and has been featured in dozens of country projects, including Beyoncé’s latest project, COWBOY CARTER. We’d love for Post and Dolly to link up on a sweet country love ballad. Anytime Post releases a love song, we fall more in love with him and his music.
Some of our favorite Dolly songs are ‘9 to 5’ and ‘I Will Always Love You.’ Wouldn’t it be so cool to hear Post cover one of these? We can only hope and pray until the album drops.
We just know Post and Shania Twain would make a killer country-pop anthem! We can just imagine the visuals right now – sparkly cowboy hats, rhinestone boots, and horses running wild in the desert. Their song would definitely be about partying in the South during the summertime!
Some of our favorite Shania songs are ‘Giddy Up!’ and ‘That Don’t Impress Me Much.’ Which are your favorites? Which one would you want Post Malone to cover?
Finally, we have to shout out our girl Kacey Musgraves. She’s been on a roll since dropping Deeper Wellwhich we’ve been listening to nonstop. If Post has a Kacey feature on F-1 Trillion we’d be so happy we wouldn’t know what to do with ourselves. We imagine that their collaboration would be soulful and lean more towards a bluegrass style with lyrics about friendship and overcoming life’s toughest struggles.
Our favorite songs from Kacey’s discography are ‘Happy&Sad,’ ‘cherry blossom,’ ‘Dinner with Friends.’
Now that we’ve dished all our F-1 Trillion collaboration dreams, it’s time to hear yours! Which iconic country artist would you like Post Malone to link up with? Are you excited to see him on the road later this year? Let us know all of your thoughts in the comments below or by finding us on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook 🐝
While the score of the first Stanley Cup final playoff game may not have impressed us much, the Edmonton Oilers are aiming to amp up the home game experience with pre-puck drop performances by two legendary Canadian musical acts.
The Rogers Festival at the Final concert series aims to celebrate the 2024 Stanley Cup final between the Edmonton Oilers and Florida Panthers, the NHL and Rogers announced on Monday.
Game 1 this past Saturday night in Florida saw the Panthers shut out Edmonton 3-0. Game 2 takes place Monday, before both teams travel to Edmonton for Games 3 and 4.
Country-pop singer Shania Twain and rock band Our Lady Peace will headline free concerts outside of Rogers Place ahead of those games in Edmonton.
Both concerts will take place at the Scotiabank Fan Park, directly to the east of Rogers Place along 104th Avenue in Ice District.
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Our Lady Peace will perform before Game 3 on Thursday, June 13.
Shania Twain will be the featured performer before Game 4 on Saturday, June 15.
Both performances will begin at 4 p.m. MT, prior to the 6 p.m. MT game times. Portions of each performance will be broadcast on television ahead of the games as well.
Both concerts will be open to the public as first come, first serve, with no tickets required to view the performances.
Doors to the arena will open at 4:30 p.m. MT for fans with tickets to the hockey games.
Twain is the only person to perform the Grey Cup halftime show twice. Our Lady Peace had a concert at Hamilton Golf and Country Club on May 31 following the second round of the RBC Canadian Open, Canada’s men’s golf championship.
Mattel is celebrating Barbie’s 65th birthday with the creation of eight new “role model” dolls from eight different countries. Among those getting the “Barbie” treatment are Viola Davis, Shania Twain and Helen Mirren.
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The country-pop diva talked about embracing menopause and why she’s proud to be flaunting more than ever in an interview with the New York Post’s Alexa magazine published Wednesday.
Twain ― a five-time Grammy winner with a number of hits to her name, including “That Don’t Impress Me Much” and “Man! I Feel Like a Woman!” ― described the experience as a rewarding challenge.
“I think menopause was a very good thing for me because there were a lot more things changing in everything about me physically that I had to very quickly come to terms with,” Twain, 58, said.
“Menopause taught me to quickly say, ‘You know, it may only get worse. So just love yourself now. Just get over your insecurities — they’re standing in your way. And fear is standing in your way,’” she explained.
“I always sing about being fearless and all of that. I go there when I write. But I’m not living it the way I’m writing it. And I want to live the way I write. I’m more fierce than I ever was because I really demanded it about myself.”
Shania Twain performs on Day 3 of the 2023 Faster Horses music festival on July 16 in Brooklyn, Michigan.
Scott Legato via Getty Images
That new outlook inspired Twain to bare her soul, and more, for the cover of her single “Waking Up Dreaming,” which came out last year.
Talking about her topless, Western-themed photo shoot, she said: “I think I needed to capture where I am right now, because it’s a moment that I want to remember.”
“So I just had to be brave about it, to own it,” she said. “And I felt really good that I felt like, ‘Yeah, I’m OK with that.’ I need to be able to look at myself in the mirror every day. I’m perfectly the way I should be. This is the way I should be at my age. I’m fine with it. And I’m not afraid of it anymore. It’s all good.”
The Canadian singer-songwriter struck a similar tone around the time of the song’s release last year.
“I am a woman in my late 50s, and I don’t need to hide behind the clothes,” she told People magazine. “I can’t even tell you how good it felt to do nude shooting.”
“I was just so unashamed of my new body, you know, as a woman that is well into my menopause,” she said. “I’m not even emotional about it; I just feel okay about it. It’s really liberating.”
Shania Twain had a few famous faces in the audience as she performed at the Hollywood Bowl on Sunday night.
Kristen Bell took to Instagram to share some snaps from the evening, admitting she noticed some familiar faces photobombing her pics.
Bell and her husband Dax Shepard ended up being sat next to Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson.
The “Frozen” actress wrote, alongside multiple photos and videos: “Saw @shaniatwain at the @hollywoodbowl last night and sat next to some really nice randos!
“Dad was crying by the first song and the randos kept photobombing us but other than that it was a perfect night!!!!” she added, with Shepard appearing to wipe his eyes in one vid.
While some women like to at least slightly pretend they would “emancipate themselves” if they “could” from a toxic relationship, some simply like to own up to loving the pain. Especially in song form. For the past decade or so, both Rihanna and Lana Del Rey have been largely responsible for filling that role. And yet, as both women “mature” (theoretically), each one has “calmed down” and explored more spiritual, “good-natured” themes in their songs of late. For Del Rey, this includes falling prey to the middle-age trap of expressing the desire to just settle down and have kids with someone (hopefully not Jack Donoghue or Evan Winiker or some other out-of-left-field rando). This revealed on such Did You Know That There’s A Tunnel Under Ocean Blvd tracks as “The Grants” and “Sweet.” Nonetheless, she still struggles with letting go of her younger self’s input on more usual emotional pain-worshipping fare, namely “Candy Necklace.”
As for Rihanna maybe part of the reason she’s taken a hiatus from music (save for her two singles, “Lift Me Up” and “Born Again” for the Black Panther:Wakanda Forever Soundtrack) is a result of not necessarily wanting to keep talking about how good toxic relationships feel (hear: “Rehab,” “Russian Roulette,” “Love the Way You Lie” and “Love on the Brain,” to name a few). After all, she’s presently in a “healthy” one with A$AP Rocky, spurred by having two children with him. Even so, considering both LDR and RiRi are like a sonic version of the Safdie Brothers’ Heaven Knows What, it’s difficult to branch out from the trope they established for themselves. That’s why Del Rey mostly hasn’t and why Rihanna has opted to become a business mogul—to avoid singing about topics that are perhaps not what people want to hear (i.e., being in love with someone stable and supportive). Because, for as much as she was ridiculed for her relationship with Chris Brown (and going back to him a second time after he physically assaulted her), listeners couldn’t deny their love of lyrics such as, “It’s like I checked into rehab, and baby, you’re my disease.” To be sure, the idea of being unable to kick a toxic addiction in the form of a love interest has been romanticized for centuries (just look at Catherine and Heathcliff). Rihanna has been able to capitalize on that repeatedly, especially after she stopped denying rumors of her romance with Brown, initially saying things like, “We are best friends, honestly, like brother and sister.” Sure, like brother and sister if they were Finneas and Billie. Or Angelina and James. Anyway, this pattern of starting out as “besties” with a guy before finally letting him into her boudoir continued with Drake and A$AP, the former being jettisoned perhaps because he was just too wholesome for Rihanna’s taste.
Focusing on her new family and her various Fenty-related business endeavors has thus made Rihanna lose touch with her songstress “baddie” side, while Del Rey, too, shuffles in the limbo of her early persona and the one in which she tries to become this generation’s Joni (Mitchell) meets Joan (Baez). So, possibly sensing a void once wholly occupied by these two queens of championing “it hurts so bad but feels so good” relationships, Anne-Marie has entered the fray with her latest single, “Unhealthy.” Already coming in hot this year with singles like “Sad Bitch,” “Expectations” and “Baby Don’t Hurt Me,” “Unhealthy” marks the fourth single that will appear on her third album of the same name this summer. Not only that, but it somewhat ironically features Miss “Man! I Feel Like A Woman” herself, Shania Twain. And yet, Twain’s notedness for being an “independent woman” took a while to cultivate after releasing “You’re Still the One,” also from her 1997 album, Come On Over.
You might say that it, too, turned out to be a song about toxic love—once Mutt Lange eventually ended up cheating on her with her best friend, Marie-Anne (not Anne-Marie) Thiébaud (truly, the stuff of country song clichés, and also a large part of the plot driving Hope Floats starring Sandra Bullock). Weirder still, though, was Twain ending up with the now ex-husband of Marie-Anne, Frédéric Thiébaud. Meanwhile, Marie-Anne is still with Mutt. So, in the end, it was a happy little “wife swap” story, wasn’t it? The sort of story Del Rey (or Taylor Swift during folklore/evermore period) might talk about on one of her songs. The point is, the fact that Twain makes a cameo on “Unhealthy” just goes to show that, no matter how far a woman comes or how much “growth” she might have experienced, there’s always room to ruminate on the “beauty” of l’amour toxique.
But before Twain’s verse enters the picture, Anne-Marie opens with, “Well, your love is worse, worse than cigarettes/Even if I had twenty in my hands/Oh, babe, your touch, it hurts more than hangovers/No, that bottle don’t hold the same regret.” Yet, despite knowing all these things vis-à-vis how bad this man is for her, she still can’t—nay, doesn’t want to—let go. In other words, “good dick will imprison you.” Or even slightly adequate dick, these days. With an accompanying visualizer for the song that shows Anne-Marie delighting in some junk food before proceeding to treat her ketchup bottle like an unwieldy splooging penis, we can feel her lack of concern for other people’s opinions as she blithely recounts, “And my mother says that you’re bad for me/Guess she never felt the high we’re on right now/And my father says I should run away/But he don’t know that I just don’t know how.”
In certain respects, it channels the simultaneously parallel and antithetical anthem that is Cyndi Lauper’s “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun,” during which she chirps, “My mother says, ‘When you gonna live your life right?’ Oh momma dear, we’re not the fortunate ones/And girls, they wanna have fun” and then adds, “The phone rings, in the middle of the night/My father yells, ‘What you gonna do with your life?’/Oh daddy dear, you know you’re still number one/But girls, they wanna have fun.” And the “fun” Anne-Marie wants to have is with this “bad for her” man (cue the Bridget Jones’ Diary line, “Anne-Marie, wanton sex goddess, with a very bad man between her thighs”). Much like Bonnie Parker, who one could easily imagine singing, while bullets rained down on her and Clyde, “‘Cause even if it kills me, I’ll always take your hand/It’s unhealthy, they just don’t understand/And when thеy try to stop me, just know nobody can/You’re still gon’ be my man.”
Anne-Marie dares to release such a single at a time when it’s not exactly chic to continue such LDR and RiRi stylings in music. Which begs the question of how much a sudden aversion toward #MeToo-oriented notions have gradually started to fall back into favor, even by women themselves (Anne-Marie could very well be talking about her own relationship with Slowthai, for all we know). As for Twain, she confirms the delights of toxicity by chiming in, “Oh, this body high gives me sleepless nights/It’s a million times what any drug could give/And my red eyes, they are twice as wide/It might look like pain, but to me, it’s bliss.”
Perhaps not since Britney Spears singing, “With a taste of your lips, I’m on a ride/You’re toxic, I’m slippin’ under” on her 2004 hit called, what else, “Toxic,” has there been so much pleasure expressed over pain. And, considering some of the other song titles on Unhealthy, including “Psycho,” “Obsessed,” “Kills Me to Love You” and “Cuckoo,” this particular single only adds to the “on-brand” motif. One that someone apparently had to pick up the slack for as Del Rey and Rihanna have started to soften.
As country-pop singer Shania Twain took the stage last month at the People’s Choice Awards to perform the classic hit “That Don’t Impress Me Much,” she surprised the audience with a sassy twist when she swapped Reynolds’ name into her famous Brad Pitt lyric.
“OK, so you’re Ryan Reynolds,” Twain sang.
“That don’t impress me much. So you have the looks, but have you got the touch?” she added as the camera panned to Reynolds.
During a recent promotional interview for “Babylon,” Pitt was playfully grilled about whether he felt Reynolds stole his shine after Twain replaced his name with that of the “Spirited” actor — and Pitt delivered an oh-so-perfect response.
Laughing, Pitt replied, “He didn’t steal it. I think we can share the wealth.”
“Yeah, Ryan’s a good egg, too,” Pitt added with a grin. “He deserves some love.”
Pitt was so supportive of the viral name swap that, elsewhere in the interview, he dropped some other Hollywood names he believes deserve their own lyrical shoutout from Twain.
“I think she should pass it on down, and next time she can sing it to Austin Butler,” Pitt added. “Maybe Leo [DiCaprio] in between.”
At the time of Twain’s performance, Reynolds — who received the People’s Icon Award that evening — appeared pretty delighted by the lyrics switch. Smiling in surprise, he seemed to mouth, “Oh my God, me?” before erupting into laughter.
After the event, the Canadian actor declared in an Instagram story that the moment “may be the best thing that’s ever happened to me,” E! News reported.
Twain seemed to be enjoying teasing Reynolds as she tweeted, “Sorry not sorry @VancityReynolds,” while sharing a clip of her now-viral performance the next day.
Meanwhile, Reynolds gushed on Twitter: “I can’t think of a more iconic, smart and beautiful person to not impress all that much.”
“Thank you for an amazing night @ShaniaTwain,” he added alongside a heart emoji.
Twain’s sixth studio album, “Queen of Me,” will debut on Feb. 3.
WASHINGTON — “Five, four, three, two, one!” and the towering National Christmas Tree blazed with bright color Wednesday evening as President Joe Biden marked a century-old American tradition leading the lighting near the White House.
The president, joined by first lady Jill Biden and host LL Cool J, led the festive crowd braving damp, chilly weather in a countdown before the tree was illuminated.
Biden delivered brief remarks on American unity and promise, concluding exuberantly as Jill Biden blew a kiss, “From the Biden family to you, Merry Christmas, America!”
The tradition dates back to 1923 when President Calvin Coolidge walked from the White House to the Ellipse to light a 48-foot fir tree decorated with 2,500 electric bulbs in red, white and green, as a local choir and a quartet from the U.S. Marine Band performed. The lighting ceremony has been carried out year after year—drawing thousands to Washington—with a few exceptions during times of war and national tragedy.
The current 27-foot white fir was planted just last year.
Vice President Kamala Harris and second gentleman Doug Emhoff joined the Bidens to watch some of the evening’s musical performances.
In 2020, due to COVID-19 health concerns, the lighting did not have a live audience. After President John F. Kennedy’s assassination on Nov. 22, 1963, President Lyndon Johnson postponed the ceremony until days before Christmas as the nation observed a thirty-day period of national mourning. And the tradition was paused from 1941 to 1945 during World War II.
CBS will broadcast the tree lighting ceremony on the evening of Dec. 18, one week before Christmas. This year’s ceremony included performances by the U.S. Marine Band, Ariana DeBose, Shania Twain, the Estefans and others.
Country music star Shania Twain will have a party for two — nights — in Moncton this spring after adding a second show in the New Brunswick city during her upcoming Queen of Me tour.
According to a release Monday from promoter evenko, Twain now has plans to perform Thursday, June 15 at Moncton’s Avenir Centre, the day after her previously-announced show scheduled for the same venue on June 14.
Tickets for the new Moncton show go on sale to the general public Dec. 2 at 10 a.m.
According to Ticketmaster, there are still tickets available for the June 14 show in Moncton, with prices ranging between $444 and $1,690.
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The tour — which will follow the February 2023 release of her new album Queen of Me, her first since 2017 — will also include a stop at the Scotiabank Centre in Halifax on June 12, which was announced along with the original tour dates at the end of October.
The Ticket Atlantic website indicates the Halifax show is entirely sold out.
Twain, the best-selling female artist in the history of country music, also added five new stops to the tour in Glasgow, UK, Bethel, NY, New Orleans, LA, Leeds, UK and Amsterdam, NL.
The Queen of Me tour will now have 55 shows across 49 cities. It’s set to kick off in Spokane, WA on April 28, making stops throughout the U.S., Canada and Europe before wrapping up Sept. 30 in Amsterdam.
Shania Twain‘s going to getcha good as the five-time Grammy award-winning and best-selling female artist in country music history will be making 17 stops in Canada during her Queen of Me worldwide tour.
The tour announcement is in conjunction with her new album labelled Queen of Me set to release on Feb. 3, 2023.
For the majority of the Canadian shows, fellow Canadian country music star, Lindsay Ell will be accompanying Twain as part of her opening act. Up-and-coming Canadian country music artist, Robyn Ottolini will be the opening act for shows in the east coast along with the show in Quebec. The only exception to a different opening act would be her show in Ottawa come July as it’s part of Ottawa’s Bluesfest.
The tour starts next April in Spokane, Wash., and has a whopping 49 stops within North America and the U.K. According to a news release, it will mark the first time Shania Twain fans around the world will get to see the queen of country pop in nearly five years.
From west to east, the Queen of Me tour will stop at the following Canadian cities:
May 2 and 3 — Vancouver — Rogers Arena
May 5 and 6 — Edmonton — Rogers Place
May 9 and 10 — Calgary — Scotiabank Saddledome
May 12 — Saskatoon — SaskTel Centre
May 14 — Winnipeg — Canada Life Centre
June 12 — Halifax — Scotiabank Centre
June 14 — Moncton, N.B. — Avenir Centre
June 17 — Quebec City — Videotron Centre
June 18 — Montreal — Bell Centre
June 20 — Hamilton, Ont. — FirstOntario Centre
June 21 — London, Ont. — Budweiser Gardens
June 23 and 24 — Toronto — Budweiser Stage
July 6 — Ottawa — Ottawa Bluesfest
Tickets go on sale Friday, Nov. 4, 2022, at 10 a.m. local time through LiveNation’s website.
The announcement also comes on the heels of her “Let’s Go!” Las Vegas residency, which wrapped up in September, weeks before she dropped a new single, Waking Up Dreaming.
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Earlier in the year, Twain dug into her personal history in a Netflix documentary, Not Just a Girl.
In an effort to help promote positive change in children’s lives in times of crises and economic hardship, $1 from every ticket sold will go to Twain’s charity, Shania Kids Can. Founded in 2010 the charity provides children with one-on-one consultations, academic support and group activities, as well as nutritious snacks and meal programs where needed, all while in the safe, confidence-building environment that is the Shania Kids Can Clubhouse.
The tour wraps up on Sept. 26, 2023, in Birmingham, U.K.
— with files from The Canadian Press
Shania Twain tells her life story in new Netflix documentary