Among the many memorable statements Madonna made throughout 1991âs Truth or Dare, the one that stuck out most, in terms of characterizing the Blond Ambition Tour, was this: âItâs a journey that you go on⊠You take a journey. Itâs cathartic. You canât get to one place without going to another place.â Madonna has obviously borne that same statement in mind with regard to the conception of her twelfthâthatâs right, twelfthâtour. For we, the audience, are all taken on the journey of her life. So yes, more than a âgreatest hitsâ tour (with that term being used more loosely in Madonnaâs interpretation), this is a âpopâ odyssey. Except that Madonna doesnât like the word âpopâ to describe her show. As she told the crowd, âI really hate that word, âpop,â âcause it sounds disposable, and I am not.â This much sheâs been determined to make the massesâhowever hating and skeptical they areâconsistently aware of. Even though some of her more adamant detractors (Morrissey especially) have billed her as precisely that. Designed for disposable, assembly-line consumption with each new era. Ergo, a nickname like McDonna (an insult hurtled at Madonna by, who else, Morrissey) referring to her McDonaldâs-like nature, capitalism-wise. And sure, Madonna has never made any attempt to hide her zeal for money, but if that were the only thing motivating her, she would have stopped (to many peopleâs delight) a long time ago.
In truth, she had a number of opportunities to simply âtake the money and shut upâ in her early days, as she was forging an artistic path for herself. One that quite a few others tried to help shape along the wayâapparently not aware of the iron will they had come up against until it was too late, and they had already sunk a lot of money into molding their âcoquette.â This included Belgian producers Jean-Claude Pellerin et Jean Vanloo, who hired Madonna to be a backup dancer for Patrick Hernandez in 1979, but also wanted to make her into their next Big Thing. They flew her to Paris and put her up in a nice place near Parc Monceau so they could work on that âshapingâ with vocal coaches, the works. Then there was Camille Barbone, who managed Madonna under Gotham Management from 1981 to 1982, when Madonna broke out of her contract to pursue her own artistic route. One that was not in line with the Pat Benatar-inspired sound and aesthetic Barbone was cultivating. Of course, these are not the people or occasions M references in The Celebration Tour. Though she says, âI think of it as a retrospective. Iâm gonna tell you the story of my lifeâthe last forty years of my life,â that story canât feature any of the people who might not have gotten a âreturn on their investmentâ in supporting Madonna Ciccone before she was: MADONNA. Although perhaps it could if Madonna ever did release the biopic she was working on for three years (starting in 2020). And obviously, this tour is meant to be a âsubstituteâ for that biopic (as opposed to a substitute for love). The one that she publicized at length via her various writing sessions with both Diablo Cody and Erin Cressida Wilson. The production also involved intense auditions (described as âMadonna boot campâ) for the lead role, with Julia Garner finally winning out over competitors like Florence Pugh, Sydney Sweeney, Alexa Demie, Odessa Young, Emma Laird, Bebe Rexha and Sky Ferreira. But maybe Madonna, in the end, got âcreeped outâ by someone trying to fulfill an impossible role, preferring to just do it herself by going on tour. Thus, the announcement at the beginning of 2023 that, while the movie was shelved, there would be a tour to soothe wounded fans instead. Indeed, many fans likely breathed a sigh of relief, knowing that the delicacy of telling such a story could go wrong in manifold ways. Even with (or perhaps precisely because of) Madonna directing the project herself.
A world tour, on the other hand, that was something she could guarantee to conquer (or so she thought before that major âhealth scareâ a.k.a. near-death experience over the summer). And she could also tell her life story that way instead, as The Celebration Tour is so clearly ârunoffâ from the Little Sparrow (the main working title) script she had been working on for years. Mining through so much material to ensure the accuracy of her storyâs telling. Maybe even snippets of the dialogue were repurposed in some of the âvignettesâ of The Celebration TourâŠlike Madonna trying to get into a club (presumably Paradise Garage) and being rebuffed. A slight she wouldnât forget about, she admits, informing the audience, âNobody let me into any clubs dressed like this. Can you imagine? Assholes! Iâve been getting revenge for the last forty years.â For who would deny Madonna entry into any club now? Having all but assured every DJ has a dance hit of hers that will undoubtedly get the crowd going. This fear of rejection she has stemming from being âbouncedâ so often in her pre-fame days manifested most overtly in a 2000 MTV promo for the Madonna V.I.P. Contest, wherein M appears at the front of a line outside of a club, only to be met with the jarring question, âAre you on the list?â She looks at the bouncer skeptically and replies, âPeople donât usually ask me that question.â Unmoved, the bouncer says, âWell I canât let you in here if youâre not on the list.â Out of patience, she reminds, âExcuse me but IâmâŠMadonna.â The bouncer then points to the slew of other people dressed like Madonna (a running theme throughout her career) waiting in line (or âon lineâ as New Yorkers annoyingly like to say) to get inside. As Madonna realizes that the bouncer sees her as another âwannabeâ/nobody, it seems to take her back to those days when she couldnât get into a club just for being herself. Awakening from the nightmare in the comfort of her palatial abode, she remarks, âThank god, it was just a dream.â She then looks into the camera as clichĂ© cheeseball music plays and adds, âBut for millions of people not getting into a nightclub, itâs a reality they have to face every day⊠Wonât you please help put an end to club-going nightmares? Enter today.â So yes, to say that club culture was, is and remains a heavy influence on Madonnaâs psyche would be an understatement. And itâs a culture that infected her upon encountering âthe sceneâ in New York City. The âstage,â naturally, where she begins The Celebration Tourâs story. For it was this moment that she attributed to the birth of her âRealâ Self: in 1978, when she moved to New York.
Thus, it can be no surprise that the âjourneyâ of the tour commences with mentioning the âtransferâ to her beloved adopted city, centered around âearly daysâ tracks like âEverybody,â âBurning Upâ and âHoliday.â âCan you imagine moving to New York in 1978?â she asks the crowd at one point. Because, sure, 70s and 80s NYC is plenty glamorized now, but back then, it was truly the last place a girl on her own should move. Even a girl as âtough as nailsâ as Madonna. But it was perhaps New York itself that transformed her into the level of âtoughâ we know today, having endured all manner of horrors upon arrival, including being raped at knifepoint. But Madonnaâs the type of person who can take all of these traumas âin strideââthat is to say, she believes that every struggle is what makes you into the person you are (ergo, âYou canât get to one place without going to another placeâ). So who would she be, indeed, without all those emotional scars (or âBeautiful Scars,â as one of her Rebel Heart-era songs is titled)? Especially the one that stemmed from her mother dying of breast cancer when Madonna was five years old. Had that not happened, thereâs no denying Madonnaâs drive for fame wouldnât have been as intense. Not to say that it was a âgood thingâ her mother died so she would be compelled to seek love from the entire world so as to fill the void where maternal love was supposed to be. Indeed, during a video portion of the show, Madonna features a soundbite of herself from a 1995 interview wherein she says that she would have gladly traded her fame and fortune for one thing: a mother. The concept of motherhood is, in fact, very much omnipresent throughout the tour. And yes, of course, lots of sexuality and writhing. After all, how do you think women become mothers? (Answer: by fucking).
But before Madonna became a literal mother to six children and a metaphorical âMotherâ to all the gays, as well as every pop star that came after her (Britney included), she was a loudmouthed âstreet kidâ aspiring to be a club kid. And thatâs the version of herself we see sitting next to her after her performance of âInto the Groove.â Dressed in what look like âragsâ by todayâs standards. And Madonna is the first to admit her 1981-era sartorial choices were slightly âtragic.â Nonetheless, she turns to the dancer mimicking her early 80s style while wearing a flesh-colored mask that obfuscates their real face (for an eerie effect) and asks the audience, âAnyways, have you met Me? Have you met Myself?â By some accounts, none of us ever really will (#nobodyknowsme).
With this reflection on the past, itâs ironic that Madonna should begin the tour with âNothing Really Matters.â Not because, for most non-fans, it wouldnât be considered a âgreatest hit,â per se, but because one of the defining lyrics of the song is: âNothing takes the past away like the future.â She then proceeds to bring the past back after that song, as though to further prove she can defy time however she wants to. Of that rag-wearing club aspirant, Madonna notes, âI like to keep her by my side. I never forget where I come fromâthe struggle, the humility, the hard work. And I just want to give you a hug right now, thank you.â Yes, Madonna symbolically hugging and thanking her early twenties self for all the bravado and determination she brought to New York so that the Madonna of forty years later could relish the fruits of those labors is a combination of being ultra-meta, a psychologistâs wet dream and, to the more cynical, yet another sign of Madonnaâs enduring narcissism. Something her former University of Michigan roommate, Whitley Setrakian, once commented on by shrugging, âHer passion wasâŠherself. The Project of Madonna.â
That passion for the Project of Madonna is alive and well for The Celebration Tour, with those âpast selvesâ and incarnations being constantly present onstage. And yes, she might owe a debt to the 9.9.99 VMAs for that idea. It was during that yearâs awards show that a slew of drag performers dressed in some of her most iconic looks gave her a nonverbal introduction before she took the stage to then introduce Paul McCartney and present the award for Video of the Year. With the endless barrage of options in terms of âMadonna looks,â the pop star has long been a favorite of drag queens, and so itâs only right that the tour should be emceed by one. Specifically, Bob the Drag Queen, who introduces the show in Madonnaâs famed Marie Antoinette ensemble from the 1990 VMAs (and yes, one of the drag queens at the 1999 VMAs wore that look, too). Heâs also sure to call out that legendary tidbit about how Madonna arrived in NY with a mere thirty-five dollars in her pocket, adding to that reminder a touch of goading about how heâd like to see you try to become the Queen of Pop with just thirty-five dollars and a dream in New York City. Of course, one of the unacknowledged things about Madonna is that she did benefit, like the rest of her baby boomer cohort, from the time and place she found herself in. For, while it was difficult to do what she did in many regards, it was also much easier to become famous in the early 80s without anyâŠpolish. Particularly as she got in on the ground floor of the postmodern/MTV pop star period that would dominate until the 00s. There wasnât much competition in her fieldânot the way there is now in terms of everyone vying for the same piece of âvirality pie.â One wonders if Madonna would have been able to thrive in such a climate, or if she was truly built for the more âblood, sweat and tearsâ form of fame that did not rely on smartphones and the internet for some kind of âdemocratizingâ advantage. She herself has said sheâs glad she came up during a time before social media, for it allowed her to experiment and become the artist she wanted to without risk of it somehow backfiring on her later with the video and photos âreceipts.â Many of which we have access to, but a great many that we donât.
Even some of those very earliest performances of âHoliday.â A song that stands out more particularly than previous performances of it on her tours in that she uses it to show the drastic âcomedownâ effect that AIDS had on the club and party circuit. Lending new meaning to phrase, âKeep dancing till we die.â Incorporating Chicâs 1978 single, âI Want Your Love,â at one point, the song starts to slow as ominous musical undertones begin to creep in. Soon, Madonna is repeating the word âholidayâ with a melancholic tone as the music has stopped altogether and the gay man she was dancing with (âplayedâ here by Daniele Sibilli) proceeds to fall to the groundâhis light-hearted dance now transformed into a danse macabre. Resigning herself to this loss, she places her coat (lined with Keith Haringâs signature graffiti) and kneels over him as the stageâs trap door opens to take them both down into the depths. The opening to Madonnaâs least appreciated song (and definitely not a greatest hit), âIn This Life,â then plays before transitioning into âLive To Tell.â This precursor to how AIDS put a stop to the party and cast a dark pall over the 80s for anyone outside of a conservative yuppie bubble is what helps to lend such a powerful effect to the performance. Serving as a contrast and visual manifestation of how everything changed once AIDS arrived and gay menâgay men that Madonna knewâstarted dropping like flies.
âLive To Tellâ not only makes excellent use of the many hanging retractable screens that appear during the show, but it also marks the first appearance of the âportal frame.â A sort of life-size picture frame Madonna can stand in while suspended in midair, âgoing back in time,â as it were. And seeing the faces of those she lost to AIDS, including her first gay friend and mentor, Christopher Flynn. Then, of course, her âtwin flame,â Martin Burgoyne. Both of these men being who she refers to in âIn This Life.â
Being that no greatest hits tour of Madonnaâs would be complete without âLike A Prayer,â she uses it once more to draw on her go-to theme of Catholicismâs intertwinement with sexuality. That, by repressing it, the religion ends up rendering sex âtaboo,â therefore even hotter because of its âforbiddenness.â Choosing to incorporate Sam Smith and Kim Petrasâ âUnholyâ before and after, the audience is treated to dancers in gimp masks gyrating before neon crosses. Because without Catholicism and its subversion, there is no Madonna. Whatâs more, the themes and visuals presented by this back-to-back pairing of âLive To Tellâ and âLike A Prayerâ ultimately serve as a better representation of what Ryan Murphy was trying to convey in the atrocious AHS: NYC.
Unfortunately, Madonna may have grown too accustomed to death already after her motherâs premature one. And, after her performance of âDonât Tell Meâ (which expectedly features a bevy of glam cowboy costumes), she informs the audience, âWhen I was a child, of course, I associated being a mother with death because my mother had many children and then she died. And then I thought, âWhy would I want to be a mother? It just ends up in death.â So my whole life I just kept saying, âIâm gonna live the life my mother never had. And I did. Oh boy, did I.â Eventually, though, she âsurrendered to the pleasureâ of motherhood. Being among the first of her kind to show others that you can be a mom and still be a badass. You donât have to give up all of yourself to do it (though, some mothers are wont to point out that Madonna has had an army of paid staff to help her raise her children, therefore remain âherselfâ). In fact, you can even impart some of yourself onto the children. Which Madonna would like to think sheâs done in that all of them have artistic inclinations. Sheâs taught them, in effect, that art is the best and healthiest way to cope with trauma and loss. To put it another way, âEverything in this show is bits and pieces of my life. People Iâve loved, people Iâve lost, friends Iâve lost, peers Iâve lost, children Iâve gained, family, art, lifeâall of it. Thatâs what saves me, and that is how I survive.â Naturally, this leads into âI Will Surviveâ (a gay anthem, bien sĂ»r), Madonnaâs chosen cover track for the tour (whereas the Rebel Heart Tour favored âLa Vie En Roseâ). Itâs a pointed selection, of course, for the crux of this tour seems to be about Madonna dealing with her survivorâs guilt over the years, particularly with regard to so many of her contemporaries dying before her. Most overtly, this pertains to Michael Jackson and Prince (both of whom Madonna âdated,â as much as one can date men like that). When combined with Madonna, they formed the Holy Boomer Trinity of pop culture icons, all born in 1958. Both men are acknowledged during the tour, though Prince to a much less cringeworthy degree. His âcameoâ arrives, fittingly, at the end of âLike A Prayer.â For the album of the same name is heavy with Prince contributions, from âLove Songâ to the closing track, âAct of Contritionââwielded at the end of âLike A Prayerâ here so that the Prince lookalike can do his guitar-scorching thing.
Regrettably, Madonna remains among the many to act as though 1) pedophilic allegations against Michael Jackson never happened and 2) Leaving Neverland doesnât exist. Strangely, Madonnaâs Jackson obsession has only increased over the years in spite of how vocal he was about his contempt for her. At one point calling her, in his taped recordings with his âspiritual advisor,â Shmuley Boteach, a ânasty witch.â He also listed Madonna as one of the people who was âjealousâ of his talent by saying, âThey admire you and know youâre wonderful and great, but theyâre jealous. âCause they wish they were in your place, wish they were in your shoes. And âMâ is one of them. Madonna. Sheâs not a nice⊠she hasnât been kind. Sheâs a woman, and I think thatâs what bothers her. Women donât scream for other women. And men are too cool to scream for women.â Needless to say, Jackson doesnât seem to be factoring in the many screaming gay men at Madonnaâs shows. The Celebration Tour being no exception to the rule. But it seems the segment that features her and Jacksonâs 80s-era silhouettes dancing (to the tune of âBillie Jeanâ and âLike A Virgin,â in a nod to what Madonna did on The Virgin Tour) against one of the screens is more for the people who really were seeking a greatest hits tour in buying a ticket. Digging deep among the few images of them actually together, Madonna displays the three âphoto sessionsâ of the two of them (the first when she went backstage to see the Jacksons after their 1984 Victory Tour, the second when they went to The Ivy together in 1993 and the third, of course, from their 1991 âdateâ at the Academy Awards). Itâs no longer totally obvious why Madonna is so dead-set on solidifying her association with a child molester (and master manipulator of those children and their parents) except the usual excuse about how thereâs no one else on the same level to compare herself to anymore. Least of all in the present climate of TikTok and YouTube nobodies coasting off millions of views rather than actual star quality and charisma.
Oddly, the main criticism about the Michael portion of the program, which, alas, sticks out in oneâs mind because itâs toward the end of the show, has little to do with Madonna continuing to elevate and idolize a sexual assaulter and more to do with being âhokeyâ or âcorny.â Um, no, the real problem is Madonna remains hellbent on aligning her affections with someone who was blatantly inappropriate with children, whether one believes the âallegationsâ or not. Her blind spot about Jackson also negates Madonnaâs feminist persona. One that would surely adhere to the adage about believing victims. Women or men. Like the men in Leaving Neverland (James Safechuck and Wade Robson, of Britney-kissing fame). Considering Madonna herself was the victim of sexual assault, it also seems bizarre that she would be so willing to gloss over this âcomplicatedâ aspect of Jacksonâs legacy. Yet, in some sense, it mirrors the glossing over of her own complicated one. From the cultural appropriation arguments (ostensibly âamendedâ by featuring the Queens Remix of BeyoncĂ©âs âBreak My Soulâ during the âVogueâ segment) to ignoring the fact that she and Sinead OâConnor werenât exactly âbest mates.â Or even in possession of the kind of acquaintanceship that would warrant Madonna flashing her image on one of the screens during, of all things, âDonât Cry For Me Argentina.â To add insult to injury, OâConnorâs image is displayed right after Marlon Brandoâsânot exactly a known advocate of womenâs rights.
In fact, one of the key clashes between Madonna and OâConnor stemmed from their divergent views on feminism. With OâConnor saying of Madonna, in a 1991 Spin interview, âMadonna is probably the hugest role model for women in America. Thereâs a woman who people look up to as being a woman who campaigns for womenâs rights. A woman who, in an abusive way toward me, said that I look like I had a run-in with a lawnmower and that I was about as sexy as a Venetian blind.â To be fair, Madonna was no kinder in her assessment of appearance when it came to her âbelovedâ Michael Jackson either, publicly declaring she wanted to give him a makeover, starting with his hair and also, âI wanna get him out of those buckly boots.â For someone as prone to and reliant upon image overhauls, there was no chance things could have worked out between them, âromanticallyâ or platonically.
Additionally, Madonnaâs affection for Jackson makes little sense when taking into account that he echoed what many detractors have said over the years: âLetâs face it, she canât sing and sheâs just an okay dancer. What does she do best? She knows how to market herself. Thatâs it.â And yet, one apparently canât put a price on effective âmarketing.â Madonna was even able to market herself as a âbetterâ Catholic than Sinead by commenting of her ripping up an image of Pope John Paul II on Saturday Night Live, âI think thereâs a better way to present her ideas rather than ripping up an image that means a lot to other people.â Evoking a sort of, âHey, thatâs only okay when I do itâ philosophy on Madonnaâs part when it comes to controversy-starting. Once more highlighting the palpable tinge of hypocrisy in featuring Sineadâs image during the tour.
After her performance of âDonât Tell Me,â Madonna is due for her second speech of the night. And, after talking about motherhood, she took the opportunity to address the shitty state of the world by inquiring of her audience, âHow can we change this? What can we do? Do you ask yourself that question? You know how you can change it?â âGive you more money,â someone in the audience jadedly quips. Because, sure, itâs no lie that Madonna has cadged her fair share of dough from fans as she assures them itâs all for a good cause. But, ultimately, isnât it? If one woman can still bring so much joy and entertainment to people in a world that is increasingly bleak as fuck in general and utterly flaccid on the showmanship front in particular, there can be no denying sheâs earned those millions. And yes, Madonna does make someone like Taylor Swift, with her âpreciousâ Eras Tour, look positively banal. The Celebration Tour, accordingly, is a reminder to those who have been foolish enough to forget that there is only one true master in the art of pop stardom, and itâs the very woman who helmed it.
While some have said that Madonna âconcedingâ to a greatest hits tour is a sign of desperation, this is not a conventional âgreatest hitsâ tour by any means (and certainly, few would cite âMother and Fatherâ or âThe Beast Withinâ as being among her hits). Unless one counts the fact that these are the greatest hits to the gay men who have enjoyed dancing to these tracks in the club the most. How else does one explain the presence of âFever,â âJustify My Love,â (cover or not) âI Will Survive,â âBedtime Storyâ and âRainâ? Whatâs more, her overt preference for the Erotica album on this tour not only reveals that she thinks the record has finally been vindicated enough to be truly appreciated, but that this, like so much of what sheâs done, is a tour for the gays. Correction: the older gays. In other words, the proverbial last of the Mohicans in terms of having any fucking taste.
*note: this review references the November 19, 2023 performance