Dua Lipa Brings Surprise Guest Charli XCX to the Stage for ‘360' in London
Brat Summer lived on at Wembley Stadium, where Dua Lipa welcomed Charli XCX to the stage for '360' Saturday night (June 21) at her second Wembley Stadium gig on the Radical Optimism Tour.
The 'Houdini' singer had the London stage lights set to neon green with Charli taking center beside her, fan-captured video from the concert shows.
More from Billboard
9 Best Moments From Dua Lipa's Crowning Moment at London's Wembley Stadium
Sabrina Carpenter, SZA, Ariana Grande Win Multiple Awards at 2025 Kids' Choice Awards (Full Winners List)
Suga Writes Letter to Fans, Marking End of Mandatory Military Service for BTS
'I thought I'd bring a friend out,' Dua Lipa teased the crowd on Saturday before the pair performed 2024's Brat album opener together. 'Let me tell you, she is the biggest brat I have ever known.'
Charli's appearance at Wembley night two follows a surprise on night one from Jamiroquai, who joined Dua Lipa on Friday for a live rendition of 'Virtual Insanity,' the English act's breakthrough single that earned a Grammy for best pop vocal performance by a duo a group in 1998, and a video of the year award at the MTV VMAs the year prior. At Friday's show, Dua Lipa told that crowd she'd invited someone who'd 'really inspired me from the moment that I started making music' and has 'been a trailblazer for British music.'
The two-night residency marked Dua Lipa's first time headlining Wembley, a 90,000-capacity venue.
The two sold-out concerts were made even more momentous for the British-Albanian pop star by a good-luck letter from the Spice Girls.
'Dear Dua,' read the card, which the singer shared in an Instagram slideshow, 'We just wanted to wish you lots of luck with your sold out shows at Wembley Stadium … that's Girl Power!! We love you! The Spice Girls xxxxx.'
Dua Lipa — whose Radical Optimism debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 upon its release in May 2024 — next performs in Liverpool, headlining Anfield Stadium for two nights (June 24-25), and then Dublin for one night at Aviva Stadium (June 27). The Radical Optimism Tour will make it to North America with an arena run beginning in September.
Best of Billboard
Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Kelsey Parker announces her baby has died
Podcast host Kelsey Parker has announced that her baby has died. Parker revealed she was expecting her third child in January, and on Sunday shared an Instagram post with the news that her son was 'born sleeping'. She lost her husband, The Wanted star Tom Parker, in 2022 after he was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour, and the baby was her first with her new partner Will Lindsay. Parker, who is mother to Aurelia, five, and Bodhi, four, with the late singer, shared a poem on Instagram about the boy she was expecting, whom she and Lindsay had named Phoenix. 'For Phoenix, Born Sleeping, Forever Loved,' the poem began, with a caption: 'Phoenix Parker-Lindsay, you will forever be loved.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Kelsey Parker (@being_kelsey) After sharing the post, Parker also put up an Instagram story which read: 'Before I receive an influx of lovely messages and heart-felt well wishes, I want to just say that I truly appreciate everything you are all going to say and share. 'But with the news being so raw, I would really like to ensure that we as a family are given space and time to process this devastating and earth-shattering news. 'I love you all and thank you for your understanding and space. 'Love always, Kelsey, Will and The Parker Family.' Parker has previously spoken candidly about how trolls have made her feel guilty for having a new partner. She said in March: 'I'm always going to have guilt but what's so hard is that Tom's not here any more, so what do people want me to do? 'Our house was full of so much sadness but now it's full of happiness, the kids deserve that more than anything.' Following her husband's death, Parker has raised money for a brain tumour charity by organising annual charity football matches in his memory. The 34-year-old hosts a podcast with model Georgia Jones called Mum's the Word! where the pair share parenting advice with celebrity guests.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Johnny Depp Says He Has 'No Regrets' About Amber Heard Trial & Was A 'Crash Test Dummy For #MeToo'
In a sprawling interview with The Times U.K., Johnny Depp claimed he was a 'crash test dummy for #MeToo,' reflecting on his protracted legal battle with actress and ex-wife Amber Heard. 'My comeback? Honestly? I didn't go anywhere,' he said. 'If I had the chance to split I would never come back.' More from Deadline Sick Juror Throws Sean Combs Trial Off Tight Schedule; No Decision Yet If Diddy Will Testify Tyler Perry Slams $260M Sexual Assault Suit By 'The Oval' Actor As A "Scam" Another Harvey Weinstein Rape Retrial Could Start This Fall, Judge Says; Current Case Ends In Mistrial As Jury Foreman Won't Return To Deliberations - Update The Pirates of the Caribbean star, who classified his ousting from Hollywood as a 'boycott,' praised the San Sebastián International Film Festival for sticking with him through 'all the hit pieces, the bullsh–.' In 2021, the fest awarded him the prestigious Donostia, its highest accolade, and last year, his second directorial effort, Modi: Three Days on the Wing of Madness, garnered a long-standing ovation by the crowd. 'No, I have no regrets about anything — because, truly, what can we do about last week's dinner? Not a f—ing thing,' he said of the much-publicized court trial with Heard. In 2022, Depp and Heard engaged in a contentious court battle during which a jury unanimously found he was defamed. After Heard filed an appeal of the verdict, the two announced separately that the case had been settled with the money paid by Heard going to charity. The case stemmed from a 2018 Washington Post op-ed in which Heard said she was a survivor of domestic violence without mentioning Depp's name. Throughout the media circus that ensued during the live-streamed trial, Heard — who wields considerably less power as a woman who is not as well-known nor cherished as veteran Depp — was largely raked over the coals both online and by Depp's fans who lined the doors outside the courtroom, receiving death threats. Studies conducted by a research firm also indicated the overwhelming hatred she experienced on social media was not entirely human-generated. The Virginia battle also followed a separate libel case in the U.K. over The Sun's calling Depp a 'wife beater.' The judge sided with the publication in 2020, after which Depp was asked to resign from Warner Bros.' Fantastic Beasts franchise, with the judge finding that the 'great majority of alleged assaults of Ms. Heard by Mr. Depp have been proved.' When asked why he pursued the public trial in the U.S., Depp answered: 'Look, it had gone far enough. I knew I'd have to semi-eviscerate myself. Everyone was saying, 'It'll go away!' But I can't trust that. What will go away? The fiction pawned around the f—ing globe? No it won't. If I don't try to represent the truth it will be like I've actually committed the acts I am accused of. And my kids will have to live with it. Their kids. Kids that I've met in hospitals. So the night before the trial in Virginia I didn't feel nervous. If I don't have to memorize lines, if you're just speaking the truth? Roll the dice.' He continued, 'Look, none of this was going to be easy, but I didn't care. I thought, 'I'll fight until the bitter f—ing end.' And if I end up pumping gas? That's all right. I've done that before.' Depp also claimed his experience predated #MeToo, and that's why people failed to support him. However, activist Tarana Burke's hashtag and movement were founded in 2006, later moving to the entertainment industry space circa 2017, the same year the New York Times and The New Yorker published exposés on now-disgraced mogul Harvey Weinstein. 'I'll tell you what hurts. There are people, and I'm thinking of three, who did me dirty. Those people were at my kids' parties. Throwing them in the air. And, look, I understand people who could not stand up [for me] because the most frightening thing to them was making the right choice,' he said. 'I was pre-#MeToo. I was like a crash test dummy for #MeToo. It was before Harvey Weinstein. And I sponged it, took it all in. And so I wanted from the hundreds of people I've met in that industry to see who was playing it safe. Better go woke!' Since 2022, the actor hasn't really gone gently into that good night — hence the disagreement with the term 'comeback.' That year, he made a surprise appearance at the MTV Video Music Awards; later on, he embarked on a 2023 European tour with band Hollywood Vampires and was seen in Savage X Fenty's fashion show. More recently, he is set to reunite with Pirates of the Caribbean co-star Penelope Cruz in Lionsgate's upcoming Day Drinker, also featuring Madelyn Cline. Additionally, filming for Terry Gilliam's Carnival: At the End of Days, opposite Adam Driver, Jeff Bridges and Jason Momoa was scheduled to commence in April. Best of Deadline Sean 'Diddy' Combs Sex-Trafficking Trial Updates: Cassie Ventura's Testimony, $10M Hotel Settlement, Drugs, Violence, & The Feds A Full Timeline Of Blake Lively & Justin Baldoni's 'It Ends With Us' Feud In Court, Online & In The Media 'Poker Face' Season 2 Guest Stars: From Katie Holmes To Simon Hellberg


TechCrunch
an hour ago
- TechCrunch
Why Danny Boyle shot ‘28 Years Later' with iPhones
In Brief Director Danny Boyle famously shot his post-apocalyptic classic '28 Days Later' on Canon digital cameras, making it easier for him to capture eerie scenes of an abandoned London, and giving the movie's fast-moving zombies a terrifying immediacy. To make his decades-later sequel '28 Years Later' (which opened this weekend), Boyle turned to a different piece of consumer tech — the iPhone. Boyle told Wired that by using a rig that could hold 20 iPhone Pro Max cameras, the filmmaking team created 'basically a poor man's bullet time,' capturing the brutal action scenes from a variety of angles. Even when he wasn't using the rig, Boyle (who once directed a biopic of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs) said the iPhone was the movie's 'principal camera,' albeit after disabling settings like automatic focus and adding special accessories. 'Filming with iPhones allowed us to move without huge amounts of equipment,' Boyle said, adding that the team was 'able to move quickly and lightly to areas of the countryside that we wanted to retain their lack of human imprint.'