logo
Nicole Scherzinger announces first major UK solo show for 13 years

Nicole Scherzinger announces first major UK solo show for 13 years

Perth Now07-07-2025
Nicole Scherzinger has announced her first major solo show in the UK for 13 years.
The former Pussycat Dolls singer will take to the stage at London's Royal Albert Hall on 6 October 2025 for An Evening with Nicole Scherzinger, a special one-off performance.
Nicole, 47, will sing her pop hits as well as West End classics along with a live band.
The concert will be Scherzinger's first in the UK for over a decade – she last performed a short solo show at G-A-Y in London in 2013 and prior to that during 2012's Killer Love tour.
Announcing her UK show, Nicole said: "I am truly humbled to be performing at Royal Albert Hall. So many of my heroes have stood on that stage, and to join their legacy means the world to me."
Scherzinger is currently celebrating a non-stop run of success across stage, screen and studio.
Most recently, she received a frenzied reception in London's West End for her turn in the acclaimed Jamie Lloyd reimagining of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard, which won her both an Olivier Awards and a Tony for Best Actress.
The Masked Singer judge Nicole has always had a love affair with the UK. She achieved eight 8 UK top 10 singles and two number ones with the Pussycat Dolls and was a judge on The X Factor for two seasons.
Nicole also lives in London with her fiancé Thom Evans.
Announcing her move back in September 2024 on Instagram with a photo of her stood next to a red telephone box, she said: "Guess who's moved to London."
Ticket presale for An Evening With Nicole Scherzinger is available from 10am, Wednesday 9 July via Aegpresents.co.uk/nicole-scherzinger-presale/.
General on-sale begins 10am, Friday 11 July via Aegpresents.co.uk/event/nicole-scherzinger/
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Can't be true': Aussie shares huge US shock
‘Can't be true': Aussie shares huge US shock

News.com.au

time10 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Can't be true': Aussie shares huge US shock

After going viral last week on the topic of Aussies and their pub meat trays, musician G Flip has stunned yet again by revealing another huge difference between the US and Australia. The latest revelation even prompted their American wife to declare it simply 'couldn't be true'. The Aussie drummer and singer, who primarily lives in the US and uses they/them pronouns, dropped a bombshell with wife and Selling Sunset star Chrishell Stause, educating her on the topic of the pen licence – a badge of honour for Aussie school kids. 'Today I found out Americans don't get their pen licence when they're a kid,' the GAY 4 ME singer revealed. 'So in Australia, when you're like eight or nine, you do a test to deem whether you're ready to upgrade from a pencil to a pen. 'You've got to make sure it's all legible and the letters look great, and then your teacher will grade you.' At the end of this process, students are gifted a certificate that allows them to use a pen for all writing tasks, known as a pen licence. 'But apparently, Americans, y'all don't get a pen licence and you're out here using pencils until you're in your teens,' the Disco Cowboy singer added. 'That's a lot of sharpening!' The comments section of the video was filled with stunned Americans, as well as other followers from around the world sharing they had something similar and guilty Aussies confessing to never securing their pen licence — but still using a pen anyway. Stause, who tied the knot with G Flip in 2022, was shocked by the key cultural difference between her wife's home country and her own. 'This cannot be true — you have never told me this,' Stause commented. One person said: 'I am an Australian who didn't get their pen licence. I moved schools in year 5, and the school I went to did the licence in year 4 so I missed it. 'But the school I left did it in year 5, so also missed it. I've been writing unlicensed for years and I carry that guilty secret with me every day.' 'Aussie here, NSW. I failed pen licence in year 3. Tried again in year 4 — failed! You bet I walked into year 5 with no licence but a three-pack.' 'BIC 4 COLOUR BALLPOINT PEN,' another said. One person said: 'In Ireland, we also get a pen licence, and what a moment that does be!' 'This is wildddddd,' one added. Another said: 'No … this can't be real.' 'Forgot about this. Putting it on my CV,' another commented. One said: 'We have pen licences in the UK too! We even got a special pen in our school when we passed! I kept mine until I was 25.' 'I'm an Aussie and my kids don't do it anymore! They don't hand write anything anymore, it's all on laptops and iPads,' one commented. Another said: 'Anyone else left handed and have their pen licence taken off them when they smudged the ink across the page?' 'We don't do this in Canada,' one said. One added: 'I never passed so I've had to use a pencil forever. I'm 40. So focus kids and work hard because it can affect you forever.' 'Oh wow. Never heard that before,' one remarked. One social media user commented: 'I never got my pen licence …. Don't tell anyone. It's my biggest shame.' 'As a primary school teacher, I can't tell you the joy it gives me to give a student their pen licence,' one commented. Last week, the Drink Too Much singer confused many by revealing the Australian tradition of the meat tray raffle. 'I'm an Aussie who lives in America and I have an American wife and I think one of the funniest things to explain about Australian culture is that you can win a meat tray in the pub,' they told followers. 'So you go to the pub and they hand out raffle tickets to win a meat tray. And you just win a tray of various meats and sausages. 'You go home with the meat tray. And everyone who's American that I've ever told that to is like, 'What the f***.'

The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner
The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner

It's clearer than the skin of a K-pop star that Mecca founder Jo Horgan wants her new flagship store in Bourke Street Mall to become a leading Melbourne tourist destination, but is it up there with the National Gallery of Victoria or more in line with the infamous 'Yellow Peril ' sculpture? At the crowded store preview for beauty lovers, influencers and media, the elbows were out and the extensions were in as people raced to experience hair treatments, fragrance consultations, skin analysis and the cafeteria before the side doors open to the public on Friday (the front doors should be operational by November). Three years ago, if I had been standing in the mall opposite Myer, I would have been in the David Jones menswear store instead of drowning in a sea of women who have conquered contouring and fake eyelash application. The former home of suits and designer Y-fronts has been lavishly transformed into a literal Mecca for women. This may be a woman's world but here is the well-moisturised man's view. If you're worried about my qualifications, I've been writing about beauty since I went to France in 2009 to see how Chanel No.5 is made and have been obsessed with skincare since Olay was Oil of Ulan. The look: At 4000 square metres, it's big. The CJ Olive Young flagship in Seoul, Korea, is a larger beauty destination at a reported 4628 square metres, but stores are like pimples: bigger isn't always better. For most Melburnians, it should be enough that the footprint is more than twice the size of Sydney's Mecca flagship on George Street. This should have them smiling before seeing the extensive range of skincare, spanning from $27 lip balms by Zoe Foster Blake's brand, Go-To, to the $864 Augustinus Bader moisturisers. Loading 'I've never ever seen a store like it,' says UK hair colourist Josh Wood, who has worked with Kylie Minogue and David Beckham. Wood has opened his first salon outside the UK in the building. 'I've been looking at the plans for two years but when I walked through the doors, I was completely blown away. It's the future of beauty.' There's a sense of discovery as you wander from brow bars with Hollywood mirror lighting to Charlotte Tilbury foundations taking root beneath a golden palm tree. The cavernous space is artfully divided by texture, colour and curtains across three floors.

The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner
The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

The verdict is in on Mecca's new flagship store, and it's a winner

It's clearer than the skin of a K-pop star that Mecca founder Jo Horgan wants her new flagship store in Bourke Street Mall to become a leading Melbourne tourist destination, but is it up there with the National Gallery of Victoria or more in line with the infamous 'Yellow Peril ' sculpture? At the crowded store preview for beauty lovers, influencers and media, the elbows were out and the extensions were in as people raced to experience hair treatments, fragrance consultations, skin analysis and the cafeteria before the side doors open to the public on Friday (the front doors should be operational by November). Three years ago, if I had been standing in the mall opposite Myer, I would have been in the David Jones menswear store instead of drowning in a sea of women who have conquered contouring and fake eyelash application. The former home of suits and designer Y-fronts has been lavishly transformed into a literal Mecca for women. This may be a woman's world but here is the well-moisturised man's view. If you're worried about my qualifications, I've been writing about beauty since I went to France in 2009 to see how Chanel No.5 is made and have been obsessed with skincare since Olay was Oil of Ulan. The look: At 4000 square metres, it's big. The CJ Olive Young flagship in Seoul, Korea, is a larger beauty destination at a reported 4628 square metres, but stores are like pimples: bigger isn't always better. For most Melburnians, it should be enough that the footprint is more than twice the size of Sydney's Mecca flagship on George Street. This should have them smiling before seeing the extensive range of skincare, spanning from $27 lip balms by Zoe Foster Blake's brand, Go-To, to the $864 Augustinus Bader moisturisers. Loading 'I've never ever seen a store like it,' says UK hair colourist Josh Wood, who has worked with Kylie Minogue and David Beckham. Wood has opened his first salon outside the UK in the building. 'I've been looking at the plans for two years but when I walked through the doors, I was completely blown away. It's the future of beauty.' There's a sense of discovery as you wander from brow bars with Hollywood mirror lighting to Charlotte Tilbury foundations taking root beneath a golden palm tree. The cavernous space is artfully divided by texture, colour and curtains across three floors.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store