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Laryngitis forces Kylie Minogue to postpone tour in Europe after UK run

Laryngitis forces Kylie Minogue to postpone tour in Europe after UK run

West Australian14-06-2025
Australian pop star Kylie Minogue has postponed a run of European shows, having 'succumbed to a viral infection' after completing the UK leg of her tour.
The Padam Padam singer, 57, performed more than a dozen shows in the country as part of her Tension Tour, with her final date a performance at Glasgow's OVO Hydro on June 6.
On Friday, Minogue said in a social media post that she would postpone her shows in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Estonia due to her contracting laryngitis, an inflammation of the voice box.
'Hi Lovers, as some of you may know, a week ago we finished the UK leg of The Tension Tour', she said.
'I made it over the finish line (Yay) but unfortunately have succumbed to a viral infection (Hello laryngitis) I've tried my best to recover fast to start our next run of shows on Monday but I'm afraid it will take me some days to be well enough to get back on stage and perform my best for you.
'I'm so, SO sorry! I have no choice but to postpone the shows in Berlin, Lodz, Kaunas and Tallinn as scheduled.
'Please keep hold of your tickets, we're doing our very best to reschedule the dates and will update you very soon on that.
'Thank you for understanding - you know I love you all. And I LOVE THIS SHOW! And I'll miss you next week. And, I can't wait to see you. Love Kylie xxx'.
In 2024, Tension II, a sequel to her 2023 studio album, saw Minogue secure her 10th number one on the UK albums chart.
Also in 2024, she took home the global icon gong at the Brit Awards and won the best pop dance recording Grammy for her hit Padam Padam.
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Magda Szubanski inducted into the Logies Hall of Fame
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Magda Szubanski inducted into the Logies Hall of Fame

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Loading Not just Jane Turner, Gina Riley and Marg Downey, with whom Szubanski has been inextricably linked for much of her career, but countless more names are on that roll of honour: Julia Morris, Wendy Harmer, Jean Kittson, Judith Lucy, Jane Kennedy, Kitty Flanagan, Caroline Reid (aka Pam Ann), Mary Coustas, Mary-Anne Fahey, Gretel Killeen, Fiona O'Loughlin, Julia Zemiro, Rebel Wilson, Denise Scott, Lynda Gibson ... and on it goes. It's hard to look past Pat McDonald, too, who might not have considered herself a comedian but brought to life the hilarious Dorrie Evans from Number 96. Or Jeannie Little, who was more cabaret than comedy, but was unquestioningly hilarious. And Dame Edna Everage, who of course set the high bar for them all. But first, Magda Szubanski. As a high-school kid, The D-Generation consumed my life, every sketch seared in my memory. Szubanski specialised in playing monstrous wives, corporate women or eccentric personalities, from stout country types in vintage cat-eye spectacles and neurotic mothers, to a woman who dressed as lounge furniture, and the earliest iteration of Lynne Postlethwaite. Then, a few years later as a young television critic, I was regularly dispatched to Melbourne where, on a Friday night, we would sit in the audience while episodes of Fast Forward were taped in Channel Seven's South Melbourne studios. As a fan, it was an embarrassment of riches, where Szubanski – as well as Jane Turner, Gina Riley and Marg Downey – shimmered with brilliance. They regularly broke character, laughing. And those moments were often included in the broadcast programs. With a wave of TV magic, we weren't laughing at them, we were invited into the joke. Loading In that strange crucible of thin budgets and ridiculous ideas, these women brought to life all manner of characters that would endure in various ways. Szubanski infamously parodied Victorian premier Joan Kirner and fashion icon Maggie Tabberer, while Turner's take on housewife Kath Knight (nee Day) from Kath & Kim was born there, as an unnamed mother giving a speech at the 21st birthday of her pregnant daughter Caitlin, played by Riley. Szubanski, Turner, Riley and Downey were devastatingly funny as the Brisbane-based Brides of Satan ('We are your concubines!'), Australian soaps were given a merciless slaying in Dumb Street, and Szubanski and Downey, as Chenille and Janelle, would turn a staple of sketch comedy – morning TV satire – into one of the show's institutions. On Big Girl's Blouse, the Labor Party leadership crisis of the 1990s was distilled down to 'Midweek Ladies', a satire set amid the power struggle to control a women's tennis club, in which Szubanski played an unforgettable take on a female Graham Richardson ('Nobble the bitch'). 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