
Fan collapses at Katy Perry gig after being invited on stage by singer
The incident occurred around 10.20pm at Little Caesar's Arena in Detroit, US, when Perry invited three fans to join her on stage to play maracas during one of her songs.
Perry, 40, paused the Sunday show, offered a prayer, and later reassured the audience the fan was doing better.
READ MORE: Dad's tragic three-word post hours before plunging to his death at Oasis gig
READ MORE: Irishman stunned as adults 'shove past kids to claim sunbeds' at Spanish hotel
Eyewitness Alexandria Cross, 34, a pharmacy technician from Flushing, Michigan, said Perry made the unusual choice to select a fan from the furthest section of the venue.
"She turned out the lights in the stadium. She saw her blue skirt and pointed her out from way at the top, very back row," Cross said. "I've never seen anybody get chosen that far back."
The pop star paused her performance while waiting for the girl to make her way down from the nosebleed section.
"She waited the whole time that the kid came down; the kid had to take an elevator," Cross added. "She did not think that she was ever going to get chosen." The incident occurred after Perry invited three fans to join her on stage to play maracas during one of her songs (Image: Alexandria Cross / SWNS)
When the young fan finally reached the stage, accompanied by a friend, the crowd erupted in cheers. But Cross said the girl appeared visibly nervous.
"She was very shy," Cross added. "She was very, very timid, and she got on the stage. She obviously was super excited, but very stiff."
Perry attempted to reassure the overwhelmed fan. "Katy wanted her to stand right next to her and gave her the shaker," Cross said.
The situation took a dramatic turn moments later when Perry gave the girl a final pep talk before the song began.
"She's like, 'you got this.' Giving her kind of a pep talk," Cross added. "And right at that moment, the girl just fainted. She just dropped right then and there."
Band members initially tried to assist. "Eventually, the EMS ended up coming on there. There were six people or so that were all around her, trying to get her to wake up," Cross said. "They couldn't get her to wake up. So four or five of them kind of lifted her up."
The girl's mother, who had made her way down from the upper section, joined them on stage and followed as the unconscious fan was carried off.
"Katy did a prayer for the kid, and then she did the song," Cross said.
The singer later provided an update to concerned fans during another segment of her performance. "She gave us an update that she's doing a lot better," Cross said. "She was very concerned about her throughout, which was super sweet."
For the latest breaking news and top stories from the Irish Mirror, visit our homepage

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
37 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Tommy Martin: If music was the new football for a mid ‘90s teen, Oasis were your team
To Edinburgh this Saturday, to see Oasis at Murrayfield. Like most people, I schlepped miserably through the online queue for the band's Croke Park shows to no avail. I didn't even get far enough to be hit by dynamic pricing, the brilliant new e-commerce innovation by which you can pay Ticketmaster the equivalent of the GNP of Liechtenstein to stand 100 yards away from Liam Gallagher. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
50 reasons the 1990s were cool: From Blur versus Oasis to text messages and the Boys in Green – the things we loved in an edgy decade
From fashion to music and TV shows, there's an appetite for all things 1990s right now. But is it just nostalgia or was it a decade that shaped who we are? When Oasis take to the Croke Park stage on Saturday, it will mark the 30th anniversary to the weekend of one of the great cultural memories of the 1990s — their chart battle with Blur for UK number one. Britpop was at its zenith in 1995. (What's the Story) Morning Glory? saw Oasis deliver Britain's best-selling album of the entire decade, while Pulp's Different Class would capture the zeitgeist spectacularly. And, they are still at large. Besides a fine new album, Jarvis Cocker and friends rolled back the years at a memorable Dublin show earlier this summer. The weekend after Oasis, another of the '90s biggest exports, Robbie Williams, will also pull the masses into Croke Park. It is fair to say the final decade of the 20th century is having a moment again. And it's not just music. Friends is hoovering up an entire new generation of fans who weren't even born when it first aired on TV. YouTube is reminding us of the pleasures of live TV show TFI Friday. Even Nokia – perhaps the quintessential brand of the '90s – is having a comeback.


RTÉ News
7 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Shakermaker - Oasis gig tops seismic data charts in UK
Oasis provided the most "ground-shaking" performance at Edinburgh's Murrayfield Stadium when they last played there in 2009, according to analysis of seismic data. The Gallagher brothers' last Scottish concert has topped the chart for the most powerful seismic concert at the venue in the last 20 years, the British Geological Survey (BGS) has said. The June 2009 Oasis gig beat the Red Hot Chili Peppers in June 2004, Kings of Leon in June 2011, and Taylor Swift in June last year, when measuring the peak earthshaking power of each event. The measurements were taken from a nearby seismic monitoring station, some 4km from the venue. At peak power of 215.06kW, the Oasis concert was more than twice as powerful as the next strongest one by the Red Hot Chili Peppers at 106.87kW. The rankings were revealed ahead of Oasis's comeback tour arriving in the Scottish capital this weekend - meaning there could be another "shakermaker". The power output is not related to the volume of the band or the crowd but rather the movement of fans jumping and dancing in time to the music, with the height of the jumping and weight of the crowd also potential factors. It means the current cohort of Oasis fans' seismic output could perhaps be compared to those of previous years. BGS seismologist Callum Harrison said: "In 2009, seismic signals generated by Oasis fans were consistent with a crowd energy of 215kW at its peak - enough to power around 30 of the scooters featured on the iconic Be Here Now album cover. "Our network of sensors around the country is sensitive enough to pick up ground movement from a source miles away that may not be detectable to humans - and precise enough to register exact timestamps for when the events occur. "The peak energy reading was recorded around 8:30pm on that June evening back in 2009, which correlates to the time the band first took the stage and performed Rock 'N' Roll Star, which couldn't be more fitting in terms of topping our seismic music chart." The BGS keeps an archive of continuous ground motion recordings from seismic sensors around the UK, dating back several decades. Harrison added: "In this instance, we are only looking back over 20 years. However, geological processes occur over vast time scales that can be difficult for humans to comprehend. "Improving our understanding of historical earthquakes is an important part of BGS research in trying to understand and mitigate the seismic risk around the country." Oasis bring their Live '25 tour to Croke Park on Saturday, 16 and Sunday, 17 August.