Prismatic World Tour

(Redirected from Prismatic Tour)

The Prismatic World Tour was the third concert tour by American singer Katy Perry, in-support of her fourth studio album, Prism (2013). The tour began on May 7, 2014, at Belfast, Northern Ireland's Odyssey Arena and ended on October 18, 2015, at Alajuela, Costa Rica's Parque Viva after six legs.[2] The Prismatic World Tour grossed more than $204.3 million from 149 shows, with a total tour attendance of 1,984,503 between 2014 and 2015; the tour is Perry's most successful, to-date.[3][4]

Prismatic World Tou
Tour by Katy Perry
Associated albumPrism
Start dateMay 7, 2014 (2014-05-07)
End dateOctober 18, 2015 (2015-10-18)
Legs6
No. of shows151
Box office$204.3 million ($262.22 million in 2023 dollars)[1]
Katy Perry concert chronology

Production

Perry first teased the tour during her We Can Survive event at the Hollywood Bowl on October 23, 2013, where she invited fans to come see her on a 2014 tour, stating that it would be "magical".[5] In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, the singer stated that "The tour is going to be fantastic. I always try to take it to the next level. I think people will realize what the tour is going to be like when they listen to the music." She also emphasized that she would be "very close" to the audience during the tour.[6] At the 2013 MTV Europe Music Awards, Perry said the show would be "less cartoony" than the California Dreams Tour and would be a "feast for your eyes".[7] Perry told Capital in December 2013 that the tour would feature less of a storyline than her previous endeavors, saying:

I'm going to bring all the bells and whistles like it was last time but it won't be so highly narrated. I just want a little bit more room to express myself ... I'm just really excited. I just did a big tour meeting yesterday and saw the graphic drawing of the stage and it's unlike anything I've seen for any other artist and it's unlike anything I've ever done. It's different, it's fresh, it's clean and it's actually in the middle of the audience.[8]

Over 275 costumes were designed for the tour, including 80 for the dancers. Perry gave designer Marina Toybina intricate details for each outfit's materials, patterns, and designs. According to Toybina, "[Perry's] creative involvement was daily, down to us deciding together on trims, final prints, specific materials and color spectrum for any and all digital artwork".[9]

During the acoustic set of the tour, Perry was dressed in a butterfly-themed see-through dress with a sparkling cape with the stage props designed with sun flowers (Left). While during the Cat-Oure section, Perry and her dancers were dressed as cats (Right).

Perry announced the tour on November 18, 2013, via Twitter. She announced the first leg as taking place in Northern Ireland, Scotland, and England, with Icona Pop as the opening act. According to the official press release, the tour was designed to be a "multi-faceted spectacular" and would include a special standing area around the stage called "The Reflection Section" to allow Perry to be "closer than ever to her fans." The first leg commenced in May 2014.[10] The North American second leg was announced on January 15, 2014, consisting of concerts in Canada, the United States and Mexico, from June to October 2014. Ferras opened for Perry on all of the North American dates, with the exception of Mexico.[11] Capital Cities opened from June 22, 2014 through August 8, 2014, Kacey Musgraves opened from August 10, 2014 through September 10, 2014, duo Tegan and Sara opened from September 12, 2014 through October 8, 2014, and Mexican-American singer Becky G opened on the Mexican dates from October 10 through 18, 2014.[12] The third leg, consisting of shows across Australia and Oceania, was announced in February 2014.[13] Betty Who served as the opening act from November 7 through 28, 2014, while Tove Lo opened from November 30 until the end of the leg. The fourth leg was announced on June 2, 2014,[14] and ran from February to March 2015 throughout Europe. Charli XCX opened these shows.[15] The fifth leg of the tour, consisting of twelve shows, was announced on January 29, 2015, and toured eastern and southeastern Asia between April and May 2015. Ferras returned as the opening act in Taipei, Taiwan;[16] The Dolls opened for Perry in China (Guangzhou, Macau and Shanghai) as well as Indonesia (Jakarta), Japan (Tokyo), the Philippines (Manila), Singapore and Thailand (Bangkok).[16] The sixth and final leg of the tour, consisting of ten shows, was announced on March 7, 2015, and took place in Latin America between September and October 2015. Tinashe served as this leg’s opening act for shows in Argentina, Brazil (Curitiba), Chile (Santiago), Colombia (Bogotá), Costa Rica (Alajuel), Panama City, and San Juan, Puerto Rico.[17] Other opening acts included Gala Brie (Lima, Peru), AlunaGeorge (São Paulo, Brazil), Argentine pop star Lali (Buenos Aires, Argentina), and Durazno (Bogotá, Colombia). On February 16, 2015, Rock in Rio announced Perry as their main headliner for the Rio de Janeiro festival.[18]

Costumes

Perry performing "Roar" in a silver, mirrored leather skirt

Multiple outfits and costumes are featured throughout the tour. Her first costume, which is worn during the "Prismatic" act, is a silver, mirrored leather skirt, complete with fingerless gloves and matching heels. The neckline, waistline, arms, and bottom of the skirt all are installed with lights that glow during the performance. Perry also has light-up extensions to match her dress for this section. During the "Egyptian" act, Perry wears a hand-embroidered purple leotard, a hand-embellished collar and an ornate purple and gold skirt, complete with thigh-high purple high heel boots. She also wears a blonde wig with black bangs and ends. The "Cat-oure" act has Perry wearing a sparkly, pink, leopard leotard, complete with a tail and a matching pink plastic hat with cat ears and a short black bobbed wig attached to it. The chest and abdomen of the costume are nude colored, and the costume also contains a shimmery belt and collar. For the "Acoustic" act, Perry wears a butterfly-inspired dress, along with a short, silver glittery cape. The dress had a butterfly over the chest, and the bottom of the dress is see-through, also containing butterflies imprinted on it. She also adorns a multi-colored wig, featuring pastel blues, pinks, and greens. The "Throwback" act has Perry emerge on stage wearing a yellow smiley face push-up bra, leggings with yellow peace signs on them, as well as a yellow skirt. For "It Takes Two", Perry wears a Yin-Yang crop top over her smiley face bra and a large Yin-Yang dress that inflates as she rises on the stage. Following "It Takes Two", the Yin-Yang costume is removed and Perry now wears a yellow leather jacket with a smiley face on the back and sunglasses. The "Hyper Neon" act follows, where Perry wears a green palm tree-inspired bra, high waisted underwear containing palm tree decor around it, and pink heels with thigh-high socks on. After exiting and returning to perform "Birthday", Perry emerges wearing a full-body, skin-colored leotard. The leotard features many birthday-themed items on it, such as balloons over the breasts, a cake over her pubic region, a bow on the buttocks, confetti, and glitter everywhere, as well as 'Happy Birthday' embroidered on the back of it. During the entire "Hyper Neon" act, Perry wears a green ombre wig, that is dark towards the top, and transitions into a more lime green towards the tip. The wig is also pulled down into small buns. For the "Encore", Perry emerges with a long black wig and a firework-inspired dress. The corset and pants and heels are both glittery blue, and the corset features fireworks over the breasts. Perry adorns elbow-length blue gloves with fireworks on them. She also wears a dress that straps onto the corset and reveals the front of her body. The dress is orange and features many different fireworks around it.

Costume changes

On May 14, 2014, at LG Arena in Birmingham, England, the Eyptian-inspired Lavender bodysuit and thigh-high boots were replaced with a Red bodysuit & Gladiator sandals during the "Ancient Egyptian" Section of the show. [1]

For the Asian Leg of the tour, Perry adorned several new costumes. For the "Prismatic" Act, she wore a metallic, purple cat-inspired leotard. The outfit contained metallic, purple thigh-high heel boots, a leotard complete with a cat face, glowing eyes, and little multi-color triangles around the leotard that lit up, similar to her previous outfit. For the "Acoustic" set, Perry now wears a sparkly green dress with sunflowers over the breasts and other parts of the dress. The wig she adorns is also more vibrant in color, and less pastel. For her shows in China, during the "Throwback" and "Hyper Neon" act, Perry wore a pastel splatter paint-inspired mini dress, which was a dress to look as if it had been splattered with paint. After her shows and China, Perry debuted (on tour) a new outfit to replace the splatter paint dress during the same act. This outfit consisted of a leather pink striped crop top bra, which had yellow shoulder pads sticking off of it. She wore leather pink striped cufflets and a pink, yellow and orange striped mini dress, created to look as if it was overlapping on itself – she wore this outfit when performing at the BBC Radio 1 Big Weekend.

Concert synopsis

During the performance of "Part of Me", Perry was dressed in a mirrored-leather skirt with matching crop top with neon-clad dancers dressed in a similar way (Left). while in the performance of "Dark Horse", Perry rose from the stage emerging on a golden horse carried below by her dancers (Right).

The show begins with neon-clad dancers emerging on stage. An area of the stage moves to form a pyramid, from which Perry emerges to perform "Roar", wearing a mirrored leather skirt and crop top with neon lights woven into the seams. Towards the end of the song, she and the dancers skip using light-up ropes while the entire arena goes dark. "Part of Me" is the next track to be performed, where she and her dancers sprint down a 15-meter long treadmill. Following Part of Me, a dubstep version of "Wide Awake", during which a triangular section of the stage rises and rotates in the air. She then performs "This Moment", which features multi-colored lasers projected across the stage. This Moment shortly transforms into "Love Me" afterward, followed by Perry exiting the stage. After a video interlude displaying Perry's face created out of stars and planets in space, she appears on stage atop a mechanical horse. During this section of the tour, she wears an Egyptian-themed outfit, completed with a hand-embroidered leotard, a hand-embellished collar, and an ornate purple and gold skirt. Perry performs "Dark Horse", before moving on to "E.T.". A large diamond-shaped structure descends from the ceiling to lift the singer in the air. "Legendary Lovers" is then performed, followed by "I Kissed a Girl", which features dancers dressed as Rubenesque mummies with large breasts and buttocks. They follow Perry around the stage and after she exits, the mummies proceed with their own dance while guitarists are lifted into the air, with sparks shooting from their guitars.

During the performance of "It Takes Two", Perry wore a ying-yang crop top with a matching huge skirt that rose from the center of the stage and rotated (Left), while during "Birthday, Perry was lifted in the air while holding big balloons and flew all over the arena (Right).

A video interlude shows a cat being transported from the Pyramids of Giza to "Kittywood". Perry emerges on top of a large ball of wool wearing a catsuit, accompanied by her dancers wearing similar cat costumes. A jazz version of "Hot n Cold" is then performed, before Perry begins to perform "International Smile"; the song is intermingled with Madonna's "Vogue". The dancers enact a short scene in which the cats chase a mouse. Perry re-enters, wearing a butterfly-themed dress and cape and performs multiple songs acoustically, including "By the Grace of God", a mash-up of "The One That Got Away" and "Thinking of You", and "Unconditionally".

At the beginning of this section, there is a "Megamix Dance Party", performed by the dancers and backing singers, which is a mix of a selection of songs. Perry arrives on stage wearing a top, skirt, and leggings featuring smiling faces and peace symbols. She performs "Walking on Air", where she is lifted above the stage and flies from one end to the other. Following this, she changes into a yin-yang dress to sing "It Takes Two". While performing the song, she is lifted off the ground while the bottom half of her dress is inflated and covers the lift, to give the apprentice of her being very tall. To close this section of the tour, a mash-up of "This Is How We Do" and "Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)" is performed as Perry and her dancers ride an inflatable car on stage. A video interlude is played, showing Perry as a mental patient in a triangular padded cell, before paint splashes from all room areas. She appears on stage wearing a bra and skirt decorated with palm leaves to perform "Teenage Dream". "California Gurls" is then performed with blackout lights and dancers move letters that eventually recreate the Hollywood Sign. Perry exits the stage before re-emerging to sing "Birthday", wearing a one-piece outfit named the "Birthday Suit", decorated with balloons over her breasts and other birthday-themed items. During the performance, Perry brings a member of the audience whose birthday is near the show's date on stage, and they sit on a throne on top of a rotating birthday cake, which emerges from the stage. She is soon trapped in a seat with multiple balloons attached and flies around the entire audience as balloons and confetti descend from above. Soon after, she exits the stage once more after thanking everyone for attending and introducing her band members.

For the encore, an interlude called "Prism-Vision" is played, where the audience is encouraged to wear special rainbow-star diffraction glasses picked up before the show to magnify the visual effects of the performance. Perry enters the stage wearing a firework-themed dress to perform "Firework". During the song's climax, multiple fireworks explode on stage before Perry ends the show, exiting through the pyramid from which she entered the stage at the beginning.

Commercial performance

Perry closing the show with a performance of "Firework"

Ticket sales

The first leg attracted high public demand, resulting in additional shows in Belfast, Glasgow, and London being announced within hours of tickets being released on general sale.[19] Soon after, Perry added extra dates in Manchester and Birmingham.[20] Extra dates in the United States, Canada and Mexico were also added to the second leg of her tour shortly after the leg's first announcement.[21] Due to vast popularity during the pre-sale period, Perry added more shows to the Oceania leg in Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane, extending the leg to December.[13][22] Jesse Lawrence from Forbes reported on the North American leg of the tour, saying that her ticket sales averaged at $252.60 on the secondary market throughout the five-month stint in the country. His analysis concluded that the average price was higher than that of her peers, such as Beyoncé and Lady Gaga, adding "with Prismatic holding one of the highest tour average prices of the summer, the secondary market won't have many dates dropping below a $200 average price."[23]

On Pollstar's Mid Year Top 100 Worldwide Tours list, released in July 2014 and ranking tours up until that date, the Prismatic World Tour ranked at number 26 with $22 million in grosses and 249,716 tickets sold for 22 shows so far.[24] The Prismatic World Tour topped the Billboard Hot Tours weekly recap the week of September 18. The tour topped the chart with $31 million in ticket sales from 21 of the tour's North American concerts that occurred in a two-month span beginning on July 15.[25] In Australia, the tour sold more than 350,000 tickets across 23 dates. It broke the record for most tickets sold at the Allphones Arena, selling a total of 89,500 tickets spanning six shows. Paul Dainty of Dainty Group, the promoters of the Australian leg, stated that ticket demand was so high "we could have added another dozen shows everywhere easily."[26]

Boxscore

The Prismatic World Tour was an international success and became Perry's most successful tour to date. The tour was the second highest-grossing, and highest-grossing led by a female, in North America by average box office gross per city in 2014.[27] According to Pollstar, the tour was the fourth best-selling in the world, and the best-selling by a solo female, in 2014 with a gross of $153 million and 1,407,972 attendees.[3] The tour was highly successful in North America, becoming the 25th best-selling North American tour of all-time[28] with sales of $94.3 million, making it the third best-selling tour in North America of 2014.[29] The tour was also highly successful in Australia, selling 350,000 tickets across the country and breaking Allphones Arena's attendance record with over 89,000 tickets sold at Allphones Arena alone.[30] The tour's success continued into 2015. The Pollstar 2015 Mid-Year Top 100 Worldwide Tour list revealed the Prismatic World Tour as the 23rd highest grosser, with a total of $25.8 million from 35 shows, and a total of 373,133 in attendance.[31] However, Pollstar later adjusted its Mid-Year report, stating that the Prismatic World Tour grossed $35.7 million from 35 international dates in the first half of 2015 instead of $25.8 million.[32] In the other hand, one week later, Billboard reported that the Prismatic World Tour grossed over $41.7 million from 27 shows in the first half of 2015.[33] At the end of 2015, the tour placed 27th on Pollstar's "Top 100 Worldwide Tours", grossing $51 million from 43 dates.[4]

Perry's performances at Melbourne's Rod Laver Arena ranked at number 11 on Pollstar's 2014 Top Year End International Boxoffice list.[34] At the 2014 Billboard Touring Awards, the tour won the award for "Top Package" and was nominated for the "Concert Marketing & Promotion" award.[35][36] Perry was the seventh most-searched artist on Ticketmaster in 2014.[37]

Critical reception

Perry performing "This Is How We Do"

The tour was largely well-received by critics. Colin Stutz, of Billboard magazine, called the performance in Belfast a "spectacle of costumes and colors".[38] Julian Douglas, from The Irish Times, wrote that Perry "entertained, thrilled, and serenaded" and "oozed professionalism" despite feeling "under the weather".[39] Emilee Lindner from MTV News felt Perry lived up to her previous "promise" of making the concert a "feast for your eyes and for your Instagram", and noted a recurring cat-theme within the show.[40] Mike Wass from Idolator praised the show's costumes and dubbed the show a "candy-colored visual extravaganza".[41] In a review of the one of the Glasgow shows, Matthew Magee from The Daily Telegraph awarded the tour four out of five stars, stating that Perry "made the kind of natural connection with her Glasgow audience that her peers would die for."[42] Richard Clayton of Financial Times gave the show an excellent review, awarding five out of five stars, and described it as "sonically stonking, visually spectacular and fun, fun, fun."[43] Daisy Wyatt from The Independent criticized Perry's vocal ability and stage presence. She awarded the tour three out of five stars.[44] Rolling Stone reviewer Mark Sutherland praised the tour, calling it "loud, garish, camp and never less than uproariously entertaining" and "a show to damage retinas and blow minds."[45]

Jem Aswad of The Village Voice described the show at Madison Square Garden as "Better Than: Every other multimillion-dollar concert I've seen" and commented that "The Prismatic tour, for all its expense and atom-splitting technology, is above all else fun, smart and crowd-pleasing, and I'll take that over the self-serious bombast that usually accompanies shows of this scale any day of the week."[46] Nate Chinen of The New York Times gave the same show a mixed review, saying that he felt the "music was subordinate to the spectacle", though described it as a "Spectacle of Pop Idol Proportions".[47] Pitchfork Media's Lindsay Zoladz commented on one of the shows at New York City's Barclays Center: "I felt about this concert the way I feel about Katy Perry overall: She throws everything she's got at the wall, and every so often hits a bullseye." Three journalists from Pitchfork gave the show a mixed review.[48] Jason Lipshutz of Billboard reviewed the same show positively, saying "the superstar is at the top of her game, and Prismatic's Brooklyn debut shone bright."[49] August Brown from the Los Angeles Times gave the tour a generally positive review, commenting that the "show at the Honda Center proved that Perry's persona is a lasting one", but "the few stumbles came in the presentation."[50] Consequence of Sound's Michael Roffman named Perry one of the Top Live Acts of 2014, saying that with the Prismatic World Tour, "similar to the late King and the still-truckin' Queen of Pop — Michael Jackson and Madonna, respectively — Perry creates an unforgettable event for her legions of fans."[51]

Accolades

YearAwardCategoryResultRef.
2014Teen Choice AwardsChoice Music: Choice Summer TourNominated[52]
Billboard Mid-Year Music AwardsBest TourNominated[53]
TEC AwardsTour / Event Sound ProductionNominated[54]
Billboard Touring AwardsConcert Marketing & Promotion AwardNominated[55]
Top PackageWon
Capital Loves AwardsBest Live ShowNominated[56]
2015Pollstar AwardsMajor Tour of the YearNominated[57]
Most Creative Stage ProductionWon

Broadcasts and recordings

Perry's pre-recorded "Birthday" performance at the Newcastle Metro Radio Arena show was aired live during the 2014 Billboard Music Awards ceremony on May 18, 2014.[58] On May 25, 2014 Perry headlined BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend, which was streamed live on the Radio 1 website. It was also broadcast live on BBC Three, BBC HD and BBC Radio 1. Highlights of the event were also broadcast on BBC Three and BBC HD during the week following the Big Weekend.[59] A recorded live performance of "Legends Never Die" with Ferras at the Staples Center was uploaded to Ferras's official YouTube channel on October 11, 2014.[60] Perry's performance during Rock In Rio on September 27, 2015, was broadcast live in Brazil on Multishow, Globo.com, and Gshow, and internationally was streamed live online on LiveXLive.com, AOL.com and AOL app.[61]

It was announced that the final Sydney shows on December 12 and 13, 2014, would be filmed for a concert movie. Almost a year later, on November 23, 2015, it was broadcast on Network Seven.[62] On March 28, 2015, Epix aired a two-hour concert special of the tour, as part of their "Free Preview Weekend".[63] A short video interlude for "Peacock" was broadcast before Perry performed "Teenage Dream".[64] During the exclusive Q&A with Epix, Perry confirmed that she will be making a DVD of the tour. She also revealed that she would change a couple of things for the DVD.[65] Netflix added the tour's concert movie to its streaming service on June 26, 2015.[66] The tour's concert movie was released on DVD, Blu-ray and Digital Download on October 30, 2015. All formats also include 30 minutes of exclusive extras.[67]

Set list

Perry performing "Walking on Air"

This set list is from the show on May 30, 2014 in London, England. It does not represent of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[45]

Notes
  • At selected dates in Europe, Perry performed "Double Rainbow" before "Unconditionally".[38]
  • At selected dates, such as on July 24 in Brooklyn and on April 28 in Taipei, Ferras joined Perry onstage in order to sing "Legends Never Die".[68]

Shows

List of concerts, showing date, city, country, venue, opening act, tickets sold, number of available tickets and amount of gross revenue
DateCityCountryVenueOpening actAttendanceRevenue
Leg 1 Europe (United Kingdom)[69]
May 7, 2014BelfastNorthern IrelandOdyssey ArenaIcona Pop18,553 / 18,553$1,658,690
May 8, 2014
May 10, 2014NewcastleEnglandMetro Radio Arena
May 11, 2014NottinghamCapital FM Arena
May 13, 2014BirminghamLG Arena
May 14, 2014
May 17, 2014GlasgowScotlandThe SSE Hydro
May 18, 2014
May 20, 2014ManchesterEnglandPhones 4u Arena21,343 / 24,951[a]$1,796,590[a]
May 21, 2014LiverpoolEcho Arena
May 23, 2014SheffieldMotorpoint Arena
May 24, 2014ManchesterPhones 4u Arena[a][a]
May 25, 2014[b]GlasgowScotlandGlasgow Green
May 27, 2014LondonEnglandThe O2 ArenaIcona Pop53,871 / 63,574$5,023,470
May 28, 2014
May 30, 2014
May 31, 2014
Leg 2 North America[11][71]
June 22, 2014RaleighUnited StatesPNC ArenaCapital Cities
Ferras
13,704 / 13,704$1,461,008
June 24, 2014Washington, D.C.Verizon Center26,508 / 26,508$3,293,503
June 25, 2014
June 27, 2014NashvilleBridgestone Arena13,487 / 13,487$1,567,175
June 28, 2014AtlantaPhilips Arena12,843 / 12,843$1,525,349
June 30, 2014TampaTampa Bay Times Forum13,680 / 13,680$1,503,644
July 2, 2014SunriseBB&T Center12,888 / 12,888$1,382,655
July 3, 2014MiamiAmerican Airlines Arena13,543 / 13,543$1,432,275
July 7, 2014UncasvilleMohegan Sun Arena6,286 / 6,541$941,786
July 9, 2014New York CityMadison Square Garden13,846 / 13,846$2,047,284
July 11, 2014NewarkPrudential Center25,584 / 25,584$3,363,432
July 12, 2014
July 15, 2014MontrealCanadaBell Centre14,284 / 14,284$1,332,540
July 16, 2014OttawaCanadian Tire Centre13,260 / 13,260$1,053,260
July 18, 2014TorontoAir Canada Centre44,556 / 44,556$4,403,610
July 19, 2014
July 21, 2014
July 22, 2014PittsburghUnited StatesConsol Energy Center13,909 / 13,909$1,440,835
July 24, 2014BrooklynBarclays Center27,823 / 27,823$3,280,455
July 25, 2014
August 1, 2014BostonTD Garden26,227 / 26,227$3,178,415
August 2, 2014
August 4, 2014PhiladelphiaWells Fargo Center28,213 / 28,213$2,952,334
August 5, 2014
August 7, 2014ChicagoUnited Center27,851 / 27,851$3,369,142
August 8, 2014
August 10, 2014Grand RapidsVan Andel ArenaKacey Musgraves
Ferras
10,286 / 10,286$787,474
August 11, 2014Auburn HillsThe Palace of Auburn Hills13,888 / 13,888$1,363,889
August 13, 2014ColumbusNationwide Arena14,138 / 14,138$1,391,453
August 14, 2014ClevelandQuicken Loans Arena15,376 / 15,376$1,336,244
August 16, 2014LouisvilleKFC Yum! Center16,306 / 16,306$1,607,190
August 17, 2014St. LouisScottrade Center14,395 / 14,395$1,463,826
August 19, 2014Kansas CitySprint Center13,132 / 13,132$1,219,456
August 20, 2014LincolnPinnacle Bank Arena13,693 / 13,693$1,217,100
August 22, 2014MinneapolisTarget Center13,718 / 13,718$1,357,694
August 23, 2014FargoFargodome21,843 / 21,843$1,660,459
August 26, 2014WinnipegCanadaMTS Centre11,858 / 11,858$956,695
August 28, 2014SaskatoonCredit Union Centre12,379 / 12,379$940,310
August 29, 2014CalgaryScotiabank Saddledome12,295 / 12,295$1,239,040
August 31, 2014EdmontonRexall Place25,112 / 25,112$2,161,810
September 1, 2014
September 9, 2014VancouverRogers Arena27,462 / 27,462$2,680,950
September 10, 2014
September 12, 2014PortlandUnited StatesModa CenterTegan and Sara
Ferras
13,675 / 13,675$1,137,015
September 13, 2014TacomaTacoma Dome19,902 / 19,902$1,764,933
September 16, 2014AnaheimHonda Center23,374 / 23,374$2,619,670
September 17, 2014
September 19, 2014Los AngelesStaples Center28,791 / 28,791$3,606,823
September 20, 2014
September 22, 2014San JoseSAP Center25,173 / 25,173$2,963,031
September 23, 2014
September 25, 2014GlendaleGila River Arena13,145 / 13,145$1,423,994
September 26, 2014ParadiseMGM Grand Garden Arena12,886 / 12,886$1,742,965
September 29, 2014Salt Lake CityEnergySolutions Arena13,860 / 13,860$1,218,622
September 30, 2014DenverPepsi Center12,784 / 12,784$1,283,904
October 2, 2014DallasAmerican Airlines Center27,453 / 27,453$3,520,503
October 3, 2014
October 5, 2014MemphisFedExForum13,136 / 13,136$1,177,517
October 6, 2014TulsaBOK Center12,388 / 12,388$1,285,851
October 8, 2014New OrleansNew Orleans Arena13,718 / 13,718$1,274,571
October 10, 2014HoustonToyota CenterBecky G
Ferras
24,268 / 24,268$2,692,788
October 11, 2014
October 14, 2014MonterreyMexicoMonterrey ArenaBecky G
October 15, 2014
October 17, 2014Mexico CityPalacio de los Deportes39,212 / 40,368$3,726,052
October 18, 2014
Leg 3 Oceania[72]
November 7, 2014PerthAustraliaPerth ArenaBetty Who29,153 / 29,153$3,822,000
November 8, 2014
November 11, 2014AdelaideAdelaide Entertainment Centre18,426 / 18,426$2,264,770
November 12, 2014
November 14, 2014MelbourneRod Laver Arena100,923 / 100,923[c]$13,360,900[c]
November 15, 2014
November 18, 2014
November 19, 2014
November 21, 2014SydneyAllphones Arena93,841 / 93,841[d]$12,177,000[d]
November 22, 2014
November 24, 2014
November 25, 2014
November 27, 2014BrisbaneBrisbane Entertainment Centre60,159 / 60,159[e]$7,350,110[e]
November 28, 2014
November 30, 2014Tove Lo
December 1, 2014
December 4, 2014MelbourneRod Laver Arena[c][c]
December 6, 2014
December 7, 2014
December 10, 2014
December 12, 2014SydneyAllphones Arena[d][d]
December 13, 2014
December 15, 2014BrisbaneBrisbane Entertainment Centre[e][e]
December 19, 2014AucklandNew ZealandVector Arena24,157 / 24,157$3,046,890
December 20, 2014
Leg 4 Europe[15][73]
February 16, 2015BarcelonaSpainPalau Sant JordiCharli XCX
February 17, 2015MontpellierFrancePark&Suites Arena
February 20, 2015LyonHalle Tony Garnier
February 21, 2015MilanItalyMediolanum Forum
February 23, 2015PragueCzech RepublicO2 Arena
February 24, 2015KrakówPolandTauron Arena
February 26, 2015ViennaAustriaWiener Stadthalle
February 27, 2015BratislavaSlovakiaOndrej Nepela Arena
March 1, 2015ZürichSwitzerlandHallenstadion13,000 / 13,000$1,183,140
March 2, 2015MunichGermanyOlympiahalle
March 4, 2015AntwerpBelgiumSportpaleis18,396 / 19,920$1,045,430
March 5, 2015CologneGermanyLanxess Arena
March 7, 2015HerningDenmarkJyske Bank Boxen
March 9, 2015AmsterdamNetherlandsZiggo Dome
March 10, 2015
March 12, 2015HamburgGermanyO2 World Hamburg7,936 / 11,664$537,228
March 13, 2015BerlinO2 World12,491 / 12,515$753,185
March 15, 2015RigaLatviaArena Riga
March 18, 2015HelsinkiFinlandHartwall Arena
March 20, 2015OsloNorwayTelenor Arena
March 22, 2015StockholmSwedenEricsson Globe
Leg 5 Asia[16]
April 18, 2015GuangzhouChinaGuangzhou Sports ArenaThe Dolls
April 21, 2015ShanghaiMercedes-Benz Arena
April 22, 2015
April 25, 2015TokyoJapanTokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium
April 26, 2015
April 28, 2015TaipeiTaiwanTaipei ArenaFerras
May 1, 2015MacauCotai ArenaThe Dolls
May 2, 2015
May 7, 2015BocauePhilippinesPhilippine Arena
May 9, 2015TangerangIndonesiaIndonesia Convention Exhibition
May 11, 2015SingaporeSingapore Indoor Stadium
May 14, 2015BangkokThailandIMPACT Arena
Leg 6 Latin America[74]
September 22, 2015LimaPeruHipódromo de MonterricoGala Brie15,635 / 15,635$1,397,180
September 25, 2015São PauloBrazilAllianz ParqueAlunaGeorge35,564 / 35,564$2,218,220
September 27, 2015[f]Rio de JaneiroParque dos Atletas
September 29, 2015CuritibaPedreira Paulo LeminskiTinashe16,076 / 16,076$1,115,000
October 3, 2015Buenos AiresArgentinaHipódromo Argentino de PalermoTinashe
Lali
17,623 / 17,623$1,745,600
October 6, 2015SantiagoChileExplanada del Estadio NacionalTinashe
Consuelo Schuster
23,438 / 23,438$1,955,240
October 9, 2015BogotáColombiaParque Deportivo 222Tinashe
Durazno
18,796 / 18,796$1,409,520
October 12, 2015San JuanPuerto RicoJosé Miguel Agrelot ColiseumTinashe15,218 / 15,653$1,691,275
October 15, 2015Panama CityPanamaPlaza Figali6,928 / 8,000$968,479
October 18, 2015AlajuelaCosta RicaParque Viva16,199 / 16,199$1,423,310
Total1,515,864 / 1,537,369
(98.6%)
$160,293,758

Personnel

Main

  • Baz Halpin – director
  • Harry Sandler – tour manager
  • Cindy Chapman – assistant tour manager
  • Jay Schmit – production manager
  • Kim Hilton – production coordinator
  • Kavi Agrawal – production coordinator
  • Bradford Cobb – tour producers
  • Steven Jensen – tour producers
  • Martin Kirkup – tour producers
  • Ngoc Hoang – tour producers
  • Alan Doyle – stage manager
  • John Czajkowski – tour accountant
  • David Mendoza – set construction
  • Michael Curry Designs – set construction
  • Aaron Ford – set construction
  • Patrick Seeley – set construction
  • Tamra Natisin – personal assistant
  • Armando Alarcon – personal trainer
  • Greenberg Traurig – legal representative
  • Jay Cooper – legal representative
  • Steve Plinio – legal representative
  • Bernie Gudvi – business manager
  • Jeff Hinkle – business manager
  • Sandy Cohen – business manager
  • Emma Banks– booking agent
  • Mitch Rose– booking agent
  • Jbeau Lewis– booking agent
  • Christian Carubi – booking agent
  • Tina Walters – travel agent
  • Debbie and Nancy Rosenblatt – travel agent
  • Lyndsay Thomson – travel agent
  • Tracy Lonsdale – travel agent
  • RJ Durell – choreographer
  • Nick Florez – choreographer
  • Katie Schaar – assistant choreographer
  • Todd Delano – hair and make-up
  • Clyde Haygood – hair and make-up
  • Larry McDaniel – hair and make-up
  • Darren Scott – hair and make-up
  • Erin Lareau – wardrobe
  • Lisa Nishimura – wardrobe
  • Laura Spratt – wardrobe
  • Abby Franklin – wardrobe
  • Marina Toybina – wardrobe
  • Tony Villanueva – wardrobe supervisor
  • Baz Halpin – production design
  • Kathy Beer – lighting director
  • John Chiodo – lighting crew chief
  • Baz Halpin – lighting design
  • Eric Marchwinski – lighting design
  • Julian Lavender – lighting design
  • John Huddleston – lighting design
  • Bart Buckalew – lighting technology
  • Tony Cerasuolo – lighting technology
  • Chris Donati – lighting technology
  • John Dall – lighting technology
  • Jamie Catt – lighting technology
  • Nick Barton – lighting technology
  • Alex Murphy – lighting technology
  • Tiffany Hudson – lighting technology
  • Chuck Melton – head rigger
  • Ricky Baiotto – riggers
  • Albert Pozzetti – riggers
  • Jake Harrelson – riggers
  • Patrick Leonard – riggers
  • Duane Burda – backline crew chief
  • Dan Lefevre – head chef, catering crew chief
  • Robert Moore – automation
  • Richard Kent – automation
  • Simon Parsons – automation
  • Rick Berger – automation
  • Michael Berger – automation
  • Eric Pelletier – automation
  • Luke Larson – carpenter
  • Dewey Evans – carpenter
  • Jimmy George – carpenter
  • PJ Smith – carpenter
  • Mike Ryder – carpenter
  • Vadim Melline – carpenter
  • Aaron Ford – carpenter
  • Pete Keppler – engineer
  • Eric Racy – engineer
  • Manny Barajas – engineer
  • Ben Rothstein – engineer
  • Shaun Barnett – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Marc Webber – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Ryan Hagan – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Dan Ivory-Castle – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Ian MacDonald – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Michael Morey – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Alex Oita – pyrotechnics and lasers
  • Lightborne – video design
  • Ben Nicholson – video design
  • JT Rooney – video design
  • Todd LePere – video design
  • Omar Montes-Rangel – video engineer, video director
  • Eugene McAuliffe – video engineer
  • Live Nation – promoter
  • SJM Concerts – promoter
  • AEG, OCESA / Zignia Live – promoter
  • Dainty Group – promoter
  • The Blonds – costume design
  • Roberto Cavalli – costume design
  • Discount Universe – costume design
  • J&M Costumers – costume design
  • Nicolas Jebran – costume design
  • Alexis Mabille – costume design
  • Marco Marco – costume design
  • Fausto Puglisi – costume design
  • Jeremy Scott – costume design
  • Silvia's Costumers – costume design
  • Straight-Laced @ Runway Archives & Showroom – costume design
  • Todd Thomas – costume design
  • Valentino – costume design
  • Johnny Wujek – costume design
  • LaDuca Shoes – costume design
  • Leah Adler – dancer
  • Khasan Brailsford – dancer
  • Lockhart Brownlie – dancer
  • Bryan Gaw – dancer
  • Loriel Hennington – dancer
  • Malik LeNost – dancer
  • Scott Myrick – dancer
  • Cassidy Noblett – dancer
  • Tracy Shibata – dancer
  • Britt Stewart – dancer

Band

  • Kris Pooley – musical director
  • Max Hart – keys
  • Casey Hooper – guitar
  • Nathan Spicer – guitar
  • Adam Marcello – drums
  • Joshua Moreau – bass
  • Lauren Ball – background vocals
  • Cherri Black – background vocals
  • The Last Night – remixer
  • Jack Rayner – remixer

Credits adapted from The Prismatic World Tour program.[75]

Notes

References