Footage from Taylor Swift‘s new ‘Eras’ tour documentary shows the moment she broke down in tears after meeting survivors and families of the victims of the Southport stabbing attack.
The knife attack took place at a dance workshop themed around her music in July 2024, in which three children were killed and ten people injured. The killer, Axel Rudakubana, was sentenced to a minimum of 52 years in jail earlier this year.
When news of the attack broke, the singer said she was “completely in shock” at “the loss of life and innocence, and the horrendous trauma inflicted on everyone who was there, the families and first responders”. She added: “These were just little kids at a dance class. I am at a complete loss for how to ever convey my sympathies to these families.”
Swift met some of the people affected by the attack at one of the ‘Eras’ shows at Wembley Stadium in August of that year. Her fans then started a fundraiser for those affected by the attack, raising over £120,000.
Now, Swift’s new tour documentary The End of an Era reveals the emotional toll it took on her. She is seen sobbing in her dressing room, comforted by her mother Andrea who tells her: “I know it doesn’t seem like it, but I know you helped them.” Swift had to go on stage and perform for three and a half hours shortly afterwards.
“From a mental standpoint, I do live in a reality that’s unreal a lot of the time,” Swift says in the first episode. “But I need to be able to handle all the feelings and then perk up and perform.”
On top of that, it was also her first show after she had to cancel three shows in Vienna due to a foiled terror plot. Swift later commented on the cancellations, calling them “devastating”, while saying she was “grateful to the authorities because thanks to them, we were grieving concerts and not lives”.
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Speaking to the media at the documentary’s premiere in New York, Swift said that “being afraid that something is going to happen to your fans is new” after performing for 20 years.
In a three-star review of the documentary, NME wrote: “There’s a great documentary to be made about The Eras Tour, but it’s probably an unofficial one exploring the unique sense of community it fostered among the singer’s fanbase. “It’s like Woodstock without the drugs,” one commentator notes here, entirely without shade. For now, though, The End Of An Era is solid content for Swifties wanting to relive the tour’s huge collective dopamine hit.”
in other news, Swift appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert this week and discussed everything from the new docuseries to her friendship with Stevie Nicks, and also addressed the critics who complain about her over-exposure and want her to “just go away.”
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“I think what I look up to most in people is career longevity, career longevity, friendship longevity, longevity in their relationships, how do you keep a good thing going? I think there are certain corners of our society that really love that and look up to longevity,” she said.
“There are also corners that are like, ‘Give someone else a turn. Can’t you just go away so we can talk about how good you were?’ And I’m like, I don’t want to, you know?”