Swift, 34, who became the first musical artist to sell out the Rogers Centre six times on the same tour, broke into tears after a heartfelt rendition of Champagne Problems.
The track is from 2020’s evermore LP, which, along with folklore, was one of two albums Swift recorded during lockdown.
As she has done throughout the Eras Tour, Swift recalled how she made the records as a way to escape from the pandemic, not knowing if she’d get to perform songs from either release in front of a crowd.
“Folklore was an album that I started writing about two days into the pandemic,” she said. “Folklore was this imaginary place I would escape to in my head everyday when I was writing stories.”
Taylor Swift performs at Toronto’s Rogers Centre.Photo by Getty Images
It was the first album, she said, where Swift didn’t make herself the main character. “I decided, what if I tried (out) being more of a narrator and kind of create characters, and these characters, they could fall in love and have their hearts ripped out and lots of drama … in this fictional place I made up.”
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Clad in a cranberry-coloured gown, she told the 49,000 gathered Swities that the creative decision gave her “a lot of fulfilment” and helped spark a musical output that included her subsequent albums: Midnights (2022) and her more recent six-time Grammy nominated The Tortured Poets Department.
But as she soaked in a thunderous ovation, Swift, who also called the dual records the most Canadian in her catalogue, fought back tears.
🚨| Taylor Swift cries while thanking the crowd after the "champagne problems" cheer at today's show
"We are the end of this tour- we've put so much of our lives into this"
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Repeating a line she had said throughout her Toronto run, the Eras Tour has been the most fun she’s had on the road, and it’s coming to an end, with just three more shows planned for Vancouver next month.
On Saturday, tears filled her eyes as she thanked the team that has been with her since the tour started in March 2023 in Arizona.
“And to my band and to my crew and everybody who has put so much into this tour … and I don’t even know what I’m saying, I’m just having a bit of a moment, sorry,” she said to the packed baseball stadium.
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“It’s not even the last show!” Swift said, wiping away tears, before continuing. “My band, my crew, all of my fellow performers, we have put so much of our lives into this. And you’ve put so much of your lives into being with us tonight and to giving us that moment that we will never forget. We’ve loved our time in Toronto. It’s been so amazing … I love you guys. Thanks so much for that.”
Taylor Swift performs during the final Eras concert in Toronto on Nov. 23, 2024.Photo by TAS Rights Management
In a lighter moment, fans of Schitt’s Creek also got a kick out of watching Swift’s reaction when her backup dancer Kam Saunders quoted a line from the sitcom during We Are Never Getting Back Together.
“So he calls me up and he’s like, ‘I still love you.’ And I’m just, I mean, ‘This is exhausting. We are never getting back together,’” Swift sang, before holding her microphone out to Saunders, who yelled “Ew, David! Ew!” — the famous line that Annie Murphy’s Alexis would often say to her brother David (played by Dan Levy) on the show.
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— no its becky ⸆⸉ TAYRONTO N6/TAYCOUVER N3 (@SwimBeckRun) November 24, 2024
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As it nears its end — there are just three shows left — the massive global success of Swift’s Eras Tour is unmatched. When it was first announced in 2022, it was an instant sellout, with the 14-time Grammy winner adding international shows that took her all across the world.
She’s ending her run in Canada, she said, because she wanted to play in front of her most “loyal, passionate, kind, thoughtful fans.”
But for every city she visited, her economic impact has been vast. In Toronto, it was estimated that the concerts would give the city a much-needed $282 million economic boost.
Taylor Swift onstage for night No. 4 of her Eras Tour in Toronto.Photo by TAS Rights Management
It’s hard to find a contemporary equivalent to the Swift craze that gripped the city over the past two weeks. Elvis Presley only played five shows outside of the United States, two of which were at Maple Leaf Gardens back in the 1950s. The Beatles gave Toronto its first taste of Beatlemania in 1964. Of course, the Rolling Stones rehearsed for several of their world tours here, and performed to 500,000 people at SARSstock back in 2003.
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Then there was the Who, who famously held their “final” concert in Toronto back in 1982 at Maple Leaf Gardens.
Taylor Swift in concert at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto on Friday May 21 2010.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift in concert at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto on Friday, May 21, 2010.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performing her Red Tour at Toronto's Rogers Centre on Friday, June 14, 2013.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Singer Taylor Swift attends the "AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY" TIFF Party hosted by The Weinstein Company and Entertainment One presented by Bombardier at Soho House Toronto during the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.Photo by Mike Windle /Getty Images for Weinstein Co
Taylor Swift attends the "AUGUST: OSAGE COUNTY" TIFF Party hosted by The Weinstein Company and Entertainment One presented by Bombardier at Soho House Toronto during the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2013.Photo by Mike Windle /Getty Images for Weinstein Co
Taylor Swift performing her Red Tour at the Rogers Centre on Friday, June 14, 2013.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift arrives at the annual Much Music Video Awards in Toronto on June 16, 2013. Photo by MICHAEL PEAKE /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Oct. 2, 2015.Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Oct. 2, 2015. Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Oct. 2, 2015. Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre during her "1989 Tour" on Friday Oct. 2, 2015. Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre in Toronto on Friday Oct. 2, 2015. Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift of 'One Chance' poses at the Guess Portrait Studio during 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.Photo by Larry Busacca /Getty Images
Taylor Swift arrives on the red carpet at the 2013 MuchMusic Video Awards at Bell Media Headquarters on June 16, 2013 in Toronto.Photo by Jag Gundu /Getty Images
Taylor Swift arrives at the 2013 MuchMusic Video Awards at MuchMusic HQ on June 16, 2013.Photo by George Pimentel /Getty Images
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Oct. 2, 2015. Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Oct. 2, 2015.Photo by Stan Behal /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs onstage during her reputation Stadium Tour at the Rogers Centre on Aug. 3, 2018. Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Aug. 3, 2018.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Aug. 3, 2018. Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift performs at the Rogers Centre on Aug. 3, 2018.Photo by Veronica Henri /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift attends 'In Conversation With... Taylor Swift' during the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival.Photo by Amy Sussman /Getty Images
Taylor Swift attends the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival.Photo by VALERIE MACON /AFP via Getty Images
Taylor Swift attends "In Conversation With... Taylor Swift" during the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival.Photo by VALERIE MACON /AFP via Getty Images
Taylor Swift seen during a Jan. 29, 2009, promo stop in Toronto at the Soho Metropolitan Hotel.Photo by Dave Abel /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift seen during a 2009 promo stop in Toronto at the Soho Metropolitan Hotel.Photo by Dave Abel /Toronto Sun
Taylor Swift seen during a 2009 promo stop in Toronto at the Soho Metropolitan Hotel.Photo by Dave Abel /Toronto Sun
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But Swiftmania is unique. At the end of 2023, the Eras shows became the first tour to cross the billion-dollar mark. Her merch sales were well north $200 million, and a concert film she self-produced sold more than $250 million worth of tickets, making it the highest-grossing concert film of all time.
With her added dates this year, Swift could bring in another $1 billion.
Then there are her album sales.
Earlier this year, Swift broke her own record for the most sales of a vinyl album in a week, moving 700,000 LP copies of The Tortured Poets Department in just three days. She sold another 800,000 copies of CD, cassette and digital downloads of the album during its first week.
According to Billboard, Swift was responsible for 7% of all vinyl albums sold in the U.S. in 2023.
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Taylor Swift performs at Rogers Centre on the sixth and final night of the Eras Tour in Toronto.Photo by TAS Rights Management
Since launching her career as a country artist in 2006, Swift has exceeded all expectations, with her legion of fans consuming her every career move.
After she performed Cassandra from The Tortured Poets Department with Mad Woman and I Did Something Bad during the acoustic section of the evening on Friday, Swifties expected she would announce the release date for her rerecorded version of 2017’s Reputation.
That much-hoped for surprise didn’t happen, but Swift still sent fans into a frenzy when she played an acoustic guitar mashup of Sparks Fly and Message in a Bottle that she followed by a piano medley of You’re Losing Me and How Did It End?
Although tour opener Gracie Abrams popped up as a surprise guest on Us and Out Of The Woods at show No. 3 last Saturday night, there were no special guests for her final night in Toronto. Unless you count Ed Kelce, the father of her boyfriend Travis Kelce, who was spotted alongside her mom Andrea Swift at the show.
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Instead, it was just Swift and 49,000 of her besties celebrating a musical run we’re unlikely to see ever again.
“Toronto, we’ve had the most wonderful time with you. We’ve had the most fun,” Swift said at the end of the night. “If you (came) to any of the other shows, if you just came in for this show, if you’ve travelled to be here, or if you just live down the street, you’ve been so generous to us.”
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Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion. Please keep comments relevant and respectful. Comments may take up to an hour to appear on the site. You will receive an email if there is a reply to your comment, an update to a thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information.