Music
Here’s what happened at The Weeknd’s Super Bowl half-time show
4 years ago
The 55th running of the NFL’s biggest game took place amid the pandemic in Tampa, Florida and this year half time was all about The Weeknd.
The Weeknd enlisted a small army of lookalikes for a glittering Super Bowl half-time show packed with hits.
The 55th running of the NFL’s showpiece event took place amid the pandemic in Tampa, Florida, with Tom Brady’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers taking on Patrick Mahomes’ Kansas City Chiefs.
About 25,000 fans – including 7,500 vaccinated healthcare workers – were allowed inside the Raymond James Stadium, which has a capacity of 65,890. The rest of the crowd was made of cut-outs.
Canadian superstar The Weeknd capped a year of massive chart success by performing the coveted half-time slot, with a set lacking none of the usual spectacle despite the limited attendance.
It opened with the R&B singer seated against the backdrop of a cityscape populated by backing dancers dressed as gospel singers.
He launched into his opening number, 2016 hit Starboy, followed by The Hills.
For Can’t Feel My Face, The Weeknd brought fans inside a brightly lit corridor, unsteadily holding the camera up to his own face.
A full moon rose above the stage while The Weeknd sang I Feel It Coming and fireworks erupted in the Florida sky.
After a rendition of Save Your Tears, The Weeknd performed Earned It from the Fifty Shades Of Grey soundtrack.
He joined a small army of backing dancers – all wearing the same red jacket as him but with bandages on their faces in line with the aesthetic for his After Hours album – on the field to perform 2020 megahit Blinding Lights.
As the lookalikes lay down, a triumphant The Weeknd, who before the show revealed he spent spent seven million dollars (about £5 million) on the performance, stood beneath a sky filled with fireworks.
The Super Bowl, one of the year’s biggest cultural events in the US, featured the usual Hollywood star power, with blockbuster film trailers and celebrity-filled adverts appearing during the many commercial breaks.
A 30-second slot reportedly cost about 5.5 million dollars (£4 million).
Matthew McConaughey appeared as a flat version of himself in an ad for Doritos 3D while Will Ferrell, Awkwafina and Kenan Thompson promoted car maker General Motors.
Post Malone joined Cedric The Entertainer for a Bud Light promotion while Drake and Paul Rudd starred in an advert for State Farm insurance.
Brad Pitt voiced a teaser building up a game that had been billed as Brady – one of the greatest American footballers ever – against the league’s current leading star Mahomes.
Before kick-off, singer-songwriter H.E.R. performed America The Beautiful while country music star Eric Church was joined by singer Jazmine Sullivan for the US national anthem.
Amanda Gorman, the 22-year-old poet who garnered worldwide attention after starring during last month’s presidential inauguration, also performed before the game started.