The Jerusalem Post

Showing ‘Courage’

Celine Dion launches massive tour, including Israel

- • By MIKAEL WOOD

QUEBEC CITY – Celine Dion warned me not to sit on the couch. An hour or so after strutting offstage to finish the first concert of her new world tour, the pop superstar had just opened the door to her dressing room in the Videotron Centre arena here, not far from where she was born in tiny Charlemagn­e. The airy, suite-like space was amply appointed with fresh flowers and exercise equipment – perfect for either a hockey team or a lung-busting power balladeer with nearly a dozen platinum albums to her name. But among the many seating options, a boxy gray sofa seemed the most natural spot for a post-show interview.

“Oh, not there,” Dion said as I went to take a seat. “This is the hardest couch I’ve ever sat on in my life. Well, give it a try. It’s so bad. Am I being a diva? No, right? Do you agree with me?” She wasn’t being a diva; the sofa felt like a bus-stop bench. So instead we settled into two chairs next to a Pilates machine and a shriveled-up rubber ball.

What do you do with that? I asked Dion, who was dressed not at all casually in a black mesh top over a zebra-print skirt. When it’s inflated, “you lay on it and it helps you to open the chest,” she said. “It can also go at the bottom of your coccyx, if I may say.” And that stretching is good for singing?

“It’s good for living,” she replied with a grin. You can understand why Dion, 51, has well-being in mind. The Courage tour – scheduled to run through late 2020 and named after a new album she plans to release November 15 – marks the French-Canadian singer’s return to the road following the death of her husband and manager, Rene Angelil, who died of throat cancer in 2016. It also comes after the conclusion earlier this year of Dion’s long-term engagement at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, where she began performing in 2003 (well before Lady Gaga and Jennifer Lopez came to town). The show comes to Israel next August for Dion’s debut in the Holy Land.

Not unlike Vegas, which Dion helped rid of its musty Wayne Newton vibe, pop music has changed immeasurab­ly since then; Dion’s brand of ultra-polished uplift – as heard in chart-topping anthems like “The Power of Love,” “Because You Loved Me” and the Oscar- and Grammy-winning “My Heart Will Go On,” from Titanic – feels even further from today’s gloomy, hip-hop-attuned Top 40 than it did from the chipper late-’90s era of Hanson and the Spice Girls.

YET SOMETHING unexpected happened on this veteran entertaine­r’s path toward pastured irrelevanc­e: Dion was reborn as a proudly avant-garde style icon known for flaunting audacious outfits on Instagram and at highly photograph­ed events like May’s Met Gala in New York, where she was seen (and seen again) in an elaborate Oscar de la Renta get-up involving sequins, a feathered headpiece and what one fashion critic described as “sleeves draped in 3,000 strands of floor-length fringe made from micro-cut glass bugle beads.”

The Dionaissan­ce, it’s been called, a phrase Dion herself approves of, even if she claims not to know precisely how it originated. “I always loved fashion – it’s not something new,” she said. “But my team and I decided it’s OK to go to fashion shows, then it made such an impact that they wanted me to be in the front row. And that turned out to be a big deal.”

Now that sense of rejuvenati­on – a sort of livingher-best-life quality – is creeping into her music. You can hear her having a great time on Courage, her first English-language album since 2013’s low-key Loved Me Back to Life; it’s full of glittery, happily melodramat­ic songs in which she’s embracing her fabulousne­ss with refreshed vigor. And onstage in Quebec City, she seemed to lean into the outsize idea of Celine Dion. There were adventurou­s outfits, of course, including one that paired crisp tuxedo pants with a silky blouse whose enormous sleeves billowed just so when she pointed skyward to accentuate a big note in Beauty and the Beast. But she also joked easily with the audience and did a killer medley of old classics by David Bowie, Labelle, Prince and Tina Turner.

“She’s in a really good place,” said Stephan Moccio, a songwriter and producer from Ontario, Canada, who’s known Dion for years and worked on Courage.

“The love of her life is gone, but I think she’s found this unique confidence – this kind of emotional wisdom – that we’ve never seen before.”

In her dressing room, Dion said she worried at first that songwriter­s, knowing she’d lost her husband, would send her only “sad song after sad song after sad song.”

“The loss of my husband is still in me,” she said of Angelil, whom she married in 1994 (after he discovered her when she was 12) and with whom she had three sons. “I will grieve that for the rest of my life. And I see him through the eyes of my children every day.” Musically, though, it was the bigger, more theatrical material – disco-inflected songs in which she could display both her voice and her wit – that captured the feeling she wanted to put across in her show.

“I love the spotlight – I love to be looked at,” she told me as she smoothed her hair, which was knotted in a low bun at the back of her head. “I’m in show business. You show your butt or your back or your shoulder and you go, ‘Voulez-vous coucher avec moi.’

“Life is short,” she added. “Can we just have a good time?” (Los Angeles Times)

Jerusalem Post Staff contribute­d to this report.

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 ??  ?? CELINE DION on her ‘Courage’ Tour, which comes to Tel Aviv in August 2020. (Brian Purnell)
CELINE DION on her ‘Courage’ Tour, which comes to Tel Aviv in August 2020. (Brian Purnell)

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