The Guardian (USA)

Must the show go on? Taylor Swift fan death highlights danger of live shows as Earth cooks

- Constance Malleret

In Brazil, a tropical country whose famed Carnival celebratio­ns are held at the peak of summer, hot weather is not usually considered an obstacle to music events.

“For Brazilians, the heat is part of our identity constructi­on … We’re a country that deals well with heat, we’re proud of that,” said Nubia Armond, a geographer at Indiana University Bloomingto­n.

But the death of a young woman during a Taylor Swift concert held amid a scorching heatwave in Rio de Janeiro has brought into sharp focus the dangers of extreme heat – and how music events will be forced to adapt to the era of global boiling.

With temperatur­es reaching 39.1C (102.38F) in Rio last Friday, more than 60,000 people packed the Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos for Swift’s firstever major gig in Brazil, the second South America stop in her legendary Eras Tour. After queuing for hours in the sizzling afternoon sun, concertgoe­rs endured stifling conditions inside the venue.

“I’d never experience­d anything like it,” said Natália Cordeiro, 29, a lawyer from the nearby city of Niterói. “It felt like an oven.”

Seeing Swift live was a “teenage dream come true” for Cordiero, but conditions made it hard to enjoy the gig. “During my favourite songs I got into it, I jumped around, I sang, but I’d get this feeling of breathless­ness,” she said.

At least 1,000 people fainted, and video footage of Swift on stage showed the 33-year-old pop star apparently struggling to breathe too.

Ana Clara Benevides, 23, collapsed while Swift was singing Cruel Summer and died in hospital shortly after. A preliminar­y autopsy has indicated she suffered minor lung hemorrhage­s, but authoritie­s said it was too early to determine whether heat and dehydratio­n were the cause.

Brazilian authoritie­s reacted promptly, issuing emergency rules to allow bottled water into concert venues. On Saturday, after fans had already started entering the stadium for Swift’s second show, the show’s promotors, Time For Fun, postponed that night’s concert as the mercury rose to 42.5C (108.5F) and the heat index – a measure that considers humidity levels and other factors as well as temperatur­e – hit 59.7C (139.46F).

Brazilian prosecutor­s are investigat­ing Time For Fun and questions have been raised about the organisers’ apparent failure to adapt the event to the baking weather conditions.

According to concert-goers, screens covered vents in the usually airy stadium, seemingly to prevent people outside from getting a peek of the show and the grass pitch was covered with metal sheeting which had heated up in the sun.

The audience were banned from bringing in their own food and water; 300ml cups inside the venue were expensive and hard to get a hold of. Despite the already dangerous heat, pyrotechni­cs were maintained during Swift’s performanc­e of Bad Blood. “The vision and heat sensation were hellish,” wrote the journalist Marcella Ramos.

In a video statement on Thursday, Time For Fun CEO Serafim Abreu acknowledg­ed that the company could have taken some additional measures in response to the heat and apologised to concert goers. He also expressed “devastatio­n” at Benevides’s death and said the company is at her family’s disposal “to provide assistance as needed”.

In such conditions, the entertainm­ent industry must accept that the show can’t always go on, said Anita Carvalho, director of the Music Rio Academy, a school of music and entertainm­ent business. “The producer should have postponed or cancelled … as it was evident no one was prepared [for this kind of heat].”

Carvalho added: “I have no doubt that [this show] will be a watershed for the events industry.”

Nathalia Valladares, a keen concert-goer who has tickets to see Paul McCartney in December and McFly next year, believes Brazil’s famously fervent fans – who think nothing of spending hours, days or even longer in line to snag the best spot at a gig – will have to adapt too. “I saw people wearing boots and gloves [at Swift’s Friday show],” the 33-year-old designer said in disbelief.

Armond hopes that the intensity of Brazil’s latest heatwave, coming hard on the heels of another extremely hot spell in September, will wake up authoritie­s and the general population to the silent danger of high temperatur­es and the urgency of the situation. A strong El Niño warming weather event helps explain the recent heat, but “there are very strong indication­s that this event was influenced by climate change”, she said.

 ?? Nilton Santos Olympic Stadium. Photograph: Tercio Teixeira/AFP/Getty Images ?? A firefighte­r cools off Taylor Swift concertgoe­rs with a hose as they queue outside the
Nilton Santos Olympic Stadium. Photograph: Tercio Teixeira/AFP/Getty Images A firefighte­r cools off Taylor Swift concertgoe­rs with a hose as they queue outside the
 ?? Photograph: Pilar Olivares/Reuters ?? A girl feels sick from high temperatur­es as she waits outside the stadium for the concert.
Photograph: Pilar Olivares/Reuters A girl feels sick from high temperatur­es as she waits outside the stadium for the concert.

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