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Emma interrupts the concert to help a fan and that humanity we miss

One of the unspoken rules of artists performing on stage is to keep going whatever happens and never stop. It happened, for example, in 2019, when the treadmill on which they were performing at their concert in Warsaw was blocked due to a technical failure and Beyoncé and Jay-Z ignored it, as if everything was planned, giving an encore. and the trio until the arrival of help and the ladder that would bring them back to the mainland. Breaking the ceremonial, especially for a valid reason, is however one of the most important and precious things an artist can do, and that is why Emma Marrone’s gesture during the evening One, None, One Hundred Thousand, staged in Campovolo on 11 June after two years of postponements, hit everyone a little.

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Noticing that a front row fan was unwell, Emma asked the band to stop, approaching the boy and asking for help. “Stop, stop, stop,” Emma yelled, interrupting her performance of It is like this every time, asking other viewers to help the fan breathe and running behind the scenes to bring him a bottle of fresh water. He did it without thinking about it, because there is nothing worse than feeling bad at a concert in the face of general indifference, the one that leads most of the audience to not care so as not to be meddled with it, worried as it is to turn away from the other. leaves in order not to have trouble.

Cosimo Buccolieri

Emma, ​​the artist on stage, the one who should go straight, instead stopped everything to lend her help, also meeting a sincere standing ovation from the people who were singing with her the wonderful song that led to the last Sanremo. A gesture of humanity and empathy – especially for those who know what it means to feel bad in the midst of other people without the possibility of going out and, above all, of asking for help – which teaches us to still have faith in mankind and, in particular, to sensitive souls like Emma.

Other stories of Vanity Fair that may interest you:

One None Hundred Thousand“Let’s sing together against gender violence”

It is like this every time: the backstage of the video of Emma’s song

Emma and the comment on fishnet stockings: “Enough body shaming, words have weight”

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Source: Vanity Fair

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