Just in case there’s any doubt that Beyoncé is that girl, the singer proved she can handle anything on the first night of her Cowboy Carter tour in London.
During her performance of “I’m That Girl,” the Grammy winner’s golden chaps slipped down her legs as she was dancing along with her dancers on stage at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium. Despite the chaps restricting her movement, Beyoncé keeps her cool. In a video shared by a fan to social media, the singer waits for the perfect moment to slide down and pull her outfit back up, on beat.
As Beyoncé launches into the song’s bridge, a backup dancer steps in behind her to fasten the chaps back in place. And not a single beat was missed during the entire interaction.
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():format(webp)/beyonce-042925-0558226a64464231a6b30d63f6a944ec.jpg)
Thursday was the first night of Beyoncé’s reign in London, after the United States leg took place in April and May.
While the tour’s U.S. leg featured appearances from the singer’s daughters, Blue Ivy, 13, and Rumi, 7, fans in London were treated to the surprise appearance of the Les Twins — Laurent and Larry Nicolas Bourgeois — dancing onstage.
Les Twins have collaborated with Beyoncé on numerous occasions, dancing alongside her on her major stages, including the Mrs. Carter Show World Tour in 2013 and the Renaissance World Tour in 2023.
Blue Ivy and Rumi also appeared during Thursday’s stop, which marks the latter’s European tour debut. This is Blue’s second run on tour with a mother, with the teen previously dancing on stage with her mom during the Renaissance album tour throughout 2023.
Beyoncé shares Blue Ivy and twins Rumi and Sir with her husband, rapper Jay-Z, whom she married in 2008.
But Beyoncé’s children aren’t her only family members to share her stage. Tina Knowles, ever the proud grandma, recently opened up to TV host Gayle King about sharing a moment on stage with her daughter and granddaughters during a recent stop on her Matriarch book tour.
“I got to be on there with [Beyoncé] and Blue and Rumi, and that made it so special,” she said, adding, “It was from a different perspective — I’m usually behind the stage — but it was actually fun. It was exciting.”
Knowles told King that she asked Rumi once how she feels being on stage with thousands of people waving and clapping back at her.
“She said, ‘It feels powerful,'” Knowles shared with a laugh.