The Mary Show Tour

The Mary Show was the second concert tour by American recording artist Mary J. Blige, in support of her multi-platinum fourth studio album, Mary (1999). It began in June 2000 and continued through August 2000.[1]

The Mary Show Tour
Tour by Mary J. Blige
LocationU.S.
Associated albumMary
Start dateJune 10, 2000 (2000-06-10)
End dateAugust 27, 2000 (2000-08-27)
No. of shows48
Mary J. Blige concert chronology

Background

Before Mary J. Blige launched her anticipated "Mary Tour" in the summer of 2000, she visited AIDS charities nationwide and presented more than a half a million dollars from the M.A.C Cosmetic's AIDS Fund. As one of the faces of Viva Glam III, M.A.C's sultry lipstick shade made exclusively to raise money for the M.A.C AIDS Fund, Blige made official check presentations to nine charities across the country. To kick off her 33-city "Mary Tour", Blige joined M.A.C President John Demsey in Los Angeles on June 9, 2000 to donate $50,000 to Project Angel Food, a charity that delivered free food to more than 1,200 men, women and children with HIV and AIDS in Los Angeles.[2]

Opening acts

Set list

  1. "Superhero Mary" (video introduction)
  2. "Deep Inside"
  3. "Mary Jane (All Night Long)"
  4. "Love No Limit"
  5. "All That I Can Say"
  6. "Sincerity"
  7. "Real Love" / "Reminsce" / "Everyday It Rains" / "I Love You"
  8. "You Bring Me Joy"
  9. "Time"
  10. "Give Me You"
  11. "You Remind Me" / "Be Happy"
  12. "What's the 411?"
  13. "I'll Be There for You/You're All I Need to Get By"
  14. "I'm Goin' Down"
  15. "My Life"
  16. "Your Child"
  17. "The Love I Never Had"
  18. "Seven Days"
  19. "Not Gon' Cry"
  20. "Let No Man Put Asunder"
Encore
  1. "Everything"

Tour dates

List of U.S. concerts, showing date, city and venue
Date
(2000)
City Venue
June 10 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
June 11
June 15 Oakdale Oakdale Music Festival
June 16 Boston Fleet Center
June 17 New York City Radio City Music Hall
June 18
June 20 Milwaukee Riverside Theater
June 21 Minneapolis Orpheum Theatre
June 23 Rosemont Rosemont Theatre
June 25 Memphis Mud Island Amphitheatre
June 27 Huntsville Von Braun Center
June 29 Sunrise Sunrise Music Theater
June 30 Savannah Savannah Civic Center
July 1 Atlanta Chastain Park Amphitheater
July 2 New Orleans Essence Music Festival
July 5 Augusta Richmond County Civic Center
July 7 Birmingham Boutwell Auditorium
July 8 Raleigh Alltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek
July 9 Richmond Landmark Theater
July 11 Vienna Wolf Trap Performing Arts Center
July 12 Westbury NYCB Theatre at Westbury
July 14 Newark New Jersey Performing Arts Center
July 15 Camden Sony Music E-Centre
July 16 Baltimore Pier Six Pavilion
July 18 Saginaw Wendler Arena
July 20 Columbus Palace Theatre
July 21 Cleveland State Theatre
July 22 Detroit Fox Theatre
July 23
July 27 Charlotte Independence Arena
July 28 Greensboro War Memorial Auditorium
July 29 Hampton Hampton Coliseum
July 30 Columbia Township Auditorium
August 3 Nashville Grand Ole Opry
August 4 St. Louis Fox Theatre
August 5 Cincinnati Aronoff Center
August 6 Pittsburgh I.C. Light Amphitheatre
August 8 Kansas City Municipal Auditorium
August 9 Chicago Chicago Theatre
August 12 Dallas Coca-Cola Starplex Amphitheatre
August 13 Houston Arena Theater
August 15 Jackson Mississippi Coliseum
August 16 Seattle Paramount Theatre
August 18 Austin Frank Erwin Center
August 19 Temecula Pechanga Entertainment Center
August 23 Oakland Oakland Theatre
August 26 Las Vegas Mandalay Bay Events Center
August 27 Los Angeles Universal Amphitheatre
gollark: No, this is a good idea. You should buy an FPGA, learn Verilog, and implement it.
gollark: Sounds like osmarksISA-2028™ but worse.
gollark: Newcomb's paradox is* culture.
gollark: ?
gollark: Also the iterated prisoner's dilemma.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.