
Celine Dion attends Coldplay Concert in Las Vegas amid stiff-person syndrome diagnosis
Washington DC [US], June 10 (ANI): Popular Canadian singer Celine Dion recently attended a Coldplay concert at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, reported People.
Celine, who has been battling with stiff-person syndrome, is now making headlines for attending the show. She posted several pictures on her Instagram handle and wrote in the caption, 'What an unforgettable evening with @Coldplay at @AllegiantStadium...My heart is still singing!'
She added, 'A heartfelt thanks to the band and their amazing team for welcoming my family with warmth and kindness. It was all...fantastique'
https://www.instagram.com/p/DKpt6EExK38/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==
Recently, Dion was seen enjoying the show as Coldplay performed on the latest stop at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas for another night of their Music of the Spheres World Tour.
One photo shows the 'Power of Love' singer in a huddle with the band, while another captures her deep in conversation with Coldplay frontman Chris Martin. Other snaps in the post include her waving at members of the crowd and making a heart gesture with her hands after appearing on the concert's big circular screen, reported People.
The setlist included Coldplay classics such as 'Paradise,' 'Yellow,' and 'Clocks.'
Dion appeared to have been joined at the show by her three sons -- Rene-Charles, 24, and twins Nelson and Eddy, 14 -- whom she shared with her late husband, Rene Angelil, reported People.
Dion and Angelil's love story began in 1980 when a 12-year-old Dion auditioned for him. He became her manager, and their professional partnership lasted seven years before they started dating in 1987, when Dion was 19. At first, Dion kept their relationship private, worried about public opinion.'I was afraid of what people would think,' she told People in 1994.
The couple also revealed their relationship publicly after being engaged for several years. 'When I was at the age to be able to say to people [we were together] ... It was like bang! Love! Love always wins,' Dion wrote in her memoir. The two were married on December 17, 1994, in a lavish ceremony at Montreal's Notre-Dame Basilica, which was broadcast live in Canada.
In recent years, Dion has faced health challenges of her own. In December 2022, the singer shared her diagnosis of stiff-person syndrome, a rare neurological disorder, which has impacted her career.
Earlier this month, Dion shared how her children have inspired her to fight stiff-person syndrome. She was diagnosed with the rare autoimmune and neurological disorder in August 2022, almost six years after Angelil died from throat cancer.
'I barely could walk at one point, and I was missing very much living. My kids started to notice. I was like, 'OK, they already lost a parent. I don't want them to be scared',' said Dion.
'I let them know, 'You lost your dad, [but] mom has a condition and it's different. I'm not going to die. It's something that I'm going to learn to live with,' reported People. (ANI)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Star
3 hours ago
- Toronto Star
Margaret Atwood guest of honour at masked ball that raised $1.5 million
On June 7 philanthropist Bruce Bailey held the third edition of his Canadian fête champêtre at his farm outside Toronto, raising $1.5 million. The gala celebrated fundraising for the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts; Canadian Opera Company; Pelee Island Bird Observatory; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; and Calgary's Glenbow Museum. Margaret Atwood was guest of honour at the party, whose theme was 'un ballo in maschera' (a masked ball), and many of the 500 guests rose to the occasion by wearing elaborate masks and costumes. Performers included a Montreal circus group, opera soprano Ambur Braid and dancers from Canada's National Ballet School.


Toronto Sun
10 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
CHRISTMAS IN JULY: A beautiful friendship
Variety Village best pals Kaden Jaglowitz, 13, (L) and his his best buddy Georgio Gonsalves, 12, who met at the Variety Village Summer Camp three years ago, shoot hoops in the main sports clubhouse on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. Photo by Jack Boland / Toronto Sun/Postmedia Network Most kids with disabilities have no friends. None. One Canadian university study put membership in that lonely kids' club at 53%. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Sad but true. Not so at Variety Village. Which brings us to the bustling lobby of that iconic east end sports centre the other day. Georgio Gonsalves, 12, glances out the big windows and his eyes spark. He bounces up and down. 'K!' he exclaims. K as in Kaden Jaglowitz, 13. The two boys are best buds. They have not seen each other for all of three days. They love each other. I mean real love. 'Kaden is so sweet,' Georgio tells me. 'I love Georgio,' says Kaden. Variety Village best pals Kaden Jaglowitz, 13, (L) and his his best buddy Georgio Gonsalves, 12, who met at the Variety Village Summer Camp three years ago, shoot hoops in the main sports clubhouse on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. Photo by Jack Boland They have other things in common, including Down syndrome and heart surgery scars and the like. Loneliness, too – until that vanished three summers ago at Variety Village's legendary camps. By chance, their moms had enrolled them in the introductory sports camp. At the end of day one, Georgio's mom, Mary Kapetanos, came to get him. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'This is Kaden,' Georgio said, solemnly. 'He's my friend.' It was music to Mary's ears. Georgio had classmates, of course, but those relationships ended at the school bell. No one invited him for sleepovers. There were no BFFs – until that Variety camp, and Kaden. Kaden's mom, Julie, says: 'The camp counsellors told us Georgio got all sad about something and was sitting alone on a hill (on Village grounds) and Kaden came to him with a water bottle and put his arm around him, then they went off to play.' The boys have been a dynamic duo ever since. 'They're like brothers,' says Julie. 'Georgio is the sensitive kind of kid and Kaden is the nurturing type,' says Mary. 'Their relationship is so sweet, so kind and tender.' Read More This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Their moms say the boys even have their own language, which sounds like garble to you and me but is Shakespeare to them. The moms, both single, are like sisters now. Kaden and Julie have become part of Georgio's extended Greek family. The moms and sons went to Disney World together. In the Village fieldhouse, the boys demo their basketball skills for Sun photographer Jack Boland. Basketball is their sport, born of a Variety summer camp. They play for a junior Special Olympics team called the Basket Hounds. They learned to boogie at a Variety summer dance camp. Fave tunes include JoJo Siwa's Boomerang . Hey-hey-hey, I don't really care about what they say Won't let the haters get their way I'ma come back like a boomerang. Hey-hey-hey. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Variety Village best pals Kaden Jaglowitz, 13, (L) and his his best buddy Georgio Gonsalves, 12, who met at the Variety Village Summer Camp three years ago, shoot hoops in the main sports clubhouse on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. Photo by Jack Boland / Toronto Sun/Postmedia Network Haters gonna hate. A total stranger once marched in off the sidewalk and asked Julie, who was on her porch with baby Kaden, 'does your child have Down syndrome?' The gall. 'I'm never wrong,' said the woman and marched off. Kaden spent weeks in ICU and could eat no solids until he was two. He was tiny. 'People used to come up and ask, 'Don't you feed your baby?'' says Julie. Baby Georgio, meanwhile, faced so much resistance from educators – one rejected him after an 'interview' at age two-and-a-half – his mom, a Montessori teacher, started her own school. Every parent of Down syndrome kids I've met over decades of the Sun Christmas Fund for Variety Village has similar stories. Society may be more open to the disability world these days, but we're a long way from real 'inclusion.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. But back to Kaden and Georgio. Tuckered out from basketball, the boys get out their 'Barbies.' That's what they call them all. Their stash ranges from Iron Man and dinosaurs to anime to actual Barbies, including one with Down syndrome features. The boys use them to work out thoughts and feelings, to confront troubles at school. For instance, one Barbie says to the other, 'Oh, yeah, you said I was stupid,' and a third doll cuts in, 'No, you're not!' And so on. You get the idea. Toronto SUN columnist Mike Strobel with Variety Village basketball buddies Kaden, 13, and his mom Julie (on left) and his best buddy Georgio, 12, and his mom Mary (on right) after hoops in the main sports clubhouse on Tuesday, June 17, 2025. Photo by Jack Boland / Toronto Sun/Postmedia Network Two boys boisterously playing with dolls would draw stares in many places. But not at Variety Village. 'I don't know anywhere else, other than our homes,' says Julie, 'where kids can foster real friendships based on who they are without having to mask any part of themselves to fit it.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The boys are back at Variety's summer camps in July – starting together with swimming, though they both fret that they're going to sink. Other camps, for kids of all abilities, include taekwondo, art, drama, track and field and rock climbing – and basketball. You are lucky if you have a friendship like that of Kaden and Georgio. Variety Village remains its backdrop. You can help keep it so. Any donations in June to the Sun Christmas Fund – Christmas in July? – will be tripled thanks to Canadian Tire Jumpstart and a private donor, to a total of $150,000. Donate at or use the QR code on this page. Could be the start of a beautiful friendship. northchannelmike@ Columnists Toronto & GTA Sunshine Girls Sunshine Girls World


Winnipeg Free Press
16 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
For Winnipeg mural artist, blank space is her happy place
Rachel Lancaster has a thing for blank walls — she can't drive past one without wanting to leave her mark on it. The mural artist is always on the search for the perfect canvas and, when she sees a wall she likes, she doesn't think twice before offering her painting services. 'That happens all the time. I've driven past a wall and wanted to paint it…. I will find the company and contact them. I always do it; why not? When you run your own small business you do whatever,' she says, laughing. Photos by Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Mural artist Rachel Lancaster creates huge artworks to fill empty spaces and has painted walls, garage doors and the exteriors of sea containers. There's one in particular she can't get out of her mind — an exterior wall belonging to Local Public Eatery, a downtown restaurant/bar on Garry Street. 'They have a beautiful white wall that faces a big parking lot. It's ideal for a mural — a mural is meant to be viewed from way back, because people then have enough room to look at it (properly),' she says. Lancaster been painting murals for almost 15 years now. It was a side gig when she first started. She would take on commissions in the evenings and on weekends, jumping in her car — always packed with brushes and paints — to create for as long as she could. 'I didn't have kids back then so I would paint all weekend. I never hung out, I just painted,' she says. Then the COVID-19 pandemic struck and Lancaster, an event co-ordinator, lost her job. She took on more painting gigs, assuming she'd return to her previous role when things settled down, but she never did. By then she was also pregnant, which spurred her decision to become a professional artist. 'Life had another plan and I just went with it and whatever happened, happened,' she says. Five years later and Lancaster now has a clothing line, she's designed colouring books and she has just written and illustrated her first children's book, posting her latest endeavours on her Instagram account, @rachel_lancaster_artist. Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Lancaster's tools of her trade — painting brushes and palettes. But murals remain her main focus. These days the artist is often booked two to three months in advance and has travelled throughout the province and beyond for painting commissions. The dream now is to go further afield. 'I've gone all over Manitoba, I've painted in Saskatchewan and in Ontario and up north in The Pas. I will travel worldwide to paint; I have a 10-year bucket list for my business and one of the things I want to paint is a really large wall in New York City,' she says. Lancaster paints on any kind of wall surface — stucco, brick, metal, wood, drywall, shipping container — and accepts both indoor and outdoor commissions. Her outdoor mural season usually runs from May to October while indoor mural painting extends from November to the following spring. She often rents a lift for taller buildings — she recently completed a mural on a six-storey apartment complex in Osborne Village — or uses an extension ladder for two-storey structures. Monthly What you need to know now about gardening in Winnipeg. An email with advice, ideas and tips to keep your outdoor and indoor plants growing. It's a physically demanding job, especially in the summer when she has to climb up and down ladders, sometimes up to 60 times per mural. She doesn't take on extra help either. The job suits her lifestyle and her personality. It feels, she says, like something she is meant to be doing. Ruth Bonneville / Free Press Lancaster finishes up a large mural on the side of a garage in a Winnipeg backyard. 'I love it. It's unlike anything else. When I was working in an office I would finish my work then stare at the clock. I would pace, I would go into different offices to chit-chat. I thought this was how life was, this was how work was meant to be. 'But this doesn't feel like work. The more I do it, the more I fall in love with it. I am in charge of my own schedule. I don't look at the clock, I don't take breaks, I don't stop for lunch. I just paint and then I go home when I'm done. It's blissful,' she says. AV KitchingReporter AV Kitching is an arts and life writer at the Free Press. She has been a journalist for more than two decades and has worked across three continents writing about people, travel, food, and fashion. Read more about AV. Every piece of reporting AV produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.