Rihanna replays the hits during a red hot Super Bowl halftime show

Rihanna replays the hits during a red hot Super Bowl halftime show

Entertainment

The pop star kicked off a highly anticipated performance at the 57th Super Bowl halftime show on Sunday evening, seven years after her last live performance.

Singer revealed pregnancy before delivering on promise of jam-packed 13 minutes

Jenna Benchetrit · CBC News

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Rihanna performs during the halftime show at the 57th Super Bowl between Kansas City and Philadelphia on Sunday in Glendale, Ariz. (Matt Slocum/The Associated Press)

Forget Philadelphia, forget Kansas City: What a night for Team Rihanna.

The pop star kicked off a highly anticipated performance at the 57th Super Bowl halftime show on Sunday evening, seven years after her last live performance — and showing off a brand new baby bump, with a rep confirming after the show that the singer is pregnant with her second child.

While the show kept things relatively simple compared to last year’s star-studded, concept-heavy event, the singer’s 13-minute set was a reminder of just how many hits saturate the 34-year-old’s catalogue.

Rihanna revealed a baby bump during her Super Bowl halftime performance Sunday night. Her rep later confirmed the pregnancy. (Ashley Landis/The Associated Press)

She jumped into the show withB*tch Better Have My Money, dancing atop one of several floating platforms with an army of backup dancers in white puffer jackets. Rihanna herself sported a monochromatic red outfit with a latex corset.

Next came three songs from her 2011 albumTalk That Talk:Where Have You Been,Only GirlandWe Found Love, interspersed with refrains fromS&Mbefore leading intoRude Boy. She then went into her 2016 Drake collaborationWork, commanding the ever-growing group of dancers to follow her across the stage.

Rihanna delivered on her promise of a ‘jam-packed’ show. (Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press)

After performing the DJ Khaled-producedWild Thoughts, she strutted across the platforms as if they were a runway before launching intoPour It Up.

A dancer handed her a mirror to quickly check her makeup — a reminder that her absence from music is largely due to a years-long commitment to her cosmetics empire, FENTY — before the opening notes ofAll of the Lightsechoed across the stadium, strobe lights flickering as even more dancers flooded the field to join her.

She sang Run This TownandUmbrella (though there was no guest appearance from Jay-Z, or anyone else) now donning a gown-like coat in the same firetruck red as the rest of her outfit.

RiRi then finished on a high note, literally, stepping onto a platform that elevated her to the skies as she belted the words toDiamonds, the spotlight solely on her as she showcased her vocals.

Rihanna finished her show on a high note, performing Diamonds as a platform elevated her toward the sky. (Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press)

Rihanna had teased during a Thursday news conference that the halftime show would be “jam packed,” pulling from a repertoire that, beyond what she performed, also includesDon’t Stop The Music, Love On The Brain, Pon de ReplayandDisturbia.

“It’s going to be a celebration of my catalogue in the best way that we could have put it together,” Rihanna said.

Rihanna and her backup dancers performed on platforms suspended over the stadium field. (Brynn Anderson/The Associated Press)

First performance in years

The performer has mostly pivoted to managing her cosmetics and beauty brand FENTY in recent years, but has slowly dipped her toes back into music in recent months.

She released a new song for the first time in six years for the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever soundtrack, but hasn’t had a new album since 2016’s ANTI.

The performer has mostly pivoted to managing her cosmetics and beauty brand FENTY in recent years. (Matt Slocum/The Associated Press)

The Grammy award-winning singer declined to perform at the event in 2019 out of solidarity with Colin Kaepernick, the embattled quarterback who famously kneeled during the national anthem to protest racism.

She has said that the timing and circumstances were right for her to participate this time around.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jenna Benchetrit is a web journalist for CBC News. Based in Toronto and born in Montreal, she holds a master’s degree in journalism from Ryerson University. Reach her at jenna.benchetrit@cbc.ca or on Twitter @jennabenchetrit.

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