NEW YORK — ''The Eras Tour was a lifetime within my life,'' Taylor Swift told the room at a screening of the first two episodes of her new Disney+ docuseries, ''The End of an Era.'' ''It feels insane.''
Swift spoke to the small New York crowd on Tuesday — a year and one day since she concluded the history-making Eras Tour. In the room were her parents Scott and Andrea Swift and brother Austin, a select few members of the press (including Hoda Kotb, Willie Geist and Gayle King), as well as her tour dancers, the choreographer Mandy Moore, docuseries directors Don Argott and Sheena M. Joyce and a few others. The showing was briefly interrupted by security alarms as a small fire was extinguished elsewhere in the building,
''The directors expanded upon the stories of not just me, but everyone who was part of this,'' Swift said, before taking her seat in the crowd.
Here are key takeaways from the first two episodes of the six-episode docuseries, which launches Friday on Disney+. Two episodes will drop weekly, through Dec. 26.
The origin of the Eras Tour
The premiere episode opens in Vancouver, Canada, 15 minutes before the tour's final date. Swift, standing in a circle with her dancers, delivers an impassioned speech, reminding them the Eras Tour wasn't about pieces simply falling into place. ''You put the pieces where they are,'' she tells them. It sets the tone for what follows: ''The End of an Era'' is the only behind-the-scenes look at her tour and what drove it.
Early on, Swift states that there were two distinct catalysts for the Eras Tour. One was having her back catalog sold out from underneath her, inspiring the rerecording project that showed her the value of ''celebrating your past.'' The other was the pandemic, which heightened the desire for a return to live events.
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