Quick started off the last leg of her long-running Times Visit with the first of nine shows in Canada, at Toronto’s Rogers Place.
The fervor started on the plane: about six young ladies and young ladies trading notes on outfits (“You’re not kidding?” “I’m doing Midnights!” “I’m going as Miss History of the U.S”), making and exchanging kinship arm bands and, surprisingly, a couple made a beeline for the country without tickets, expecting a day-of marvel. It went on at the bars and cafés the prior night and the day of, with themed mixed drinks flying and each discussion encompassing, in some style, the greatest occasion that has raised a ruckus around town in years.
Also, when Taylor Quick made that big appearance in Toronto on Thursday night (Nov. 14) for the first of six shows, flagging the beginning of the Canadian last leg of her long-running and record-breaking Periods Visit, it had arrived at an excited pitch, the principal notes of show opener “Miss History of the U.S and the Shock Ruler” almost overwhelmed by the shouts of the individuals who had stood by so lengthy to see a show that might very well at no point ever returned around in the future.
“Here in 2024 we have taken Periods Visit everywhere,” Quick expressed from the get-go in the show. “We went to Asia, we went to Australia, we burned the entire summer in Europe, swung back through America, and afterward we thought, ‘Guess what? On the off chance that we will wrap the Periods Visit up’ — which we are, in nine shows — ‘I was thinking, I need to enjoy those last shows with the most liberal, empowering, energetic, sensitive fans.’ So we came to see you, Toronto.”
Before the show, the regions around the scene were pressed loaded with individuals, either arranged to get in the second the entryways opened or flooding into the bars and eateries inside the nearest area to the setting. However, when she hit the stage, apparently the entire city had fit into the Rogers Place to observe the scene. Here are the eight greatest minutes from Taylor Quick’s first of six evenings in Toronto, with just eight of the 149 Times Visit shows to pursue this.