"Entertainment Tonight" was in Las Vegas yesterday (August 31) to do a new interview with Shania.
Stacey Gualandi @staceygualandi Entertainment Tonight producer
đLet's Go Girls!đ¤ I feel like a (lucky) woman getting to work with these two beauties today! Don't miss @shaniatwain and @cassiedilaura coming soon to @entertainmenttonight. Find out what's up next for the Queen of Sin City after she says goodbye to her "Let's Go!" Las Vegas Residency September 10th @zappostheater @phvegas (Happy belated birthday Shania!!!!) đ đ đ Next time I'll remove the neck mask. 𤌠#shaniatwain #et #interview #shania #entertainmenttonight #exclusive #letsgo #wakingupdreaming #lasvegas #zappostheater #notjustagirl #planethollywood
And don't forget, the Come on Over Diamond Edition.
I bet the show will air right after the end of Vegas.
Lots of things will happen from mid-September on. Can't wait.
A fan sent a message to Cassie DiLaura (the reporter who interviewed Shania) and asked when the interview will air on "Entertainment Tonight". Cassie said it will air Friday, September 23. Supposedly she asked Shania about the new album. Could Shania be announcing the album and releasing the lead single that day??? Why is the interview being aired on a FRIDAY? Hmmm?
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Tommy's #1 SHANIA TWAIN SuperSite shaniasupersite.com Our eyes are closed, but we're not asleep, We're wide awake beneath the sheets
It seems a bit early to have a single if the album is dropping in winter of 2023, no? Plus we've not heard anything about the Come On Over 25th anniversary celebration. Would it be wise to have both going at the same time?
Shania Twain on How Music Got Her Through Her Darkest Times and a Possible Duet With Harry Styles (Exclusive)
By Paige Gawleyâ | Entertainment Tonight | September 23, 2022
Shania Twain is all for doing a duet with Harry Styles. ET's Cassie DiLaura is with the iconic country star in Las Vegas, and Twain shares that she's definitely down to put out a song with the One Direction alum after her surprise appearance during his Coachella set earlier this year.
"We just have to ask. I have never asked him so. I just have to officially ask Harry," she tells ET, adding that she does "expect him to say yes" when she floats the idea.
While fans may have to wait a bit for a Styles/Twain duet to become a reality, the latter singer is holding them with her new single, "Waking Up Dreaming," which is out now.
"This particular song is just so fun. Iâm a real day dreamer and this is how the idea came up," she says. "... When youâre asleep and you wake up and you go, 'Oh, I just wanna go back to sleep, so I can enter that dream again and maybe change the ending,' [and] youâre just enjoying that dreaming. I enjoy day dreaming. I enjoy getting lost in my dreams and escaping in them, day or night."
As for her album, which is still in the works, Twain says she "had so much fun making" it.Â
"I did more collaborating than Iâve ever done before in my career with the songwriting, so Iâve enjoyed sharing that space with other creatives," she adds.
That fact makes her excited to get on the road and tour her new material.
"When I think about a new tour coming up and I think about getting up there... I want the new music to slide in amongst the classics without skipping a beat, literally, and keep the momentum going," Twain says. "Thatâs what the new music on this album is like."
Amid all the ups and downs of her personal life Twain tells ET that "music healing me... has come right from the very beginning of my childhood."
"When I needed to escape, thereâs no dinner in the house, I'm hungry, I got to [put] mind over matter, grab my guitar, go out in a bush and just write music until it's time for bed. If there was violence in the house, [it was the] same thing," she recalls. "Head out somewhere where I could be alone and not hear it and just get locked into my creative self and just disappear. Music was that escape."
Many of her tumultuous times are shown in her Netflix documentary, Not Just a Girl, a project that was years in the making.
"It took a lot of thought and a lot of time... I wanted to share things that people probably wouldnât know about me that would make it interesting. Getting a hold of a lot of the archival photos and videos was difficult," she says. "... There was a lot of contemplation too about what to share and what not to share. I think with more time I became more and more comfortable sharing my most personal elements, as far as a music documentary goes."
As her personal life influences much of her music, everything from her poverty during childhood, her parents' deaths, her health struggles, and her 2010 divorce from Robert "Mutt" Lange was included in the doc.
"Anywhere where there was a personal crisis that created a shift in my career was included as part of that explanation," she shares. "The obvious ones being, first of all, the poverty in my life, which was really a huge part of my musical development and how that developed in my life, and also being very isolated with that... The death of my parents, which was a crossroads of, 'Do I quit altogether, get a real job, then be able to feed the kids and survive?'"
"The next one was losing my voice through... getting a divorce," Twain adds. "... They were sort of happening simultaneously, both very devastating, obviously, to my career, both directly affecting my career and the changes and the directions it would take."
One of those directions led Twain straight to Las Vegas, where she put on Letâs Go! The Las Vegas Residency on-and-off at Zappos Theater at Planet Hollywood Resort and Casino since 2019. She played her final show of the residency earlier this month.
"I do feel like I have a lot of mixed feelings about it. I will miss it," Twain tells ET of her Vegas show. "All I can do is plan to come back and make it part of my life again, but thereâs a lot going on."
Miranda Lambert is stepping into Twain's shoes for her own residency, Velvet Rodeo The Las Vegas Residency, which will kick off later this month.
"Put your boots on and come out here to kick some a**. Have fun. It's a very fun room and Las Vegas is really great," Twain advises Lambert. "Even when you donât have a show, there's always other artists to connect [with], and sports games going on. Iâm never bored here, so I canât imagine you'll ever be bored here, Miranda."
As for what she has learned throughout her storied career and wants to pass on to the next generation, Twain tells ET, "You have to roll with what is inevitably going to be a lot of punches."
"I think you have to expect the punches. I think you have to expect the falls," she says. "... Donât let it harden you, donât get tainted by it, stay happy with it, stay loving it."