The following is a list of concert tours given by The Cheetah Girls.
Concert Tour Name: | Cheetah-licious Christmas Tour |
Artist: | The Cheetah Girls |
Album: | Cheetah-licious Christmas |
Number Of Shows: | 17 |
This Tour: | Cheetah-licious Christmas Tour (2005–06) |
Next Tour: | The Party's Just Begun Tour (2006–07) |
In late 2005, The Cheetah Girls went on tour to support their Christmas album, Cheetah-licious Christmas. Aly & AJ went along with them, as the opening act, to support their own album Into the Rush. The Jonas Brothers also performed as surprise guests for a total of 10 shows of the tour, promoting their debut album It's About Time. The holiday theme of the concert included giant presents (in which the Cheetah Girls performed in), winter clothes, and even a tropical theme for their song "Christmas in California", which included surf boards with the girls' names on them. The Cheetah Girls also sang songs from the first Cheetah Girls movie soundtrack, the cover of "I Won't Say (I'm in Love)" (from DisneyMania 3), and their version of "Shake a Tail Feather" (from the Chicken Little soundtrack).[1]
Date | City (All U.S.) | Venue |
---|---|---|
December 6, 2005 | Newark | Prudential Hall |
December 7, 2005 | Landmark Theatre | |
December 9, 2005 | Albany | Palace Theatre |
December 10, 2005 | Providence | Providence Performing Arts Center |
December 11, 2005 | Reading | Sovereign Performing Arts Center |
December 13, 2005 | Boston | Orpheum Theatre |
December 14, 2005 | Philadelphia | Verizon Hall |
December 15, 2005 | Wallingford | Chevrolet Theatre |
December 17, 2005 | New York City | Nokia Theatre Times Square |
December 18, 2005 | Prism Theatre | |
December 19, 2005 | Greensboro | War Memorial Auditorium |
December 20, 2005 | Duluth | Arena at Gwinnett Center |
December 22, 2005 | Houston | Jones Hall for the Performing Arts |
December 23, 2005 | Grand Prairie | Nokia Live at Grand Prairie |
December 27, 2005 | Los Angeles | Gibson Amphitheatre |
December 28, 2005 | San Francisco | Nob Hill Masonic Center |
See main article: The Party's Just Begun Tour.
Concert Tour Name: | One World Tour |
Artist: | The Cheetah Girls |
Album: | The Cheetah Girls: One World |
Number Of Legs: | 1 |
Number Of Shows: | 46 |
Last Tour: | The Party's Just Begun Tour (2006–07) |
This Tour: | One World Tour (2008) |
The One World Tour is the final concert tour by the American group, The Cheetah Girls. It supports the soundtrack to their third film, The Cheetah Girls: One World. The tour played over 40 concerts in the United States and Canada. At most shows, the stage was placed in the middle of the floor, which created a theater-like environment.
The tour was announced on August 12, 2008, ten days before the premiere of their final film, . The tour was originally set to begin in Austin, Texas, but a rehearsal show was added in Corpus Christi, Texas.[3] The concert benefited the Corpus Christi Independent School District. Midway through the tour, it was plagued with controversy as band member Adrienne Bailon had explicit photos leaked online.[4] Bailon stated that the photos were stolen from her laptop, at the JFK Airport. Backlash ensued with a few tour dates being cancelled, including a performance at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade.[5] American publication Us Weekly later reported the act was a publicity stunt to break Bailon from the typical Disney star image.[6]
< | --Date--> | < | --Location--> | < | --Venue--> | < | --Reason/Additional Info--> |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 14, 2008 | Memphis | FedExForum | Cancelled[9] | ||||
October 22, 2008 | Houston | Toyota Center | Cancelled | ||||
October 29, 2008 | Charlotte | Time Warner Cable Arena | Cancelled | ||||
November 25, 2008 | Rochester | Blue Cross Arena | Cancelled | ||||
November 30, 2008 | Indianapolis | Conseco Fieldhouse | Cancelled | ||||
Venue | City | Tickets sold / available< | --The stage was placed in the middle of most venues, creating a theater-like environment--> | Gross revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Frank Erwin Center | Austin | 3,549 / 4,660 (76%) | $157,715[10] | |
The Cajundome | Lafayette | 5,674 / 8,503 (67%) | $250,401[11] | |
CenturyTel Center | Bossier City | 3,311 / 4,771 (69%) | $147,184[12] | |
Mississippi Coast Coliseum | Biloxi | 6,891 / 7,473 (92%) | $305,918[13] | |
Sommet Center | Nashville | 3,825 / 5,326 (72%) | $169,373 | |
BancorpSouth Center | Tupelo | 4,432 / 8,283 (53%) | $192,750[14] | |
Alltel Arena | North Little Rock | 4,955 / 6,116 (81%) | $218,333 | |
American Airlines Center | Dallas | 5,253 / 6,500 (81%) | $233,835[15] | |
AT&T Center | San Antonio | 3,250 / 4,837 (67%) | $146,636[16] | |
Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena | Jacksonville | 4,330 / 5,449 (79%) | $193,505[17] | |
American Airlines Arena | Miami | 8,742 / 11,117 (79%) | $380,918[18] | |
Amway Arena | Orlando | 5,134 / 6,931 (74%) | $232,124 | |
BI-LO Center | Greenville | 3,302 / 4,289 (77%) | $313,956[19] | |
Arena at Gwinnett Center | Duluth | 5,071 / 6,376 (79%) | $222,880 | |
Thompson–Boling Arena | Knoxville | 3,823 / 7,524 (51%) | $166,005 | |
Greensboro Coliseum | Greensboro | 3,751 / 5,414 (69%) | $166,909[20] | |
1st Mariner Arena | Baltimore | 3,666 / 6,545 (56%) | $162,544[21] | |
Richmond Coliseum | Richmond | 3,071 / 5,880 (52%) | $137,089 | |
Boardwalk Hall | Atlantic City | 5,700 / 6,417 (89%) | $254,427 | |
Verizon Center | Washington, D.C. | 7,902 / 8,493 (93%) | $348,580 | |
Spectrum Theater | Philadelphia | 3,805 / 4,739 (80%) | $169,415[22] | |
Prudential Center | Newark | 7,343 / 8,825 (83%) | $328,706 | |
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum | Uniondale | 9,350 / 10,966 (85%) | $394,098 | |
Verizon Wireless Arena | Manchester | 4,873 / 6,977 (70%) | $217,397 | |
XL Center | Hartford | 3,722 / 5,604 (66%) | $167,734 | |
Theatre at Air Canada Centre | Toronto | 6,226 / 7,219 (86%) | $237,207 | |
Wolstein Center | Cleveland | 3,815 / 4,186 (91%) | $168,630 | |
U.S. Bank Arena | Cincinnati | 2,625 / 3,818 (69%) | $116,765 | |
Petersen Events Center | Pittsburgh | 2,642 / 3,406 (78%) | $119,248 | |
Nationwide Arena | Columbus | 3,343 / 5,329 (63%) | $146,091 | |
Rupp Arena | Lexington | 4,832 / 6,206 (78%) | $214,822 | |
The Palace of Auburn Hills | Auburn Hills | 4,475 / 4,788 (93%) | $201,138 | |
United Center | Chicago | 6,439 / 7,177 (90%) | $286,554 | |
U.S. Cellular Arena | Milwaukee | 3,179 / 5,776 (55%) | $142,241 | |
iWireless Center | Moline | 4,264 / 7,627 (56%) | $187,923 | |
Scottrade Center | St. Louis | 3,300 / 5,197 (63%) | $144,290 | |
Sprint Center | Kansas City | 4,371 / 6,603 (66%) | $176,966 | |
Target Center | Minneapolis | 3,213 / 4,447 (72%) | $142,502 | |
Qwest Center | Omaha | 5,104 / 5,907 (86%) | $228,475 | |
Oracle Arena | Oakland | 5,355 / 6,232 (86%) | $241,182 | |
Jobing.com Arena | Glendale | 3,656 / 4,777 (77%) | $162,340 | |
Honda Center | Anaheim | 6,089 / 9,247 (66%) | $273,467 | |
San Diego Sports Arena | San Diego | 4,063 / 5,385 (75%) | $180,357 | |
TOTAL | 196,042 / 271,342 (72%) | $9,048,630 | ||