Last week, Adele kicked off her long-awaited Las Vegas residency at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace, performing to an audience of 4,000 fans. But most recently, the "Easy On Me" singer had a fangirl moment of her own after finding out Shania Twain attended one of her concerts.
On Nov. 27, Adele took to her Instagram Story and shared a candid photo of herself performing with the country star watching her from the crowd, wearing a wide-brimmed cowboy hat.
"Thank god you had a hat on… I would have self combusted had I seen it was you," Adele, 34, captioned the snap. "I adore you, I can't believe you came to my show."
In response, Shania re-shared the Story and wrote, "Thank god we didn't make eye contact, all I can think of is the reaction of all those fans to @adele combusting halfway through the show," along with a laughing emoji.
Adele's residency was originally scheduled to debut back in January; however, one day before her curtain call, the "Easy On Me" singer announced that the "show ain't ready" in an emotional Instagram video.
"We've tried absolutely everything that we can to pull it together in time and for it to be good enough for you, but we've been absolutely destroyed by delivery delays and COVID," she explained. "It's been impossible to finish the show. I'm gutted and I'm sorry it's so last minute."
Months later, the Grammy winner called the experience "worst moment in my career, by far," but stuck by her decision to postpone for the integrity of the show.
"The stage setup wasn't right," Adele admitted to Elle in August. "It was very disconnected from me and my band, and it lacked intimacy. And maybe I tried too hard to give it those things in such a controlled environment."
Adele's residency finally kicked off Nov. 18, with her 10-year-old son Angelo—who shares with ex husband Simon Konecki—and her boyfriend, sports agent Rich Paul, in the audience. During the show, she subtly addressed the shows' postponement and thanked her fans for their patience.
"Thank you so much for coming back to me," she told the audience, according to The Guardian. "It looks just like I imagined it would."