Patti LaBelle didnât envision a six-decade career when she entered the music business at 14 years old. But 67 years later, she doesnât take it for granted, acknowledging the fragility of life.
âI think of my sisters who all passed before they turned 50, and so I thought that I would be one who also would ⌠leave at a certain age,â reflected the 81-year-old entertainment icon. âWhen I turned 70, I said, âIâm still doing it.ââ
A regal celebration would be fitting for a singular act of her eminence, but to the delight of adoring subjects, there’s even more fanfare to bestow. âThe Queens: 4 Legends. 1 Stage.â tour features LaBelle with fellow music legends Chaka Khan, Stephanie Mills and Gladys Knight, 81. The second leg of their royal concert processional kicks off Friday in Greensboro , North Carolina.
âTheyâre coming to the four of us and loving what they see because weâve not stopped. Weâre phenomenally into what we do. Thereâs no pretending,â said LaBelle, the âLady Marmaladeâ and âIf Only You Knewâ singer-actor, noting a tour with a collection of this much prestige is unprecedented. âTo come back with the Queenâs tour, itâs just beautiful.â
Raising generations
The first leg of the tour â produced by Black Promoters Collective â ran from May through June. Arenas were treated to megahits like Khanâs âIâm Every Womanâ and âSweet Thing,â Knightâs âMidnight Train to Georgiaâ and âNeither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye),â Millsâ âHomeâ and âNever Knew Love Like This Before,â as well as LaBelleâs âThe Right Kinda Loverâ and âYou Are My Friend.â
A rotating stage transitions each 45-minute set into the next performance, introducing each artist to their wide cross-section of concertgoers, which often includes multiple generations: parents, grandparents and even great-grandparents. Individually, the impact of Khan, Knight, LaBelle and Mills within the music industry and pop culture canât be quantified, with fans and critics praising them for never abandoning soul music or their Black audience.
âI hear it all the time. You know, âI was weaned on you,â from mother to grandmother on down. Itâs lovely to hear,â Khan, 72, told The Associated Press in a joint interview with LaBelle and Mills. âIâm sure I canât grasp the feeling that theyâre feeling, but I get it â I think. And I think itâs pretty special.â
Ain’t No Stopping Us Now
At 17 years old, Mills originated the role of Dorothy in âThe Wiz,â which debuted on Broadway 50 years ago. Now, 68, the Grammy winner affectionally known as âthe babyâ by her co-headliners, says thereâs no need to slow down.
âItâs in the blood. What would we do? Sit at home and not do anything?â said Mills, who hopes for another Broadway stint in the near future. âI was 11 my first Broadway show. So, Iâve been in the business my entire life.â
Musical Monarchs
Despite the accolades amassed by each artist â Khan and Knight are both in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame â the rarity of assembling a tour with iconic legacy artists with long careers is not lost on them. But what Khan, the âAinât Nobodyâ and âThrough the Fireâ singer, is most proud of is far more poignant.
âStaying alive,â said Khan, who’s lived a colorful public life, and has not shied away from discussing her past substance abuse issues in various interviews in the past. âI probably took it for granted at some point in my life.â
Khan’s story will be brought to the stage in the âIâm Every Womanâ production premiering in Londonâs West End in early 2026. Khan, who’s also been in the studio with Sia, has said she’s prepping an album featuring unreleased music she recorded with Prince and Sly and the Family Stone bassist Larry Graham.
âThe Queens: 4 Legends. 1 Stage.â tour is scheduled to wrap Oct. 5 in Cleveland. LaBelle, whoâs preparing to launch a new syrup in her popular food line, says she recognizes the blessing of still being able to get on stage and perform.
âMy favorite part is just being able to still do it at my age,â she said. âMost people hide their age when they turn 50 ⌠itâs a blessing, itâs a graduation. And like I said, at this age, donât be afraid to do anything ⌠you canât stop living.â

