Shania Twain, 59, made a joke about maybe having to be hauled “off the stage” because of her stage fright as she got ready to host the People’s Choice Country Awards on Thursday.
“I’m not the best reader,” the man admitted. The singer said to Taste of Country this week, “I Feel Like a Woman!” “I’m a very spontaneous speaker and thinker, so if I get rambling, they might have to take the hook out and get me off the stage.”
Having performed since she was around eight years old, Twain claimed that she had struggled with stage fright her whole career.
The “You’re Still the One” singer admitted to having severe stage fear to CTV in Canada in it.
Therefore, I believe that the only way I could handle it would be to simply stop doing what I was doing and embrace the idea that “We’re all in this together” in order to avoid feeling alone.
Getting on stage, in her words at the time, is “not a step, it’s a leap.” It’s a leap. It’s true that Pavaratti would say, “OK, everybody, it’s time to die,” right before coming on stage every night because it truly feels like a leap and you’re crossing a terrifying threshold. Every night, the unknown is present. That is the nature of life. It’s really unclear. Unexpected things happen, even though I hate to admit it.