Leann Rimes Cancelled Performances: 2 Blue Tour Dates Rescheduled
Leann Rimes cancelled performances on her 30 Years of Blue Tour after a severe illness left her unable to travel and perform that week. The two affected Washington stops were pushed back rather than dropped, with new dates set within weeks.
Spokane and Seattle shifts
Rimes said on April 29 that the upcoming shows in Spokane and Seattle would be rescheduled, writing, “I am unable to travel & perform this week.” She added, “I’m so sorry to share that the upcoming shows in Spokane and Seattle will be rescheduled. Also, good news as we will be seeing you very soon!”
The Spokane concert moved to May 31, and the Seattle concert moved to June 2. For ticket holders, that turns a short-notice cancellation into a brief delay, not a lost stop, which is the cleaner outcome for a touring act trying to keep the route intact.
April 28 from bed
Rimes wrote on April 28 that she did not know exactly what she had and that it was brutal. She also said, “Haven't left the bed.” A photo she shared showed her under the covers with three boxes of tissues nearby, the clearest sign yet that this was more than routine fatigue.
That admission came after she described herself as “truly heartbroken” over the reschedule and thanked fans for their kindness and continued support as she recovered. It also gave a sharper picture of the tradeoff at work here: she is protecting two dates on the calendar, but only by stepping off the road long enough to get well.
April 23 at home
On April 23, the 43-year-old singer said she and Eddie Cibrian had stepped away for 3 days amid “very tense, heart wrenching things happening at home with family.” She later said their 15th anniversary included “tears and worry,” along with “moments of laughter and deep gratitude for this love of ours.”
For fans holding Spokane and Seattle tickets, the practical read is simple: the tour is still moving, just on a revised schedule. Rimes has already put the two Washington dates back on the books, and the next question is less about whether the shows return than whether she has enough time to recover before she gets back onstage.