Ecstatic Beyoncé fans sang and danced in feverish excitement in Stockholm on Wednesday night as the superstar kicked off her first solo tour in seven years with a futuristic spectacle featuring a lunar rover, an airborne horse and wall-to-wall rhinestones.
Hours before the doors opened, hundreds of people were thronging outside the stadium, including some who had travelled halfway around the world to catch the show, anxious to see the global music icon.
Once the concert was about to begin, the tens of thousands of fans in the 60,000-capacity Friends Arena - filled to the brim - erupted in cheers as their "queen" emerged on stage.

"Just want to say: Y'all make me so happy," Beyoncé said as the concert began.
"I see familiar faces, people that flew from very, very far to come see the first show tonight," she told the audience at the outset of the three-hour space and science fiction-themed show.
The show features Beyoncé performing atop a lunar vehicle, playing the role of a news anchor while dressed as a queen bee and suspended above the crowd as she sits on a model horse completely covered in sparkling rhinestones.
"There was a lot of anticipation for what she was going to do, and yes, I'm speechless. It was just incredible," Shane Barkey, a 31-year-old radio host from Ireland's Midlands 103, told AFP.

"This was another level. Amazing, I can't wait for the rest of the tour," Abdul Ibraimoh, a 33-year-old artist manager from London, said after the show.
Many of the fans in Stockholm sported cowboy hats and rhinestones, mimicking the look of the performer's outfit in the ads announcing the 57-stop European and North American tour.
Julie Vargas, who flew in from Houston, Texas - Beyoncé's hometown - confessed to having a "shrine" dedicated to the star at home.
"I don't want any spoilers, I wanted to be the first to see it and take the news back to H-town baby!" the 38-year-old surgical technologist said as she waited in line in the early afternoon.

The Renaissance World Tour, announced in February after being teased last autumn, is the star's first solo tour since 2016.
Tickets sold out so quickly for the opening show that tour organisers added a second concert at the same venue for Thursday.
From there, Beyoncé goes to Brussels this weekend.
The tour, which continues until September, is expected to earn Beyoncé nearly $2.1 billion, according to business magazine Forbes.

"We love Beyoncé, she's the queen, that's why we are here of course," 36-year-old artist Kasher Bloom from Riga told AFP.
"Beyoncé is the queen! Our mother, everything! I would do anything for her," said Jarra Jatta, a 21-year-old fan from Helsingborg in southern Sweden.
In February, Beyoncé made history by becoming the most successful artist in the history of the Grammys, surpassing the late classical conductor Georg Solti's long-standing record of 31 lifetime trophies.
But despite winning another four Grammys, fans were disappointed that she missed out on the award for Album of the Year for her seventh studio album, the house-tinged Renaissance. The 16-song 2022 album was an instant hit and earned wide praise for its deep ambition.

Source: AFP