 Madonna hoped to 'turn the world into one big dancefloor' |
Madonna's Confessions tour has become the highest-earning show by a female artist, says US magazine Billboard. Figures are yet to be finalised, but tour manager Arthur Fogel claims 1.2 million people attended 60 shows, making $193.7m (�102.3m).
The four-month tour, which began in LA in May, ends in Tokyo on Thursday.
The previous record was set by Cher's Farewell tour. The three-year tour, which ran between 2002 and 2005, made $192.5m (�101.6m) across 273 shows.
Ticket sales
The Confessions on a Dancefloor tour, named after Madonna's number one album, included shows across major US cities, Canada, Europe and Japan.
Rapid ticket sales prompted the 48-year-old star to add extra dates in several cities, including five additional dates at London's Wembley Arena, where tickets cost between �80 and �160.
Despite criticism over a controversial mock crucifixion featured in the stage show, and threats of prosecution, the tour has proved Madonna's most financially successful to date.
The Material Girl's last tour, Re-Invention, in 2004, saw her play 56 shows worldwide, making $125m (�71m), according to Billboard magazine.
The 2001 Drowned World tour reportedly earned $75m (�39.5m).
Billboard claim the singer has earned $400m (�211.2m) in tour ticket sales over six years.