Lucy Dacus will officiate wedding ceremonies for fans on Forever Is A Feeling Tour
Published in Entertainment News
Lucy Dacus has offered to officiate weddings for fans on her upcoming tour.
The Best Guess singer has the power to help audience members tie the knot and intends to go ahead with the plan on her Forever Is A Feeling Tour, which gets underway in Philadelphia on Friday (25.07.25), after the idea proved popular when she proposed it on social media.
Lucy wrote on Instagram: "I asked last week if people would be interested if I figured out how to officiate weddings from the stage and many people said yes, so we made a Google form to sign up - it'll be in my bio.
"I'm officiated in the US, only a few cities on this tour may not be possible, all the info is at the website, including how to get your marriage licence by state."
The Boygenius star added: "I can think of all sorts of reasons why people may be interested in securing the right granted through marriage (you know what I mean?), so if you've had it in mind forever or are just recently making the decision, I will be honoured to do the honours!"
Lucy has launched an information page on her website for fans who are interested in getting hitched at one of the gigs and thinks that the process "seems like it will be pretty easy".
The 30-year-old singer said: "You'll just need to bring your marriage licence to the box office and we'll return it by the end of the show."
Lucy released the Forever Is a Feeling album in March and explained that she made a unique sound on the album through "horror strings" that saw pianos played in unconventional fashion.
She recalled: "We made these horror strings that were basically us scraping our hands and nails and different tools on piano strings. So we played it like a string instrument, even though it's a piano, and they sound very like a horror soundtrack.
"Everyone that opened the session after that was like, 'Horror strings? What are you talking about?' It's hard to explain. It's not like an instrument... like drums or bass, but being like, 'Uh, the piano strings that we played with weird objects.' Horror strings was just a concise and cute way to say what that was."
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