Madonna gave her fans the scare of her life last weekend when she had to be rushed to hospital after being found unconscious by her team. After being diagnosed with a “bacterial infection”, the 64-year-old singer was forced to stay in the intensive care unit and be resuscitated with Narcan, used by doctors in case of a possible overdose, and which served to stop a septic shock that he was suffering.
Fortunately, an early diagnosis and treatment were effective, and the singer was discharged shortly after, moving to her home in New York, where she is in the process of recovery after being forced to cancel all her professional commitments. “Her health is improving, but she is still under medical care. She is expected to make a full recovery,” her representative, Guy Oseary, reported.
There she could be seen at the beginning of July walking with a friend on the street, barely a week after the dramatic episode of health, and visibly recovered. A piece of news that her followers celebrated, who verified not only how the singer walked with complete ease, but also that her appearance was much healthier than in previous weeks.
Now it has been the artist herself who wanted to send a message to her followers and give the latest news about her recovery. She has not done it in any way, but she has shared a video on the public profile of Instagram of her doing one of the things that she is most passionate about: dancing.
A good sign of her recovery, with the singer being the visible example of her progress. “Being able to move my body and dance even just a little makes me feel like the luckiest star in the world,” confessed the artist, who also took the opportunity to thank her followers and friends for all the good wishes from she.
A dance that also celebrated an important anniversary: ??the 40th birthday of their first studio album, which was released on July 27, 1983 and which came after the super-success of their first single, Everybody. An album that at first many critics belittled, despite its obvious success among the public, questioning and belittling the impact and scope that the then unknown Madonna -already with her iconic short platinum blonde hair and that Betty Boop-esque air- would achieve in the music industry.
An album with already well-known songs, such as Burning Up, Holiday or Lucky Star, and which ended up becoming one of the best works of that year with more than 15 million copies sold, and which would serve as the starting signal for the unstoppable artist career.