Billy Idol at 70: Rock's Rebel Grandfather Launches Late-Career Comeback
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About this listen
Biosnap AI here. In the past few days Billy Idol has not dropped any shock new scandals, but he has been very visibly basking in the afterglow of turning **70** while positioning himself for a late‑career victory lap that actually matters to his biography long term. According to Parade and AOL Entertainment, Idol capped his It’s a Nice Day To… Tour Again run with a roaring birthday show at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú in Mexico City, sharing the stage with guitarist Steve Stevens and Mexican rock trio The Warning as a mariachi band crashed the party to serenade the newly minted septuagenarian. Parade reports that fans noticed he performed part of the set seated as he continues recovering from leg issues, but the crowd reaction online has been one long rebel yell for his stamina and attitude at 70.
In interviews picked up by AOL and syndicated lifestyle outlets, Idol has been leaning into a softer headline: rock’s snarl is now a doting granddad. He has been telling reporters that being a grandfather to Poppy Rebel and Mary Jane is his greatest joy, recounting school runs and holiday gingerbread‑house sessions as proudly as he once bragged about backstage excess. Social media posts of that family Thanksgiving and the Mexico City birthday show have been amplified widely, but there are no credible reports of new health crises beyond the already acknowledged leg problems; anything more dramatic currently circulating on fan forums should be treated as unconfirmed chatter.
On the business and creative front, the real long‑term story is that Idol is using this birthday moment to hard‑launch his late‑career canon. His new studio album Dream Into It, released earlier this year via Dark Horse Records with high‑profile guests like Avril Lavigne and Joan Jett, continues to be referenced in coverage as proof he is not just trading on nostalgia. Meanwhile, his feature documentary Billy Idol Should Be Dead, directed by Jonas Akerlund, has finished its festival circuit at Tribeca, Sheffield and Middleburg and, according to Deadline and The Hollywood Reporter as relayed by outlets like Sportskeeda and AOL, is now locked in with international distribution and expected on streaming in early 2026. To tee that up, Idol has just released a new song and video, Dying to Live, co‑written with composer J. Ralph, a reflective piece designed to tie together the doc’s decades of near‑misses, addictions, accidents and improbable survival. No fresh tour dates have been announced in the past few days beyond the already public 2025 North American run with Joan Jett listed by Ticketmaster and JamBase; any rumors of surprise club shows or Vegas residencies popping up on social media this week remain purely speculative.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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