Madonna says she and 'many other artists' in her Madame X show were very sick. Photo / Joseph Okpako, WireImage
Pop superstar Madonna has revealed she has recovered from the coronavirus which forced her to pull out of a string of concerts in Paris in February and March.
The 61-year-old pop icon said she had tested positive for antibodies which may mean she had Covid-19 — though at the time she said she didn't realise she had it.
"I am not currently sick," she told her 15 million followers on Instagram. "When you test positive for antibodies it means you had the virus, which I clearly did as I was sick at the end of my tour in Paris over seven weeks ago along with many other artists in my show," she said.
Madonna only played a single night in Paris on February 22 before calling off the next show, citing "ongoing injuries".
She later called off two further Paris concerts — the last in her Madame X world tour — after French authorities banned large gatherings in a bid to stem the spread of the virus in early March.
"At the time we all thought we had a bad flu," Madonna wrote in her post. "Thank God we are all healthy and well now."
The Paris dates on Madonna's tour seem to have been cursed. Her opening night concert didn't start until after midnight, three and a half hours' late.
Her Madame X tour was beset by issues. Aside from the star's propensity to start late, she also cancelled a string of dates because of persistent knee and hip injuries, and did not reschedule shows, leaving many fans disappointed.
Scientists are sceptical about the accuracy of many antibody tests which claim to show a person has had the virus.
Some warned even tests that meet the US government's informal standards might produce false positives.
The singer revealed she had the virus after sharing an article about her donating US$1.1 million (NZ$1.8m) towards research to find a vaccine for the coronavirus.
Madonna was among 200 artists and scientists who signed an open letter on Wednesday calling for radical change across the world rather than "a return to normal" after the coronavirus lockdowns.
Alongside Hollywood stars Cate Blanchett, Jane Fonda and Marion Cotillard and a clutch of Nobel Prize winners, she pleaded for an end to unbridled consumerism and a "radical transformation" of economies to help save the planet.
"The ongoing ecological catastrophe is a meta-crisis," the open letter said. "Unlike a pandemic … a global ecological collapse will have immeasurable consequences," it added.
Madonna made a large donation to a fund organised by the EU to find a vaccine for Covid-19, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen revealed last week.