Fans camp out overnight ahead of Ed Sheeran gigs

Alice Cunningham & Cameron Noble
BBC News, Suffolk
Reporting fromPortman Road, Ipswich
Cameron Noble/BBC Three Ed Sheeran fans outside Portman Road. They are standing next to each other and each wearing a pink Ipswich Town football shirt. They are smiling and looking into the camera.Cameron Noble/BBC
Fans including Morgan Summersgill (centre) have come from far and wide to see his Portman Road gigs in Ipswich this weekend

Fans from across the world have travelled to Ipswich to watch global superstar Ed Sheeran return "home" to Portman Road stadium. With 90,000 fans expected across the next three nights, fans from the US, Germany and closer to home have descended upon the town to welcome the star back to Suffolk.

Visiting that castle

Alice Cunningham/BBC Reuben Librack and Senumi Tebuwna smile at the camera while sitting in a queue outside Portman Road. Reuben has dark curly hair and Senumi has long dark hair. Alice Cunningham/BBC
Reuben Librack and Senumi Tebuwna said they had been looking forward to the show for several months

Senumi Tebuwna and Reuben Librack, both 21, travelled from Brighton for the first sold-out show and visited the Suffolk town of Framlingham where Sheeran grew up, about 15 miles north of Ipswich, whose medieval castle he wrote a song about.

"Yesterday we went to Framlingham Castle because that is where he [Sheeran] filmed Castle on the Hill, so we did the whole tour," Ms Tebuwna said.

"We've been looking forward to this for two months."

Mr Librack added: "I saw Myles Smith was playing as well and I'm a big fan."

'Worth the drive'

Alice Cunningham/BBC Tina Hoff and Linda Kennedy stand together and smile at the camera. Tina has short hair and wears sunglasses. Linda has long grey hair that is tied up and she wears glasses. Alice Cunningham/BBC
Tina Hoff and Linda Kennedy travelled from Bournemouth to see Sheeran on two of the three nights

Tina Hoff, 58, and Linda Kennedy, 56, also arrived on Thursday night from Bournemouth.

"We're seeing him again on Sunday," Ms Hoff said.

"First time seeing him... I'm very excited. It's worth the drive."

Ms Kennedy echoed her friend's excitement.

"I thought if we're coming up this way we may as well go to as many as we can and we don't know if he's going to be doing any more over here for a while.

"As soon as they said he was playing here I thought that was it, I'm getting tickets."

'17th show'

Alice Cunningham/BBC Marlene Krueger smiles at the camera. She wears an Ipswich Town cap and has long brown hair.Alice Cunningham/BBC
Marlene Krueger has travelled from Germany to see all three nights at Portman Road

Marlene Krueger, 22, lives in Munich in Germany and travelled on the train to Ipswich.

She was right at the front of one of the queues to get inside Portman Road on Friday and will be attending all three nights.

"It took more than 10 hours because German trains are horrible," she said.

"I always want to be at the front [of the crowd] because it is the best feeling you can have so I came here this morning around 7am.

"It's really hot, but we have these blankets [sun-reflecting sheets] that are really helping.

"I would say I go to a lot of concerts... I think it's my 17th Ed Sheeran show in the last three years; I'm a big fan."

'It's hot'

Alice Cunningham/BBC Caitlin Brundle and Thomas Portway smile at the camera. Caitlin has brown hair that has been braded and Thomas has short brown curly hair.Alice Cunningham/BBC
Caitlin Brundle and Thomas Portway were in the queue at about midday on Friday

Thomas Portway and Caitlin Brundle, both 19, came from Bury St Edmunds, in west Suffolk, and arrived on Friday lunchtime to get in the queue.

"We had wanted to come earlier, but it's hot," Mr Portway said.

"It's only about a four-hour wait [until gates open]. We might have to get an ice cream later.

"It's nice for him [Sheeran] to be here rather than somewhere like London where we'd have to drive far."

Ms Brundle added: "We're very excited, we're big concertgoers so we love a show."

'Paint the town pink'

Alice Cunningham/BBC Fans sit on the ground within lines of metal gates with foil blankets resting above them to provide shade. Alice Cunningham/BBC
Fans waiting in the queues early on were given metallic, reflective sheets to place over themselves to avoid the sun

Many of the fans gathered outside Portman Road were wearing pink, inspired by the artwork and marketing for Sheeran's upcoming album Play.

It has also provided the inspiration behind the pink displays and bunting that have been dotted around the town.

Fans began arriving in the early hours of Friday before sitting in extreme heats of up to 27C (81F) .

Queues for Sheeran's merchandise were also forming early on with fans desperate to get their hands on T-shirts, hoodies and more.

'Tonight's the night'

Alice Cunningham/BBC Mary Farruku smiles at the camera. She has long dark hair that has been tied back. She wears a pink Ipswich Town shirt. Alice Cunningham/BBC
Mary Farruku did not have to travel far to get in the queues on Friday lunchtime

Mary Farruku, 21, lives in Ipswich and was "really excited".

"I saw him when he was last in Ipswich at Chantry, that was amazing," she said.

"I follow Myles Smith on TikTok and I was really excited to hear that he was here.

"I'm busy this weekend so tonight is the night."

Fan zone

Alice Cunningham/BBC A grassed area that has been dyed pink.Alice Cunningham/BBC
Areas around Portman Road has been painted pink in the colour of Sheeran's upcoming album

Ipswich Borough Council and Ipswich Central will be hosting a three-day homecoming party in the town centre too.

This will include a Cornhill fan zone from 10:00 to 18:00 BST each day, featuring a large screen filled with Sheeran trivia, live messages from fans and more.

A pop-up shop selling merchandise will be set up, and there will be live busking in Alderman Park next to Portman Road stadium from 13:30 daily.

Stateside fans

Cameron Noble/BBC A head and shoulders image of Deborah Marshall He is wearing a white T-shirt and dark sunglasses. He is standing in front of Portman Road and looking into the camera.Cameron Noble/BBC
Deborah Marshall travelled to Ipswich from Evansville in Indiana

Deborah Marshal, 73, who travelled to the town from Indiana, US, said: "I came a long way because I really, really, really love Ed Sheeran."

"I didn't even know who Ed Sheeran was before 2020 but once I found him I just wanted to follow him," she told the BBC outside Ipswich Town's ground.

"He has helped me through life situations with his music."

Morgan Summersgill, from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, has travelled to England for the first time to see Sheeran, both on Friday and on Sunday.

She said she was soaking up the atmosphere that has engulfed the town.

"I am a huge Ed Sheeran fan and this is my fifth time seeing him," she said.

"I am so grateful to be here and be a part of it, and tomorrow, to make it even more special, I am getting the 'Play' symbol done [as a tattoo] in Ipswich.

"It is incredible and I cannot even explain how I am feeling."

Cameron Noble/BBC A group of Ed Sheeran fans - some standing, some sitting on the ground - outside Portman Road. Most of them are wearing pink tops Cameron Noble/BBC
Fans have been waiting on the dry grass of Alderman Park outside the concert venued since the early hours of Friday

He 'means so much'

Cameron Noble/BBC A head and shoulders image of Martin Cox. He is wearing a white T-shirt and dark sunglasses. He is standing in front of Portman Road and looking into the camera.Cameron Noble/BBC
Martin Cox has been queueing to get into Portman Road since the early hours of Friday

Martin Cox, 70, from London, has been a fan of Sheeran since 2010 and turned up outside Portman Road during the early hours.

"I like to be here to get to the front row and to also meet other people who are in the queue," he said.

"He means so much to me because of his songs, the way he performs, and his personality."

Andrew Woodger/BBC A grass verge off a roundabout is painted pink in the shape of a triangle with a white triangle in the middle of it. Beyond the roundabout are a church, modern high-rise buildings and an old industrial building with a mural on it. Andrew Woodger/BBC
Pink is in evidence across the town, including some of the green/brown grass on roadside verges being repainted in honour of Sheeran's return
Jen O'Neill Ed Sheeran with an acoustic guitar standing in the street outside a pub with an audience of mostly female fansJen O'Neill
Sheeran's appearance on the bill at The Swan in Ipswich town centre (now The Swan & Hedgehog) in 2010 turned into an impromptu gig in the street

Tribute act pays tribute

Cameron Noble/BBC A head and shoulders image of Hayley Judge. She is wearing a black T-shirt with the word Hayley written on it in pink. She is wearing dark sunglasses and looking directly into the camera. Other Ed Sheeran fans can be seen in the background.Cameron Noble/BBC
Hayley Judge says she is the only female Ed Sheeran tribute act

Hayley Judge, from south London, claims to be the only female Ed Sheeran tribute act.

She told BBC Radio Suffolk she was looking forward to hearing the singer's new songs, which she is "loving", but added that 2011's The A Team "never gets old for me".

"I used to run an open mic night, and one of the guys came one night, and he played The A Team, and I'm like, 'Oh, that's an amazing song'," she said.

"And then that's how I started following Ed and just started learning his songs and bought a loop station."

A kind of homecoming

Getty Images Ed Sheeran singing at a concert in Madrid. He is wearing a black T-shirt.Getty Images
Sheeran told the BBC he was excited ahead of the three concerts. He grew up in Framlingham and is a minor shareholder in Ipswich Town FC

Sheeran himself is equally as excited about his huge shows this weekend - but it is not the first time he and his acoustic guitar have popped up in the town.

He performed pub gigs as he made a name for himself in venues including the Steamboat Tavern and The Swan, and he appeared at Ipswich Music Day where local acts perform at the annual free event in Christchurch Park.

After his rise to global superstardom, he played four concerts in the town's Chantry Park in 2019.

In 2021, in the wake of Covid lockdown restrictions, he played a live-streamed gig at Portman Road with no audience present.

He also played an impromptu gig outside the town hall in 2022.

"This is the first time in my entire career that I am actually playing [in front of fans at Portman Road]," he said while talking exclusively to the BBC.

"So this is kind of like a homecoming show, which is going to be good."

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