Victoria Beckham may be ready to make a comeback as the Posh Spice.
The Spice Girls broke up in 2001, but a new revelation from Beckham, who has made a career out of modelling and modelling endeavours, suggests she could swap the runway for the stage again.
Beckham was part of an iconic 90s group that included Geri Halliwell (Ginger Spice), Mel B (Scary Spice), Melanie Chisholm (Sporty Spice) and Emma Bunton (Baby Spice). The five women made history as the best-selling female group of all time with more than 100 million records sold.
Fans are hungry for a reunion, and the fact that all the Spice Girls turned up to celebrate Beckham’s 50th birthday last year gave them a glimmer of hope. Beckham to Andy Cohen on SiriusXM’s Andy Cohen Live show, where she admitted that a reunion would be “tantalising”.
While the idea seems intriguing, Beckham’s boundaries are that she’d be willing to do a residency but not do multiple dates around the world.
“Could I take on a world tour? – Beckham said. – ‘No, I can’t. I have a job to do “.
“How good would the Spice Girls be on Sphere?” she suggested. “I love that idea. I mean, I don’t even know if I can still sing. I mean, I’ve never been that great.”
The group last performed together during the closing ceremony of the London Olympics in 2012, 11 years after they officially broke up.
Victoria Beckham reflects on being Posh Spice
Beckham shares moments about her time in the band in her Netflix documentary Victoria Beckham. She explained that during her pregnancy with Brooklyn, her eldest child – she also shares Romeo, 23, and Cruz, 20, and daughter Harper, 14, with her husband, David Beckham – the fashion designer was bullied for her weight gain.
“I’ve been everything from Porky Posh to Skinny Posh,” she said. “I mean, you know it was a lot and it’s hard. I didn’t have with control the things that were written about me, the pictures that were taken, and I guess I wanted to control it, you know, control it with clothes.”
Despite the media attacks, Beckham shared in an interview with Vanity Fair how Posh Spice changed her life.
“I’m so grateful and proud to be a Spice Girl,” she said. “People say they like the Spice Girls, and the Spice Girls, you know, made them feel good enough. And the Spice Girls did that to me.”
“They made me realise I’d had enough,” she added. “If it wasn’t for the Spice Girls, I would be genuinely shy. I would have been a completely different person “.
Beckham’s documentary is now streaming on Netflix.