No, no, no? Yes, yes, yes! Destiny's Child members reunite at Beyoncé's Houston show

No, no, no? Yes, yes, yes! Destiny's Child members reunite at Beyoncé's Houston show
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It's the year of millennial pop reunions: *NSYNC, 98 Degrees, and now the granddaddy (or, rather, grandmotha) of them all, Destiny's Child.

Beyoncé regaled her former collaborators Kelly Rowland, Michelle Williams, LaTavia Roberson, and LeToya Luckett on Saturday night at her homecoming show in Houston for the latest stop of her Renaissance World Tour.

Destiny's Child
Destiny's Child

Columbia Records (L-R): LeToya Luckett, Beyoncé Knowles, LaTavia Roberson, and Kelly Rowland of Destiny's Child

Fan photographs taken at the concert at the NRG Stadium show Luckett and Roberson, who founded Destiny's Child with Beyoncé and Rowland, in attendance, while Rowland was seen hanging with Williams, who joined the group later.

The only member who did not seem to attend was Farrah Franklin, who joined the group after Roberson and Luckett left, though she later quit after a few months.

Beyoncé and Roberson met in 1990, and under the guidance of Bey's father, Matthew Knowles, they formed a group called (the hip-hop rappin') Girls Tyme with Rowland and three other girls.

Following their loss on Star Search, as depicted in the video for Beyoncé's song "Flawless," Knowles dedicated himself full-time to managing the group, cutting it from six girls to four, adding Luckett as the final member, and eventually settling on the name Destiny's Child.

That lineup released Destiny's Child's self-titled debut album in 1997, which contained the hit "No, No, No," but it was 1999's The Writing's on the Wall that catapulted them to superstardom. And controversy.

Roberson and Luckett had grown discontent with Knowles as their manager and attempted to split with him, though not the group. But Knowles unceremoniously fired and replaced them with two new members, Williams and Franklin, the latter of whom eventually left.

Destiny's Child
Destiny's Child

Kevin Mazur/WireImage Kelly Rowland, Beyoncé, and Michelle Williams of Destiny's Child

The erstwhile Children found out they had been replaced when the video for "Say My Name" premiered without them in it. Yet following years of lawsuits and bitter disputes, it seems all is well in the world of Destiny.

Rowland, Williams, and Beyoncé have reunited on multiple occasions, including for Bey's 2013 Super Bowl halftime show and 2018 Coachella performance.

Beyoncé also surprised concertgoers at Saturday's show by bringing out Megan Thee Stallion, who's also from Houston, for a performance of their 2020 collaboration, "Savage (Remix)."

"I love you, queen," Beyoncé told Megan in a video shared on X, formerly known as Twitter, to which the rapper replied, "I love you, Beyoncé."

The Houston concert was the first time the pair performed the track together live.

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