Beyonce ‘paid $35million’ for one-hour show at Atlantis The Royal in Dubai’s official opening

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Gold toothbrushes, $285,000-a-night suite and Beyonce’s $35 million hour-long show: Inside the world’s ‘most luxurious hotel’ when it first opens its doors

  • Hotel guests enjoy free gold-plated toothbrushes and combs.
  • The store sells Picasso art and there are 17 restaurants and a 21-foot aquarium.

To guests paying $285,000 a night for a suite, surely only the biggest star on the planet is suitable entertainment.

And Beyonce was, in fact, the headline act at last night’s launch party for what is being billed as the world’s most luxurious hotel.

The Crazy In Love singer was paid $35 million for her hour-long show, her first concert in four years, at the Atlantis The Royal in Dubai.

Hotel guests enjoy complimentary gold-plated toothbrushes, combs, and razors, which bosses expect guests to sneak in their suitcases, a seven-pillow “menu,” personal butlers, and the opportunity to meditate with dolphins.

His shop sells Picasso artwork, and there are 17 restaurants and bars featuring eight celebrity chefs, including Heston Blumenthal’s debut bar, Resonance, where guests can admire a 21-foot-tall aquarium containing 4,000 jellyfish.

Beyonce, pictured, was paid $35 million for a one-hour show at the Atlantis The Royal Grand hotel in Dubai.

It's the first hotel designed with Instagram in mind, with a host of features designed to look good in photos, including a fountain that spans four acres and breathes fire.  The cheapest room is $1,800 per night.

It’s the first hotel designed with Instagram in mind, with a host of features designed to look good in photos, including a fountain that spans four acres and breathes fire. The cheapest room is $1,800 per night.

It’s the first hotel designed with Instagram in mind, with a host of features designed to look good in photos, including a fountain that spans four acres and breathes fire. The cheapest room is $1,800 per night.

Celebrities at the launch included Kendall Jenner, Rebel Wilson, Liam Payne, Mark Wright and Michelle Keegan, as well as Beyonce’s husband Jay-Z and their children.

Partygoers drank 4,000 bottles of Moet & Chandon champagne at the opening of the 43-story hotel, which has 3,000 staff members to cater to its wealthy guests.

The VIP-only ‘big reveal party’ comes ahead of the full opening next month for those members of the ‘general public’ who can afford it.

Hotel guests enjoy complimentary gold-plated toothbrushes, combs, and razors—which bosses expect guests to keep in their suitcases—a seven-pillow menu, personal butlers, and the chance to meditate with dolphins

Hotel guests enjoy complimentary gold-plated toothbrushes, combs, and razors, which bosses expect guests to stash in their suitcases, a seven-pillow “menu,” personal butlers, and the chance to meditate with dolphins .

The Royal Mansion's flagship suite where Beyonce and her family stayed costs $142,500 a night

The Royal Mansion’s flagship suite where Beyonce and her family stayed costs $142,500 a night

The Royal Mansion’s flagship suite where Beyoncé and her family stayed costs $142,500 a night. At over 11,000 square feet and 22 stories high, it has four spacious rooms, a cinema, a ‘safe room’ and its own swimming pool. If you need more space, you can expand to 15 rooms for $285,000 per night.

Of the 795 rooms, 44 have their own private infinity pools, hundreds of feet in the air.

Outside one bar is an exclusive ‘ultra lounge’ with 20 tables, each with a minimum spend said to be in excess of $35,000.

Hotel boss Timothy Kelly told The Mail on Sunday: “We call it the space for your one per cent”, an exclusive place for only the wealthiest “celebrities and dignitaries”.

Hotel boss Timothy Kelly told The Mail on Sunday: Do we call that the space for your one percent? An exclusive place only for the very rich? Celebrities and dignitaries?

Hotel boss Timothy Kelly told The Mail on Sunday: “We call it the space for your one per cent”, an exclusive place for only the wealthiest “celebrities and dignitaries”.