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Madonna shared a series of pictures of herself with her father Silvio Ciccone on his 93rd birthday on Instagram on Monday.
The hitmaker, 65, posted adorable rare snaps with her Italian father as she paid a heartfelt tribute.
One picture showed the performer giving him a big hug while wearing a corset and fishnets as he appeared to be at one of her concerts.
She wrote: 'To The O.G. Daddy—-Happy 93rd Birthday Silvio! Congratulations for riding the roller coaster of life with humor and sanity intact.
'Thank you for sharing your mantra in life with me: which is. "I'm Gonna Go until the Wheels fall off." Nothing can stop us! Love you to the moon and back.'
Madonna shared a series of pictures of herself with her father Silvio Ciccone on his 93rd birthday on Instagram on Monday
The hitmaker posted adorable rare snaps with her beloved father as she paid a heartfelt tribute
Among the sweet slew of snaps, Madonna shared a throwback photo with her mother Madonna Louise Ciccone of when she was a tiny tot.
Madonna, who lost her mother when she was just five years old, has previously been incredibly open about her heartbroken loss at such a young age.
Another picture saw a young Madonna on stage with her beaming father during an old concert.
Fans were stunned when Madonna shared a photo of her father as a young child, as they claimed she looked the spitting image of him.
Some comments read: 'I never realize how much you look like your father until I saw the last picture.'
'I mean, some people invented computers, some people get gold medals, some find antidotes and so and so. But this gentleman can say that he created MADONNA !!!'
'You look so much like your dad!!'
'Wow, now I see u got your beautiful eyes from your father.'
One picture showed the performer giving him a big hug while wearing a corset and fishnets as he appeared to be at one of her concerts
Among the sweet slew of snaps, Madonna shared a throwback photo with her mother Madonna Louise Ciccone and father Silvio of when she was a tiny tot
Another picture saw a young Madonna on stage with her beaming father during an old concert
She also shared a rare family picture as a child with her family
Fans were stunned when Madonna shared a photo of her father as a young child, as they claimed she looked the spitting image of him
Fans were stunned when Madonna shared a photo of her father as a young child, as they claimed she looked the spitting image of him
It comes after Madonna responded to a class action lawsuit claiming her concert start times are 'false advertising' since she never starts on time.
Back in January, the 65-year-old singer was sued by concert goers Michael Fellows and Jonathan Hadden after her three shows at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn last December started hours after the time listed on the tickets.
Now the singer has filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, according to TMZ, claiming that real fans would know she never starts on time.
The dismissal documents claim that real fans would know that she often runs past the allotted time because of her late starts and most true fans realize this.
'If a fan is familiar enough with Madonna's concert history to know her performances run for two hours and fifteen minutes, that fan would surely know that Madonna typically takes the stage well after the ticketed event time (after an opening act, set transition, and so on) and plays late into the night,' the document claims.
The shows mentioned in the original lawsuit took place on December 13, 14 and 16, with Fellows and Hadden claiming they were supposed to start at 8:30 PM, though didn't actually start until 10:30 PM.
The original lawsuit claimed, 'wanton exercise in false advertising, negligent misrepresentation, and unfair and deceptive trade practices.'
They also state Madonna has a long history of not starting her concerts on time.
It comes after Madonna responded to a class action lawsuit claiming her concert start times are 'false advertising' since she never starts on time
Back in January, the 65-year-old singer was sued by concert goers Michael Fellows and Jonathan Hadden after her three shows at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn last December started hours after the time listed on the tickets
The shows mentioned in the original lawsuit took place on December 13, 14 and 16, with Fellows and Hadden claiming they were supposed to start at 8:30 PM, though didn't actually start until 10:30 PM
The original lawsuit claimed, 'wanton exercise in false advertising, negligent misrepresentation, and unfair and deceptive trade practices'
The filing also shared a Facebook post from Hadden where he raved about the show, adding he has 'never missed a Madonna tour'
The fans say they sent $155.90 and $292.50 respectively on the tickets and are suing for unspecified damages.
The singer filed a response to the lawsuit in April, where she claimed, 'No reasonable concertgoer - and certainly no Madonna fan - would expect the headline act at a major arena concert to take the stage at the ticketed event time.'
'Fans got just what they paid for: a full-length, high quality show by the Queen of Pop,' the statement added.
The filing also shared a Facebook post from Hadden where he raved about the show, adding he has 'never missed a Madonna tour.'
Madonna was also hit with a federal lawsuit in April filed by three fans - Elizabeth Halper-Asefi, Mary Conoboy, and Nestor Monte, Jr. - who said she started her show at Capital One Arena in Washington D.C. two hours late.
They also alleged that Madonna provided, 'a hot and uncomfortable temperature in the venue during her performance' and that she, 'lip sync[ed] much of her performance.'
The disgruntled concertgoers declared that these alleged actions represent 'Madonna's arrogant and total disrespect' for ticketholders.
'In essence, Madonna and Live Nation are a consumer's worst nightmare,' the lawsuit states.
At her tour stop in D.C., on December 18, the plaintiffs recalled the mother-of-six told the crowd: 'I am sorry I am late… no, I am not sorry, it's who I am… I'm always late.'
'Defendants failed to provide any notice to the ticketholders that the Concerts would start much later than the start time printed on the ticket and as advertised, which resulted in the ticketholders waiting for hours for the Concerts to begin at the Venue,' the suit claims.
Madonna was also hit with a federal lawsuit in April filed by three fans - Elizabeth Halper-Asefi, Mary Conoboy, and Nestor Monte, Jr. - who said she started her show at Capital One Arena in Washington D.C. two hours late