Warwick took to Twitter on Friday and shared her reaction after she was mistaken for the Empress of Soul by ESPN broadcasters Mary Carillo and Chanda Rubin during Serena Williams’ unexpected success Thursday night against the world’s No. 2 player, Anett Kontaveit, at Arthur Ashe Stadium in Flushing, New York.

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All through the match, cameras had been panning to the elegant gathering. Regardless, this time there was an error, as the cameras showed two ladies in the stands. Carillo noted, “Gladys Knight” was in cooperation. Rubin gave off an impression of being in wonderment and moreover yelled, “Gladys Knight!” Problem was, it wasn’t Knight. It was truly Warwick.

Warwick evoked two of her praiseworthy melodies – – “Walk around By” and “I Say a Little Prayer” – – as well as Knight’s thing of beauty, “12 PM Train to Georgia” for her unbelievable commend back. Fans revered the response. One individual replied, “The Queen of shade haha” while another person said, “OMG! I almost spit my coffee.”

Knight took to Instagram on Thursday and acknowledged the stumble as a gigantic image of honor.

“Dionne and I have been sisters for a really long time and I truly need to accept that she is as respected to be mistaken for me as I would be her,” she said. “I’m sure it was a blameless goof. It was a gift to be in the house to see Serena’s importance.”

At any rate, what unequivocally happened? Rubin, a past enduring tennis player with a 2002 accomplishment over then No. 1 world-situated Williams added to her collection, tended to ET’s Kevin Frazier and was unflinching that “there’s zero opportunity that I would mistake Dionne Warwick for Gladys Knight.”

Rubin, first of all, says she’s a robust Knight fan. So much, Rubin says she has a picture of her in her office. Rubin calls the photo one of her top decisions, while adding she for the most part appreciates the astounding opportunity to chat with Knight when they’ve had encounters at various events.

— Dionne Warwick (@dionnewarwick) June 13, 2022

“Exactly when we are commentating – – as I was doing the past night in a corner – – by then when this happened, I was watching the court, not seeing our program screen,” Rubin surveyed. “In this manner, mid-thought, my partner [Carillo] referred to there’s Gladys Knight. Additionally, we had been seeing her on the jumbotron. Consequently when she said Gladys, I rehashed her rapidly without seeing what was on the program screen.”

“Whenever we put the picture in a difficult spot on [the] program [monitor] after the point was played,” Rubin continued, “I got it, ‘Is this the picture we said was Gladys Knight?’ That isn’t [Gladys Knight]. That is Dionne Warwick. Along these lines, we kind of prevailed at last about it in the corner, continuous. We kept it light and we kept it moving. Absolutely didn’t figure I would stir and kind of make them design. I love moving, not actually subsequently, but it was simply crazy to accept that it was made into much more prominent game plan than it really was by then.”