Gareth Cattermole/Getty for Adele Adele is taking her return to the stage seriously. The Grammy winner, 34, stopped her show several times to help struggling fans as she took to the stage on Friday as part of her British Summer Time Hyde Park concert series, her first public concert in several years . “Just want to give mad respect to Adele for stopping the show and doing a scene when she thought someone was in trouble and needed help from security. It was a crowd of 65,000+ and she still did it. It’s really that easy,” wrote a member of audience, sharing a video of the scene on Twitter. RELATED: Adele teases start of London concert series: ‘Who’s ready for tomorrow?’ In the clip, Adele can be seen telling her band to stop playing and walks to the front of the stage to signal concertgoers to security. According to Page Six, Adele stopped the show four times to check on audience members who appeared to need medical attention. She also sent some water for her fans in the front row, who waited seven hours in the heat to get in, TMZ reports. Friday’s show was Adele’s first public appearance in five years since the release of her fourth studio album 30 in November, although she previously treated fans to her televised concert special, An Audience with Adele, at the time . The singer has since been forced to postpone Adele Las Vegas Weekends due to the challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. “Oh my God, I’m back home,” he told the crowd, according to Rolling Stone. “It’s so weird to be in front of a crowd again. I get so nervous before every show, but I love being here.” RELATED VIDEO: Adele Announces Las Vegas Residency Postponement In Tearful Video: ‘We’re Running Out Of Time’ Adele’s on-stage vigil comes after at least 10 concertgoers died during a mass casualty event at Travis Scott’s Astroworld festival in Houston last November. The tragedy resulted in hundreds of lawsuits against Scott, 31, and Live Nation. Other musicians, including Billie Eilish, Doja Cat and Pharrell Williams, have since made it a point to stop their concerts and check in on fans as needed.