Jonathan Ross’ two daughters Honey and Betty enjoyed a night out with their famous father at Taylor Swift’s last London show on the Eras Tour on Tuesday night.
Betty, 33, who suffers from fibromyalgia – a condition which causes pain all over the body – put on a risqué display in a glitzy silver bralette and tiny shorts as she stuck up a love heart with her younger sister Honey, 27.
Meanwhile, Honey looked trendy in a burgundy red leather jacket and black checkered trousers.
Jonathan, 63, spent quality time with his beloved daughters and danced the night away to the singer’s hit songs.
Tuesday night marked Taylor’s eighth show at the London venue after a series of five consecutive shows in London and three back in June.

Jonathan Ross’ two daughters Honey and Betty enjoyed a night out with their famous father at Taylor Swift ‘s last London show on the Eras Tour on Tuesday night

Jonathan spent quality time with his beloved daughters and danced the night away to the singer’s hit songs (Honey, left, pictured with her father)
Jonathan slipped into a graphic black T-shirt which read ‘I’m a tortured poet’, teamed with flared jeans.
Celebrities flocked to attend the final concert as Emily and her husband John led the famous stars in attendance.
Honey is the youngest daughter of her talk show host father Jonathan and his wife Jane, with the pair also sharing Harvey Kirby, 27, and Betty Kitten.
Jonathan’s outing comes after he admitted his staff on his chat show were ‘scared’ of him as he candidly opened up about his relationship with colleagues days after BBC staff branded Strictly ‘toxic and cruel’.
The ITV presenter said he has found it a ‘difficult learning curve’ to change the way he speaks to staff as he ‘used to think he could say almost anything’ and not worry about the consequences.
Jonathan’s interview comes as Strictly was thrown into more crisis earlier this week as backstage staff spoke about their experience on the show.
The broadcaster explained in a new interview how his staff members were frightened of being fired from his show after he criticised their work.
However, Jonathan has now detailed how he has learned to become a ‘much softer character’ because ‘society has changed’.

Meanwhile, Honey looked trendy in a burgundy red leather jacket and black checkered trousers

Honey flashed her cleavage in a semi-sheer halterneck top with red snake motifs

Tuesday night marked Taylor’s eighth show at the London venue after a series of five consecutive shows in London and three back in June
Speaking on the Walking The Dog podcast, he said: ‘I’ve grown markedly more aware of the impact words can have whereas when I was younger, I used to think you could say almost anything because they’re just words.
‘I also felt like, if I didn’t intend something but you say something as a joke, you kind of thought everyone knew the intention.
‘It was a fairly hard one, a difficult learning curve.’
He continued: ‘I had a bunch of people working on the show years ago and I wasn’t happy with the people they were suggesting as guests.
‘I wanted it to be a slightly broader range, so I said, ‘We should broaden your horizons, we should get someone that’s just got a weird dog, that’s just done a weird thing, they don’t just have to be people that have
just got a book out.’
‘Then afterwards someone that was in the company with me took me to one side.
‘[He’s] a really nice guy called Mike and he said, ‘I know what you’re saying and I kind of agree with you, but the way you’re saying it, they’re all scared of you’.
‘I was like, “Why are they scared of me? I’m just another person in the office room”.

Jonathan’s outing comes after he admitted his staff on his chat show were ‘scared’ of him as he candidly opened up about his relationship with colleagues days after BBC staff branded Strictly ‘toxic and cruel’

The ITV presenter said he has found it a ‘difficult learning curve’ to change the way he speaks to staff as he ‘used to think he could say almost anything and not worry about the consequences’
‘He said, “Because it’s your show, and it’s your company, and you’re saying it and they’re thinking you might fire them”
‘I said, ‘But I didn’t say anything along those lines,’ and he said, ‘No, no, but it’s perceived, you’ve let them know you’re dissatisfied with something therefore their next thought is probably, ‘Oh, f***’.
‘It hadn’t even occurred to me back then that that would be the way it goes and now it is.
‘Now, even if someone is incredibly incompetent in their job, I will not talk to them publicly about it and I would take them to one side.’
He added: ‘That’s something we should just learn by being older but also because society has changed.
‘Certainly I have become, in many ways, a much softer character than I was previously even though I didn’t ever think I was hard in anyway; but I clearly was without realising it.’
The Jonathan Ross show has been running for 20 series after first airing on ITV back in 2011.