The Jonas Brothers concert in Prague Tuesday night was interrupted by a scary incident.
A social media video from the concert shows Nick Jonas, 32, running off the stage mid-performance after a laser was pointed right at him.
The youngest Jonas brother stood up from the piano, signaled “time out” with his hands and sprinted down the stairs to get away from the stage.
Nick’s brothers Joe, 35, and Kevin, 36, also ran off the stage and the show was paused for 10 minutes, according to Rolling Stone.
A representative for O2 Arena said in a statement to Variety, “We can confirm that the Jonas Brothers’ performance had to be interrupted for several minutes due to the use of a prohibited laser pointer by the person. The organizing service responded to this fact. After a few minutes, the band continued their performance.”
The Post has reached out to reps for Nick and O2 Arena for comment.
Fans reacted to the incident on social media.
“The current climate of society is so f–ked that something this small has to be taken so seriously,” one person wrote via X.
“It’s scary, what if it’s a real shooter, you never know,” another fan tweeted.
“@nickjonas handled that laser threat like a pro, but artists shouldn’t have to face this,” somebody else said.
A fourth fan wrote, “He’s so scared. This breaks my heart. He’s a father and husband first. People need to be more mindful.”
Nick has one daughter, 2-year-old Malti, with wife Priyanka Chopra. He and his brothers are currently on their Five Albums. One Night. The World Tour, which is scheduled to end Wednesday night in Krakow, Poland.
The “Sucker” singer is not the first music artist to be rushed off the stage for safety reasons.
It happened to Green Day last month when a drone was spotted over Detroit’s Comerica Park, where the band was performing. After a brief delay, they returned to the stage and resumed their show.
In an even scarier situation, Taylor Swift had to cancel three sold-out shows in Vienna, Austria, on her Eras Tour in August after police narrowly thwarted an ISIS plot to attack the concerts.
The three Austrian suspects — who were 17, 18 and 19 years old, and were allegedly recruited online by ISIS — plotted to drive a car full of explosives into Swift’s Vienna shows.
Swift broke her silence on Instagram Aug. 21, saying that the thwarted attack “filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount of guilt because so many people had planned on coming to those shows.”