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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Entertainment
Casey Cooper-Fiske and Lisa McLoughlin

Olivia Dean wins Grammy for best new artist: ‘I’m up here as a granddaughter of an immigrant’

British pop singer Olivia Dean has called for immigrants to be celebrated after she won the best new artist gong at the 2026 Grammy Awards.

The 26-year-old’s comments come after artists protested against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) officers deployed in US cities at Sunday’s awards ceremony.

Becoming emotional after scooping the award, the London-born star said: “Thank you, I never really imagined that I would be up here, let alone nominated, so thank you so much, I just want to say that an artist is really nothing without their team.

Emily, my best friend, my manager, we’ve been doing this for 10 years, so this is for you too, and my family.

Olivia Dean won her first Grammy on Sunday night

“I guess I want to say, I’m up here as a granddaughter of an immigrant, I wouldn’t be here (if it was not for immigration).

“Yeah, I’m a product of bravery, and I think those people deserve to be celebrated, so yeah, we’re nothing without each other. Thank you so much, I love you, thank you so much.”

It came after all of the nominees for the award performed, including British singer Lola Young, who delivered a powerful performance of her single Messy as she made her return to performing publicly, having sung at Spotify’s best new artist party on Thursday.

The 25-year-old performed an intimate version of the track, seated at a piano in a red tartan outfit.

The gong was presented by last year’s winner, The Subway singer Chappell Roan.

Also performing were girl group Katseye, indie band The Marias, pop star Addison Rae, pop rocker Sombr, R&B artist Leon Thomas and US singer Alex Warren.

She accepted the award from Chappell Roan
The Londoner also performed at the event

Earlier in the night, singers Joni Mitchell and Kehlani, and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon were among artists wearing “Ice out” and “Be Good” pins at the annual ceremony, held at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Sunday.

Ice officers have been deployed in US cities as part of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation initiative, most notably in Minnesota and Minneapolis, where about 2,000 federal agents have been deployed.

Officers have come under strong criticism over their aggressive approach. Most recently, Ice agents fatally shot two people on the streets of Minneapolis: Renee Good on January 7 and Alex Pretti on January 24.

Kehlani, 30, cursed Ice in her acceptance speech as she won her first Grammy for best R&B performance for Folded.

She said: “I hope everybody’s inspired to join together as a community of artists and speak out against what’s going on. F*** Ice.”

Speaking on the red carpet, Colombian singer-songwriter Karol G, who is nominated for her record Tropicoqueta in the best Latin pop category, addressed the plight of the US’s Latin community.

She said: “Our community here in the United States is going through a lot of bad and difficult and hard things, and just to be a voice, just to be a representation, just to be a part of how positive we are, and how special we are for the world.

“So it is like the best meaning of being in these places, and I am super happy because there’s a lot of Latin artists tonight, and to keep like seeing every year more and more and more, that’s evolution, it’s very special, that’s beautiful.”

Amy Allen, Rhiannon Giddens and Margo Price were also among the artists wearing the political pins.

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