Michelle Obama’s Grammys Remarks Drowned Out by Audience Applause

Former first lady praises Motown and Beyonce, once the applause quiets down

michelle obama alicia keys grammys
Getty Images

Michelle Obama was briefly drowned out by applause as she joined host Alicia Keys, Lady Gaga, Jada Pinkett-Smith and Jennifer Lopez at the beginning of the 61st Annual Grammy Awards Sunday.

After Keys introduced the other four women as her sisters, each delivered short remarks about the power of music. The former first lady went last, and got only a few words into her remarks about wearing out old Motown Records when she grew up on the South Side of Chicago before the audience drowned her out with applause.

“We’ve got a show to do!” Obama told the audience, before continuing. She said Beyonce’s “Run the World” had helped her through the last decade, and added:

“Whether we like country or rap or rock, music helps us share ourselves… it allows us to hear each other, to invite each other in.”

If she was testing the waters for a 2020 run, it couldn’t have gone much better — though both she and former President Obama have said repeatedly that she isn’t interested in running.

Despite the presence of a former first lady, the opening was mostly apolitical. In the opening number, Camila Cabello’s “Havana,” one performer read a newspaper with the headline, “Build Bridges Not Walls.”

And Keys alluded to music’s role in protest, among other things: “Music is what we cry to, it’s what we march to, it’s what we rock to, it’s what we make love to.”

She told the audience that the night would be a celebration.

In Gaga’s opening remarks, she told her audience: “They said I was weird, that my look, my choices, my sound, that it wouldn’t work. But music told me not to listen to them. Music took my ears, took my hands, my voice and my soul and it led me to all of you, and to all my Little Monster who I love so much.”

As she accepted the first award of the night, Gaga said how grateful she was that her film “A Star Is Born” addressed mental illness, and urged the audience to pay attention to one another’s troubles and help each other.

Comments