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Grace VanderWaal
VanderWaal in 2018
VanderWaal in 2018
Background information
Born (2004-01-15) January 15, 2004 (age 20)[1]
Lenexa, Kansas, U.S.
GenresPop
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • actress
Instruments
  • Ukulele
  • guitar
Labels
Websitegracevanderwaal.com

Grace Avery VanderWaal[2] (born January 15, 2004)[1] is an American singer-songwriter and actress.[3] She is known for her distinctive voice and has often accompanied herself on the ukulele.

VanderWaal began her musical career by posting videos of her original songs and covers on YouTube and performing at open mic nights near her home in Suffern, New York. In September 2016, at age 12, she won the eleventh season of the NBC competition show America's Got Talent (AGT), performing her original songs. In December 2016, with Columbia Records and Syco Music, she released her debut EP Perfectly Imperfect, which became the best selling EP that year. Her first full-length studio album, Just the Beginning (2017), debuted at number 22 on the U.S Billboard 200. She released a second EP, Letters Vol. 1, in 2019.

She has performed at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino in Las Vegas, Madison Square Garden, the opening and closing of the 2017 Special Olympics World Winter Games in Austria, various benefit concerts, the Austin City Limits Music Festival and on various television talk shows. VanderWaal conducted her first concert tour in 2017 in support of Just the Beginning. She next toured in mid-2018 with Imagine Dragons in their Evolve World Tour, and in 2019, after opening in a tour for Florence and the Machine, she conducted her own Ur So Beautiful tour. She made her acting debut in 2020, starring as Susan "Stargirl" Caraway in the Disney+ musical drama film Stargirl, followed by its 2022 sequel Hollywood Stargirl.

VanderWaal has received two Radio Disney Music Awards (including a Best New Artist award), a Teen Choice Award, the 2017 Billboard Women in Music Rising Star Award, and the 2018 MTV Europe Music Award for Best Push Act. She has been named to Billboard magazine's 21 Under 21 list of fast-rising young music stars five times (2016–2019 and 2021) and is the youngest person ever included in the Forbes 30 Under 30 music list.[4]

Early life

[edit]

Family and education

[edit]

VanderWaal was born near Kansas City, Kansas, to Tina and David VanderWaal, who lived in Lenexa at the time. Her father is of Dutch descent.[5] When he became a vice president of marketing at LG Electronics in 2007,[6] the family moved to Suffern, New York.[7][8] VanderWaal later moved to South Carolina.[9] She has an older brother and sister.[10] After winning America's Got Talent in 2016, VanderWaal was home-schooled and enrolled in online courses for 7th grade[11][12] but later attended public school[13][14] part of the time.[15] She graduated from the Laurel Springs School in 2022.[16]

Early musical efforts

[edit]

VanderWaal was singing and making up songs by the age of three.[17] As a preteen, she found songwriting inspiration by watching movies and trying to imagine what a character was feeling, and "what it would be like if I were them, and wrote a song."[18] She decided to learn the ukulele after watching a Brazilian au pair play and seeing a Twenty One Pilots video on YouTube.[19] She asked for one for her 11th birthday but her mother refused, thinking she would never learn to play it. Then she bought one herself, using money she received for her 11th birthday, and watched more videos to teach herself how to play.[20][a] She also played the saxophone in her school's marching band.[22]

In 2015, VanderWaal began to record song covers and original songs, accompanying herself on ukulele, and to post them on her YouTube channel.[23][24] She includes among her musical influences such artists as Jason Mraz, Twenty One Pilots and Katy Perry.[19][25] She also began to perform during open mic events at small venues near her home[10] and to study music theory.[7] In July 2016, after her audition on AGT, she performed at the Lafayette Theatre in Suffern and then at the Ramapo Summer Concert Series at Palisades Credit Union Park.[26]

Career

[edit]

2016: America's Got Talent

[edit]

On June 7, 2016, VanderWaal auditioned for the eleventh season of NBC's talent competition show AGT, singing her original song about identity, "I Don't Know My Name". She was selected by one of the show's judges, Howie Mandel, as his "golden buzzer" act to skip the next round and perform in the live quarterfinal round.[23][27] Simon Cowell called VanderWaal "the next Taylor Swift."[28] Brittany Spanos in Rolling Stone magazine termed the song an "emotional, catchy, quirky tune".[29] VanderWaal continued to perform her original songs on the show; for her next performance at the quarterfinals on August 23, 2016, she sang "Beautiful Thing", a song that she wrote for her sister.[30] For the semi-finals on August 30, she performed "Light the Sky",[23] and for the September 13 finals, she sang "Clay", a song about dealing with bullies.[31] AGT's video of VanderWaal's audition has drawn more than 100 million views,[32] and was ranked the No. 5 trending YouTube video of 2016.[33]

VanderWaal again performed "I Don't Know My Name" at the September 14 finale results episode, then introduced a performance by Stevie Nicks, who compared her own style with VanderWaal's.[34] At the end of the broadcast, VanderWaal was announced as the season 11 winner.[35] She was the second female winner and the second child winner in the show's history.[28]

Post-America's Got Talent

[edit]

VanderWaal planned to use part of her AGT winnings to make a donation to charity and to buy two tree houses, built by the team from Treehouse Masters, for herself and her sister.[36] VanderWaal was a guest on The Ellen DeGeneres Show and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in September 2016,[37] and she headlined four sold-out concerts in the PH Showroom at the Las Vegas Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino in October, performing with other AGT finalists.[38] She also headlined the America's Got Talent Holiday Spectacular in December on NBC, where she performed her arrangement of "Frosty the Snowman".[39]

VanderWaal signed a recording deal with Columbia Records in 2016[40] and released her debut EP, Perfectly Imperfect, on December 2, 2016. The five songs on the EP include all four of VanderWaal's original songs from AGT and another original, "Gossip Girl", all produced by Greg Wells. A Walmart version featured one additional song, "Missing You (Coffeehouse Version)".[11] The EP debuted on the Billboard 200 albums chart at No. 9[41] and was the best selling EP of 2016.[42] The lead single, "I Don't Know My Name", debuted on Billboard's Digital Song Sales chart at No. 37[43] and on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart at No. 24.[44] Another song on the EP, "Light the Sky", was featured as background music in Google's "Year in Search 2016" video.[45]

VanderWaal promoted the EP with a series of appearances and performances. In November 2016, she performed "Light the Sky" and "Riptide" at halftime during a New York Knicks game at Madison Square Garden in New York City,[46] and "I Don't Know My Name" in the 2016 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade,[47] on NBC's Today show[12] and at the Christmas tree lighting at South Street Seaport, in New York City, where she also sang "Light the Sky".[48][49] In December, she sang "I Don't Know My Name" on The Wendy Williams Show,[50] at Cyndi Lauper's annual holiday fundraiser at the Beacon Theatre (where she also duetted with Lauper on "True Colors"),[51] on CBS's The Talk,[52] and at Z100's Jingle Ball Tour 2016 stop at Madison Square Garden.[53] In reviewing the last event, Jon Caramanica of The New York Times commented: "One of the loudest receptions of the night was for Grace VanderWaal, a precociously thoughtful 12-year-old singer-songwriter-ukulele player".[54] Later that month, VanderWaal returned to NBC's Today Show to sing "Light the Sky".[55]

2017–2018: Just the Beginning

[edit]
VanderWaal performing in 2018

In January 2017, VanderWaal sang "I Don't Know My Name" on Live with Kelly.[56] She performed atop the Empire State Building for engaged couples at the building's Valentine's Day lighting event in February.[57] In March 2017, she performed at We Day Illinois at Allstate Arena to celebrate young people's action on social issues.[58] She also sang "Light the Sky" at the annual benefit gala "One Night for One Drop", organized by Cirque du Soleil at the New York-New York Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.[59] The same month, VanderWaal appeared twice at the 2017 Special Olympics World Winter Games in Austria, duetting with Jason Mraz on two of his songs at the opening ceremony and performing her own songs at the closing ceremony.[60][61] In April, she performed at WE Day charity events in Seattle,[62] and Los Angeles,[63] and she appeared at the 2017 Radio Disney Music Awards.[64] Her May appearances included a fundraiser at Ramapo High School in New Jersey for The Valley Hospital's children's programs.[65] In June 2017, VanderWaal launched Perfectly Imperfect in Japan, performing and meeting with fans there.[66] She donated funds to help establish an elementary school show choir in the East Ramapo Central School District,[67] sponsored scholarships for graduating seniors from each of Ramapo and Spring Valley High Schools pursuing music[68] and another show choir at Chestnut Ridge Middle School.[69]

By early 2017, VanderWaal began working on a full-length album, eventually titled Just the Beginning, that she called "more produced ... really the same sound ... [but] less acoustic" than her debut EP.[70][71] She told an interviewer for Rookie magazine about how her process changed for the album, writing songs "on demand" with a collaborator: "I've never done this before; it's kind of weird to go into a room with usually a 30-year-old man and just be like 'Oh, let me open up about my life to you and write a super personal song!'"[72] In June, she participated in VidCon's opening show, YouTube OnStage, in The Arena at Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California,[73] where she premiered the first single from the upcoming album, "Moonlight".[74][75] She later released additional singles from the album.[75][76] In July, she performed at the Starkey Gala in St. Paul, Minnesota, to support hearing charities.[77] In August, she returned to AGT as a guest performer, singing "Moonlight".[78] The same month, Windex used VanderWaal's "Beautiful Thing" as the soundtrack to an advertisement,[79] Honda used her cover of "Over the Rainbow" for a Japanese ad,[80] and SheKnows Media ranked "I Don't Know My Name" as one of the 16 most empowering songs for women so far in 2017.[81] In September, VanderWaal performed on Live with Kelly and Ryan.[82] The same month, she appeared on Treehouse Masters in an episode about the tree houses that VanderWaal had planned since her appearance on AGT,[83] and modeled at New York Fashion Week for Marc Jacobs.[84]

VanderWaal promoted Just the Beginning with performances in September on Ellen[85] and in October at the Austin City Limits Music Festival,[86] where she was "[o]ne of the fest's biggest breakout acts ... whose soaring voice and sweet pop songs charmed large ... crowds."[87] She performed at more WE Day events in Vancouver, British Columbia, in October[88] and Saint Paul, Minnesota, in November.[89] VanderWaal released Just the Beginning on November 3, 2017.[90] She sang "Moonlight" on Megyn Kelly Today on the release date.[91] The album debuted on the Billboard 200 albums chart at No. 22.[92] She began her first solo concert tour, the Just the Beginning Tour, on November 5, 2017, which ran through February 2018.[93] By September 2017, the tour had sold out.[75] VanderWaal returned to Japan in late November to promote the album.[94] In December, she appeared on the Today show.[95]

In March 2018, VanderWaal traveled to Kenya with the Starkey Hearing Foundation to help hearing-impaired youth there.[96] In April, she performed on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.[97] She was the opening act for Imagine Dragons in the North American leg of their Evolve World Tour from June to August 2018.[98] During the tour, she also performed on The Late Late Show with James Corden[99] and at the 2018 LoveLoud Festival.[100] In December 2018, she returned to Live with Kelly and Ryan together with Ingrid Michaelson to perform their duet from Songs for the Season of "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree".[101]

2019–present: Letters Vol. 1 and Stargirl

[edit]

In early 2019, VanderWaal recorded her first soundtrack song, "Hideaway", for the animated film Wonder Park.[102] She made several tour stops in the southeastern US with Florence and the Machine in June 2019[103] and gave her own North American tour, titled "Ur So Beautiful", in August and September 2019, with an additional performance in November.[104] Later in the year she performed at The Trevor Project gala to prevent suicide among LGBT youth.[105] She released several songs in 2019[106][107] and released an EP, Letters Vol. 1, in November 2019.[108] Music Week described it as "spiky, futuristic, diverse".[109]

In 2020, VanderWaal starred in her acting debut as Susan "Stargirl" Caraway in Disney+'s Stargirl, based on the 2000 novel of the same name. Both the film and VanderWaal's performance received positive reviews.[110] Courtney Howard, in Variety, commented: "She ropes us into the mystery of her character reveal with heaping amounts of magnetism and grounded authenticity. It's no surprise that the music-driven scenes really showcase her power".[111][112] In 2021 and 2022, VanderWaal released a couple of new songs.[113][114] She reprised the role of Stargirl in a sequel, Hollywood Stargirl, released on June 3, 2022, on Disney+.[115] Courtney Howard wrote in Variety that "VanderWaal is once again a magnetic presence".[116]

In 2023, VanderWaal performed live in Brooklyn, New York, playing unreleased music at two shows.[117] She plays pop star Vesta Sweetwater, "a virginal pop star who gets snagged in a deep-fake sex scandal"[118][119] in the 2024 film Megalopolis, written and directed by Francis Ford Coppola; VanderWaal wrote two songs for the film, which she performs on the soundtrack.[120] Vanderwaal told Variety in 2024 that she is planning to release her second full-length album, which will treat "some pretty serious and heavy topics".[118]

Reception and accolades

[edit]

In 2016, a review of 15 of VanderWaal's song covers that she posted on her YouTube channel, praised her arrangements, vocal delivery, musical taste and "the combination of sass, attitude and confidence she brings to every cover".[121] In another 2016 assessment, USA Today characterized VanderWaal's voice as "endearingly croaky".[30] Others called it "raspy"[122] or "timelessly soulful".[123] Lindsay Peoples wrote for New York Magazine: "The songs [VanderWaal] wrote and performed on AGT were not only catchy but emotional and unique to her own sound, a mix of raw and folk".[124] Billboard magazine praised VanderWaal's vocals on her debut EP, Perfectly Imperfect, finding them "reminiscent of a Taylor Swift-Regina Spektor hybrid".[125] Rolling Stone agreed.[126] Brianna Wiest of Teen Vogue wrote: "The EP takes you through Grace's range, touching on issues that are all-too-well-known for young people, as well as soul-stokingly beautiful medleys that almost anyone could relate to. ... [W]e see ... her ability to master both a softer, vowel-breaking folk tone as well as push through a serious power-ballad by the end. It's rare that you see both at once, but that's part of the magic of Grace's sound: it's at once completely new, and totally unexpected."[127]

A review of VanderWaal's album Just the Beginning in USA Today stated: "VanderWaal's big-throated performance on 'A Better Life' channels Florence Welch and Miley Cyrus. There's a certain chirp in VanderWaal's voice that's reminiscent of Swift, but otherwise, her vocals align much more closely to Sia's in her full-voiced belting and nonchalant pronunciations. ... VanderWaal sounds like a 13-year-old in her songs, in the best possible way. In a voice that sounds refreshingly green, she launches herself at huge choruses with a total lack of restraint."[90] A reviewer for The Buffalo News wrote that the "vast diversity in her songwriting ... makes her stand out as a truly unique and exquisite artist."[128] Selina Fragassi of the Chicago Sun-Times commented that, on the album, VanderWaal's "raspy-sweet-peculiar vocals recall Elle King, Regina Spektor and Katy Perry ... [and] proves herself a modern-day Mozart".[129] Critics writing in the Houston Chronicle similarly praised VanderWaal's "smart pop songs that beautifully showcase her persona and wonderfully peculiar rasp of a voice."[130] A reviewer for the Dallas Observer opined that VanderWaal's lyrics tackle "complicated issues with aplomb as her raspy, warbling voice undulates around each syllable."[131]

A reviewer called VanderWaal's Seattle concert in February 2018 "a well balanced set of ballads and full energy songs. ... [H]er stage and style are a boho chic age appropriate complement to her teenage themed, yet old-soul-mind works. ... Her set was full of sweet commentary and incredible vocals".[132] Abby Jones of Billboard wrote that her performance of her single "Clearly" on The Late Show in 2018 was "moving ... stunningly bold ... mature, powerful".[97][133] A reviewer for Mass Live said of her performance on tour in June 2018 that she "was a pleasant surprise ... holding her own in the arena rock milieu. [She] won over the crowd".[134] Later that month, a tour reviewer noted, in Argus Leader, "her whimsical flower crown, carefree attitude and incredible voice. ... VanderWaal captivated the audience".[135] Another wrote in Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that "VanderWaal is one of the youngest performers at Summerfest [2018]. She's also one of the most talented, bringing a honeyed, slightly frayed rasp to assured pop songs".[136]

A reviewer in Vanity Fair called VanderWaal's 2019 single, "Stray", "contemplative, haunting ... ["Stray" and "Hideaway" are] mature and grounded – a progression from her previous work".[14] A Rolling Stone critic found her 2019 single "Waste My Time" "a major departure for the teen. ... The more mature track is dream-pop bliss".[137] MTV's critic called the 2019 music video for her song "I Don't Like You" "a sharp portrait [that] ... represents the chaos, confusion, and anger we often feel in relationships. ... In a style reminiscent of Sia's best videos ... with such deep-cutting lyrics ... and sharp visuals".[138] V magazine called her 2022 song "Lion's Den" "relatable and poignant ... a resounding cry for her generation. ... It's a powerful, unfiltered story of someone coming into their own, told with unflinching honesty and candidness."[114] In 2023, an NBC review said that VanderWaal "has the voice of an angel", called her song "Boyfriend" "deep" and "emotional", and said that her cover of Amy Winehouse's "Wake Up Alone" "sounds heavenly".[139] Of her 2024 single "What's Left of Me", one reviewer wrote: "Driven by her gripping vocals, it's a raw track".[140] VanderWaal hopes to release an album in early 2025 on the Pulse Records label.[141]

Billboard magazine named VanderWaal to its 21 Under 21 list of "music's hottest young stars" in four consecutive years, 2016–2019.[37][142] Variety listed her in its "Young Hollywood Impact Report 2017".[143] She was a finalist in the Best Female Artist category at the International Acoustic Music Awards in 2017, the youngest finalist in the awards' history.[144] VanderWaal won the 2017 Radio Disney Music Award for Best New Artist[145] and a 2017 Teen Choice Award.[146] Refinery29 included her on its 2017 list of 29 young actors, singers and activists "on the verge of superstardom."[147] VanderWaal is credited with helping to boost the popularity of the ukulele,[148] and in 2017, Fender named her as its youngest Signature Series artist ever and its first collaboration with a ukulele player; the instrument line was released in 2018.[149] VanderWaal received Billboard's 2017 Women in Music Rising Star Award[150] and the 2018 MTV Europe Music Award for Best Push Artist.[151] She is the youngest person ever included in the Forbes 30 Under 30 music list.[4] In 2019 the New York State Senate awarded her its Women of Distinction honor for her efforts to expand musical education in the East Ramapo Central School District.[152]

Billboard again named VanderWaal to its 21 Under 21 list in 2021.[153] By 2024, she had accumulated more than thirteen million followers on social media.[154] As of 2024, her Instagram account has more than six million followers,[155] her YouTube channel has more than three million subscribers,[156] and her Facebook page more than one million followers.[157]

Awards and nominations

[edit]
Year Award Category Result Ref.
2016 America's Got Talent Won [35]
2017 Radio Disney Music Awards Best New Artist Won [145]
2017 Teen Choice Awards Choice Next Big Thing Won [158]
2017 Billboard Women in Music Rising Star Award Won [150]
2018 Radio Disney Music Awards Best Song That Makes You Smile Nominated [159]
2018 MTV Europe Music Awards Best Push Act Won [151]
2018 32nd Japan Gold Disc Awards New Artist of the Year, Best 3 New Artists Won [160]

Discography

[edit]

Albums

[edit]
List of albums, with selected chart positions
Title Details Peak chart positions
US
[92]
AUS
[161]
BE
(FL)

[162]
BE
(WA)

[163]
CAN
[164]
JPN
[165]
Just the Beginning
  • Released: November 3, 2017
  • Label: Columbia
  • Format: CD, digital download
22 60 118 107 20 37

EPs

[edit]
List of albums, with selected chart positions
Title EP details Peak chart positions
US
[92]
CAN
[166]
Perfectly Imperfect
  • Released: December 2, 2016
  • Label: Columbia
  • Format: CD, digital download
9 11
Letters Vol. 1
  • Released: November 22, 2019
  • Label: Columbia
  • Format: CD, digital download
 —  —

Charted singles

[edit]
List of nationally charting singles, with selected chart positions
Title Year Peak chart positions Album
US
Bub.

[167]
AUS
[168]
BE
(FL)
Tip

[162]
BEL (WA)
Tip

[163]
JPN
[169]
"I Don't Know My Name" 2016 24 82  —  —  — Perfectly Imperfect
"Moonlight" 2017  —  —  — 3  — Just the Beginning
"So Much More Than This"  —  —  — 16 43
"Ur So Beautiful" 2019  —  — 45  —  — Letters Vol. 1
"—" denotes that recording did not chart or was not released in that territory.

Filmography

[edit]

Film

[edit]
List of films
Year Title Role(s) Notes Ref.
2020 Stargirl Susan "Stargirl" Caraway Streaming film [111]
2022 Hollywood Stargirl [116]
2024 Megalopolis Vesta Sweetwater [120]

Tours

[edit]

Headlining

[edit]
  • Just the Beginning Tour (2017–2018)
  • Ur So Beautiful Tour (2019)

Opening act

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ VanderWaal told Access Hollywood that she was hoping for a ukulele for her 11th birthday, "and I remember my mom did not buy me one, 'cause she thought I would never play it."[21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Carter, Brooke (March 25, 2017). "What Happened to Grace VanderWaal – Now in 2017". Gazetter Review.
  2. ^ VanderWaal, Grace (confirmed account) [@GraceVanderWaal] (June 22, 2016). "Avery" (Tweet). Retrieved September 15, 2016 – via Twitter.
  3. ^ Spanos, Brittany. "Hear Grace VanderWaal's "Today and Tomorrow" Ahead of Stargirl Release: Teenage singer-songwriter returns to her ukulele for song featured in film debut", Rolling Stone, March 6, 2020
  4. ^ a b Greenburg, Zack O'Malley. "Meet Grace VanderWaal, the Youngest 30 Under 30 Music List Member Ever", Forbes, November 13, 2018
  5. ^ "Half-Nederlandse Grace VanderWaal wint America's Got Talent" Archived October 8, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, rtlnieuws.nl, September 15, 2016. Retrieved October 7, 2017
  6. ^ "Hall of Fame Profile: David VanderWaal", Shopper Marketing, April 24, 2015. Retrieved December 21, 2018; and Wolf, Alan. "She Did It: Industry Daughter Grace VanderWaal Wins Top Prize on America's Got Talent", Twice, September 15, 2016. Retrieved January 8, 2017
  7. ^ a b Izadi, Elahe. "America's Got Talent winner Grace VanderWaal, 12, has Lenexa roots", The Kansas City Star, September 16, 2016. Retrieved September 16, 2016
  8. ^ Rao, Naveen. "Grace VanderWaal Family: Things to Know About AGT 2016 Winner's Parents", Earn the Necklace, September 15, 2016. Retrieved January 8, 2017
  9. ^ McCarthy, Lauren. "Grace VanderWaal Is Doing Great", Nylon, March 4, 2021
  10. ^ a b John, Caroline. "Grace VanderWaal Family: 4 Things You Need To Know", Earn the Necklace, August 31, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  11. ^ a b Mallenbaum, Carly. "Exclusive: Grace VanderWaal's Perfectly Imperfect tracklist", USA Today, November 16, 2016. Retrieved November 17, 2016
  12. ^ a b D'Zurilla, Christie. "Grace VanderWaal performs 'I Don't Know My Name', shares her age-related angst on Today", Los Angeles Times, November 28, 2016
  13. ^ Kaufman Gil. "Grace VanderWaal, Parkland Student Sofie Whitney Talk School Safety & Healing Power of Music Before March for Our Lives", Billboard, March 22, 2018; Nordstrom, Leigh. "Grace VanderWaal Balances Middle School With Marc Jacobs", Women's Wear Daily, November 3, 2017; and Bruner, Raisa. "Backstage With Pop's Youngest Rising Star Grace VanderWaal", Time magazine, November 16, 2017
  14. ^ a b Duboff, Josh. "Grace VanderWaal Is Growing Up – But Not Too Quickly", Vanity Fair, May 23, 2019
  15. ^ Dodson, P. Claire. "Grace VanderWaal Talks Stargirl and Her New Single 'Waste My Time'", Teen Vogue, August 8, 2019
  16. ^ "Amelia Rose Earhart to speak at the Laurel Springs School 2022 commencement" (Press release). PR Newswire. May 23, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  17. ^ "Grace VanderWaal: 'I was just ready to spring into my dreams of music.'", Guitar Girl, March 15, 2018
  18. ^ Savayan, Tania. "AGT star Grace VanderWaal calls herself 'pretty bland'", USA Today (verified channel), YouTube, video at 2:16–2:38, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  19. ^ a b Sikorski, David. "Grace VanderWaal Reflects on Her Showstopping America's Got Talent Performance", The Daily Beast, June 10, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  20. ^ Petit, Stephanie. "5 Things to Know About America's Got Talent Winner Grace Vanderwaal", People, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  21. ^ VanderWaal, Grace. "AGT Winner Grace VanderWaal Sings For Natalie & Kit!", World Airline's YouTube channel, video at 4:16–4:23, September 28, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016; and Roberts, Karen. "Check out Grace VanderWaal's ukuleles", The Journal News, July 31, 2016, December 10, 2016
  22. ^ Muppala, Savitha. "Grace VanderWaal's Popularity Creates Record Ticket Sales for AGT Show at Planet Hollywood" Archived October 31, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Movie News Guide, October 28, 2016
  23. ^ a b c Salazar, Hayley. "Artist to Watch: America's Got Talent's Grace VanderWaal" Archived July 24, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, The Collegian, September 6, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  24. ^ Villanueva, Mariel Ann. "America's Got Talent 2016 Grace VanderWaal to Sing Another Original for Live Shows?" Archived October 15, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Hall of Fame Magazine, August 12, 2016. Retrieved October 30, 2016; and Wicks, Amanda. "Grace VanderWaal's Top 3 Cover Songs" Archived December 9, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Radio.com, June 9, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2016
  25. ^ Weatherby, Taylor. "Grace VanderWaal's 10 Best Covers", Billboard, January 15, 2017
  26. ^ Roberts, Karen. "Grace VanderWaal is in L.A. for her next AGT appearance", The Journal News, September 9, 2016, December 10, 2016; and D'Onofrio, Michael. "AGT star Grace VanderWaal sings in Rockland", The Journal News, July 11, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016
  27. ^ Roberts, Karen and Sharon Rhodes. "Grace VanderWaal wins AGT, will sing in Vegas", The Journal News, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016
  28. ^ a b Izadi, Elahe. "'The next Taylor Swift' – Meet the 12-year-old singer-songwriter who won America's Got Talent", The Washington Post, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016
  29. ^ Spanos, Brittany. "America's Got Talent Star Grace VanderWaal Talks Songwriting, Katy Perry" Archived November 20, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Rolling Stone, June 9, 2016. Retrieved October 29, 2016
  30. ^ a b Mallenbaum, Carly. "Grace VanderWaal: 5 things we learned about the America's Got Talent phenom", USA Today, September 13, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016
  31. ^ Heldman, Breanne L. "America's Got Talent: Grace VanderWaal wows with original song about bullies", Entertainment Weekly, September 14, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016
  32. ^ America's Got Talent. "Grace VanderWaal: 12-Year-Old Ukulele Player Gets Golden Buzzer – America's Got Talent 2016", YouTube. Retrieved December 21, 2019
  33. ^ Elizabeth, De. "The Top 10 Trending YouTube Videos of 2016", Teen Vogue, December 7, 2016; and Raynor, Madeline. "Adele, Channing Tatum make YouTube's top trending videos of 2016", Entertainment Weekly, December 7, 2016
  34. ^ Angermiller, Michele Amabile. "Stevie Nicks Praises Grace VanderWaal on America's Got Talent: 'She's Got It'", Billboard, September 14, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016
  35. ^ a b Angermiller, Michelle Amabile. "America's Got Talent Winner Grace VanderWaal Books Vegas Concerts", Billboard, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 18, 2016
  36. ^ Haas, Mariah and Stephanie Petit. "America's Got Talent Winner Grace Vanderwaal, 12, Reveals What She's Going to Do with Her $1 Million Prize", People, September 15, 2016. Retrieved December 27, 2016
  37. ^ a b "21 Under 21 2016: Music's Hottest Young Stars", Billboard, September 29, 2016. Retrieved December 27, 2016
  38. ^ "America's Got Talent winner, Suffern native VanderWaal plays sold-out Vegas show" Archived October 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, News12.com, Westchester County, New York, October 28, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016 (content preview)
  39. ^ Briones, Isis. "Grace VanderWaal Performs 'Frosty the Snowman' on America's Got Talent's Holiday Spectacular", Teen Vogue, December 20, 2016; and Angermiller, Michele Amabile. "America's Got Talent Winner Grace VanderWaal Set to Headline Holiday Special", Billboard, November 7, 2016. Retrieved November 7, 2016
  40. ^ Angermiller, Michelle Amabile. "America's Got Talent Winner Grace VanderWaal Joins Adele, Beyonce at Columbia Records", Billboard, September 20, 2016. Retrieved September 21, 2016
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[edit]
Preceded by America's Got Talent winner
Season 11 (Summer 2016)
Succeeded by