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As it happenedended1620771222

Brit Awards 2021: 6 biggest talking points, from Jack Whitehall’s jokes to Little Mix making history

Ceremony at the O2 Arena in London included live audience and performances from Coldplay, The Weeknd and Dua Lipa

Kevin E G Perry,Roisin O'Connor
Tuesday 11 May 2021 23:13 BST
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Watch live as stars arrive on red carpet for Brit Awards

The 2021 Brit Awards took place tonight (11 May) at the O2 Arena in London, honouring a new generation of stars while also heralding the long-awaited turn of live music in front of a mass audience.

Here are six of the hottest talking points from the British music industry’s biggest night:

1. Jack Whitehall’s sharp one-liners proved why Brits have kept faith

This year was comedian Jack Whitehall’s fourth straight year hosting the Brit Awards, equalling a record held by James Corden who hosted every year from 2011 to 2014. Whitehall was on vintage form this time round, fan-boying over Little Mix but still delivering jokes with edge and panache. He took easy swings at Piers Morgan and Laurence Fox, while the joke that was nearest to the knuckle was probably his introduction for Brits newcomer Olivia Rodrigo: “In the words of Tiger Woods: ‘Driver’s Licence’, take it away…” Will Whitehall be back next time for a record-breaking fifth year in a row? Don’t bet against it.

2. Women reign

Picking up her Best British Solo Female Award, Dua Lipa casually observed that when she first won a Brit back in 2018 she’d appealed for more female representation on the Brits stage. Well, this year she got her wish. Little Mix will deservedly receive headlines for becoming the first all-female act to take home Best British Group, but there were also major wins for Arlo Parks in the Breakthrough Artist category and Haim for Best International Group. With Taylor Swift taking home the Global Icon prize and Griff winning Brits Rising Star, that meant eight of the 11 awards given out on the night went to women.

3. A long-awaited return to live music

After 14 months without large-scale gigs in London, the 2021 Brit Awards marked a triumphant return for the very concept of live music. From Coldplay on their barge in the Thames to Dua Lipa’s technicolour reimagining of a tube carriage – social distancing be damned! – to Headie One and AJ Tracey’s socially-conscious double-header, a night that was initially declared a ‘test event’ ended up feeling like it might just herald a long-awaited new dawn.

4. One of the most diverse Brit Awards in history

The Brit Awards, like many awards ceremonies, have faced years of criticism over its repeated failures to champion diversity in the music industry. This year, though, it made history more than once by honouring Little Mix and Taylor Swift, as the first female recipients of the Best Group and Global Icon awards, respectively. Arlo Parks received the Breakthrough award after making the Top 10 UK albums chart with her debut, Collapsed in Sunbeams, and Dua Lipa won the biggest award of the night, Best Album, for her rave-receiving 2020 album, Future Nostalgia.

5. The Brits’ first ever 'zoom' performance (The Weeknd)

In a first for the Brits, The Weeknd appeared in a special streamed performance of his single “Save Your Tears”. Compared to the average Zoom, however, this was a lavish high-production affair, which saw him standing beneath a torrential downpour as he later accepted the award for Best International Male Artist.

6. Championing new artists

Among the many notable moments of this year’s Brit Awards was how eager the organisers were to support new music, rather than simply reward the small cluster of familiar, chart-dominating faces. It allowed Rising Star artist Griff a chance to perform alongside the likes of Dua Lipa and The Weeknd. In her speech accepting the Global Icon award, too, Taylor Swift urged hopeful musicians to pave their own paths and to not be put off by the internet’s toxic culture of criticism.

The liveblog is now closed

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As if Jack Whitehall brought out the viral sesh guys.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:19
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HAIM take Best International Group for their sublime album, Women in Music Pt III.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:26
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Read our five-star review of Women in Music III here

Haim review, Women in Music Pt III: A fearless, effervescent album

On their third record, the sisters address misogyny, depression and death without ever letting the momentum dip

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:26
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Wonderful performance from Griff and, I think, possibly the first time God has been thanked in the ceremony’s history? I could be wrong, but traditionally it’s a very American thing to do at awards shows.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:35
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Next up is Best British Single...

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:35
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Harry Styles wins Best British Single for “Watermelon Sugar”, battling off a bunch of fierce competition including Dua Lipa.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:37
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You can check out the full list of winners so far here:

The full list of winners at the 2021 Brit Awards

Little Mix, Arlo Parks and Dua Lipa were among the artists honoured at the live ceremony in London

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:42
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Classic Brits: A really powerful and politically relevant performance from Headie One and AJ Tracey... muted by ITV.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:53
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Maisie Williams is presenting Taylor Swift with the Global Icon award. We’re getting a reel of some of her biggest moments throughout her career to date, as a voiceover from Jack Whitehall dubs her a “creative visionary” and “an artist of her generation”. Also featuring testimony from Swift’s peers and friends, including Selena Gomez and Ed Sheeran.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 21:56
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Beautiful speech from Taylor Swift that thanks the NHS, her longterm partner Joe Alwyn, her management, her friends and family, and her musical collaborators.

Roisin O'Connor11 May 2021 22:03

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