Inside Mariah Carey’s 2026 MusiCares Person of the Year gala
If anyone told Mariah Carey ahead of time that Friday nightβs MusiCares Person of the Year tribute would feature a live auction β an auction in which a meet-and-greet with the singer in Abu Dhabi was offered to the highest bidder β you sure couldnβt tell by observing her reaction.
Seated near the stage at the Los Angeles Convention Center, a camera feeding close-up images of her face to several screens, Carey appeared genuinely surprised by an auctioneerβs description of the backstage hangout in which sheβd be expected to participate next month.
But such is the life of a queen.
Watching Carey respond in real time was actually the best thing about this annual Grammy-weekend gala meant to honor an artistβs work and philanthropy. Though the 56-year-old herself sang for only a minute or so at the end of the show, Carey was a delight to behold as a series of admirers took turns performing some of her many hits (and a handful of deep cuts).
Jennifer Hudson performs.
(Emma McIntyre / Getty Images)
The look of game recognizing game as Jennifer Hudson crushed βVision of Love.β The tenderness with which she regarded her old friend Busta Rhymes doing their βI Know What You Want.β The slowly dawning realization that this heavily tattooed white man named Teddy Swims was really going to pull off βWithout You.β
βThat was terrifying,β Swims said when he finished the song β an all-timer of a power ballad with a lengthy chain of custody going back through Carey, Harry Nilsson and the doomed Welsh band Badfinger.
Best of all was the sight of Carey proudly singing along to Foo Fighters and Taylor Momsen as they blazed through a pair of tunes from the cult-fave grunge album she secretly recorded in the mid-1990s under the name Chick.
Dave Grohl of Foo Fighters, left, and Taylor Momsen perform.
(Matt Winkelmeyer / Getty Images)
Other acts on the bill included Adam Lambert, who went slow and moody for βCanβt Let Goβ; the British girl group Flo, which gave an airy performance of βDreamloverβ; and Laufey, who kept a watchful eye on a giant prompter scrolling lyrics at the back of the room as she did βItβs Like That.β
Then there was Billy Porter, who took βAlways Be My Babyβ way over the top with wild vocal runs that made up for what they lacked in precision with β well, mostly with volume.
Carey took the stage late in the evening to give her thanks to βso many friendly and familiar faces β people Iβve worked with, people Iβve long admired, even people I thought Iβd never see again.β After her speech, Jon Batiste popped out to lead a random assortment of stars through an all-hands finale of βAll I Want for Christmas Is You,β which recently set a new record for the most weeks at No. 1 on Billboardβs Hot 100.
Charlie Puth? Gayle King? Rita Wilson? Carey looked pleased(-ish) to see each one.