June 26th, 1993. Boca Raton, Florida. A baby girl is born—Ariana Grande-Butera.

No one could have known then that she would one day shatter records set by the Beatles. That her voice would be called “unlimited” by Broadway composers. That she would turn tragedy into the most-watched concert in modern history.

She started as a red-headed sidekick on a kids’ show. People underestimated her from the very beginning.

They don’t anymore.

 

She is the daughter of Joan Grande, the Brooklyn-born CEO of Hose-McCann Communications—a manufacturer of communications and safety equipment. Her father, Edward Butera, owns a graphic design firm in Boca Raton. She is of Italian descent, half Sicilian and half Abruzzese. She has an older half-brother, Frankie Grande—an entertainer and producer. And she has always been exceptionally close with her maternal grandmother, Marjorie Grande.

Her family moved from New York to Florida. Her parents separated when she was around nine or ten years old.

Even as a child, Grande performed with the Fort Lauderdale Children’s Theater. Her first role? The title character in their production of Annie. She also performed in The Wizard of Oz and Beauty and the Beast. At eight years old, she sang at a karaoke lounge on a cruise ship and performed with various orchestras—South Florida’s Philharmonic, the Florida Sunshine Pops, and symphonic orchestras.

She made her first national television appearance singing the national anthem for the Florida Panthers.

She attended Pine Crest School and later North Broward Preparatory School.

By age thirteen, she became serious about pursuing a music career. Though she still concentrated on theater, when she first arrived in Los Angeles to meet with her managers, she expressed a desire to record an R&B album.

“I was like, I want to make an R&B album,” she recalls. “They were like, um, that’s a hell of a goal. Who is going to buy a fourteen-year-old’s R&B album?”

 

In 2008, Grande was cast in the supporting role of cheerleader Charlotte in the Broadway musical 13. For this, she won a National Youth Theater Association award. When she joined the musical, she left North Broward Preparatory School but continued to be enrolled—the school sent materials so she could study with tutors. She also sang multiple times at the legendary New York City jazz club Birdland.

In 2009, she was cast in the Nickelodeon television show Victorious alongside her 13 co-star Elizabeth Gillies. The sitcom was set in a performing arts high school. Grande played the adorably dim-witted Cat Valentine.

She had to dye her hair red every other week for the role. It severely damaged her hair. Executive producer Dan Schneider didn’t want all the cast members to be brunettes—and the red hair was a feature the network felt would fit Cat’s personality.

The show premiered in March 2010 to the second-largest audience for a live-action series in Nickelodeon history: 5.7 million viewers.

The role propelled Grande to teen idol status. But she was more interested in a music career.

“Acting is fun,” she said, “but music has always been first and foremost with me.”

Her character was compared to Britney Murphy’s performance in Clueless—very impressionable, easily swayed, but generally sweet. The second season premiered in April 2011 to 6.2 million viewers, becoming the highest-rated episode of Victorious.

In 2010, she played the role of Miriam in the musical Cuba Libre, written and produced by American songwriter Desmond Child.

After the first season of Victorious wrapped, Grande wanted to focus on her music career and began working on her debut album in August 2010. To strengthen her vocal range, she began working with vocal coach Eric Vetro.

She made her first musical appearance on the track “Give It Up” on the soundtrack Victorious: Music from the Hit TV Show in August 2011.

While filming Victorious, Grande made several recordings of herself singing covers of songs by Adele, Whitney Houston, and Mariah Carey. She uploaded them to YouTube.

A friend of Republic Records CEO Monte Lipman came across one of Grande’s videos. Impressed by her vocals, he sent the links to Lipman.

She was signed to a recording contract.

 

Her first single, “Put Your Hearts Up,” was released in December 2011. It was recorded for a potential teen-oriented pop album that was never issued. She later disowned the track for its bubblegum pop sound, saying she had no interest in recording music of that genre.

The song was later certified gold by the RIAA anyway.

Also in 2011, Grande voiced the fairy princess Diaspro in thirteen episodes of the Nickelodeon version of the Italian animated television series Winx Club. She appeared in Greyson Chance’s music video for “Unfriend You,” portraying his ex-girlfriend. And she voiced the title role in the English dub of the Spanish-language animated film Snowflake: The White Gorilla.

A second soundtrack for Victorious, Victorious 2.0, was released on June 5th, 2012, as an extended play. Grande supplied vocals as part of the show’s cast for the song “Five Fingers to the Face.”

After three seasons, Victorious was not renewed. The finale aired in February 2013. The third and final Victorious soundtrack, Victorious 3.0, was released on November 6th, 2012, featuring Grande duetting with Victoria Justice on the song “L.A. Boyz.”

In December 2012, Grande collaborated on the single version of “Popular Song”—a duet with British singer and songwriter Mika. She also starred as Snow White in a pantomime-style musical theater production called A Snow White Christmas together with Charlene Tilton and Neil Patrick Harris at the Pasadena Playhouse.

She played Amanda Benson in Swindle, a 2013 Nickelodeon film adaptation of the children’s book of the same name.

Meanwhile, Nickelodeon created Sam & Cat, an iCarly and Victorious spin-off starring Jennette McCurdy and Grande. Grande and McCurdy reprised their respective roles as Cat Valentine and Sam Puckett on the buddy sitcom, which paired the characters as roommates who form an after-school babysitting business.

The pilot aired on June 8th, 2013. The show was immediately picked up. The following month, Nickelodeon doubled Sam & Cat’s original twenty-episode order for season one, making it a forty-episode season.

Despite its success in the ratings, the series was canceled after thirty-five episodes. The final episode aired on July 17th, 2014.

 

Grande recorded her first studio album, Yours Truly (originally titled Daydreamin’), over a three-year period.

It was released on August 30th, 2013, and debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 with 138,000 copies sold in its first week. Yours Truly also debuted in the top ten in several other countries, including Australia, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the Netherlands.

The lead single, “The Way,” featuring Pittsburgh rapper Mac Miller, debuted at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100, eventually peaking at number nine for two weeks.

Grande was later sued by Minder Music for copying the line “What we gotta do right here is go back, back in time” from the 1972 song “Troglodyte (Cave Man)” by The Jimmy Castor Bunch.

The album’s second single, “Baby I,” was released in July. Its third single, “Right There,” featuring Detroit rapper Big Sean, was released in August. They respectively peaked at number twenty-one and number eighty-four on the Billboard Hot 100.

Grande recorded the duet “Almost Is Never Enough” with Nathan Sykes of The Wanted, which was released as a promotional single in August 2013. She also joined Justin Bieber on his Believe Tour for three shows and kicked off her own headlining mini-tour, The Listening Sessions, the following month.

Billboard ranked Grande at number four on their list of “Music’s Hottest Minors 2013″—an annual ranking of the most popular musicians under the age of twenty-one. At the 2013 American Music Awards, she won New Artist of the Year.

She released a four-song Christmas EP, Christmas Kisses, in December 2013. Grande received the Breakthrough Artist of the Year award from the Music Business Association, recognizing her achievements throughout 2013.

 

By January 2014, Grande had begun recording her second studio album with singer-songwriter Ryan Tedder and record producers Benny Blanco and Max Martin. The same month, she earned the Favorite Breakout Artist award at the People’s Choice Awards.

In March 2014, Grande sang at the White House concert “Women of Soul: In Performance at the White House.” The following month, President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama invited Grande again to perform at the White House for the Easter Egg Roll event.

She released her second studio album, My Everything, on August 25th, 2014. It debuted atop the Billboard 200.

Its lead single, “Problem,” featured Australian rapper Iggy Azalea and premiered at the 2014 Radio Disney Music Awards on April 27th. The song debuted at number three, eventually climbing to number two on the Billboard Hot 100, and debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart—becoming Grande’s first number-one single in the United Kingdom.

The album’s second single, “Break Free,” featuring German musician and producer Zedd, peaked at number four in the United States. She performed the song as the opening of the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards and won Best Pop Video for “Problem.”

Grande and Nicki Minaj provided guest vocals on “Bang Bang,” the lead single from Jessie J’s album Sweet Talker, which peaked at number one in the UK and reached number three in the US.

With the singles “Problem,” “Break Free,” and “Bang Bang,” Grande joined Adele as the only female artists with three top-ten singles simultaneously on the Billboard Hot 100 as a lead artist.

Grande was the musical performer on Saturday Night Live with Chris Pratt as the host on September 27th, 2014. That same month, the third single from My Everything, “Love Me Harder,” featuring Canadian recording artist The Weeknd, was released and peaked at number seven in the United States. The song became her fourth top-ten single of 2014—the most by any artist that year.

In November 2014, Grande was featured in Major Lazer’s song “All My Love” from the soundtrack album for the film The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1. The same month, she released a Christmas song titled “Santa Tell Me” as a single from the reissue of her first Christmas EP, Christmas Kisses. She later released the fifth and final single from My Everything, “One Last Time,” which peaked at number thirteen in the US.

 

In February 2015, Grande embarked on her first worldwide concert tour, The Honeymoon Tour, to further promote My Everything, with shows in North America, Europe, Asia, and South America.

She was featured on Cashmere Cat’s song “Adore,” released in March 2015. In the spring, she signed an exclusive publishing contract with Universal Music Publishing Group covering her entire music catalog.

Grande also filmed an episode for the Fox Broadcasting Company reality TV series Knock Knock Live in 2015, but the show was canceled before her episode aired. She also guest-starred on several episodes of the Fox comedy horror television series Scream Queens as Sonia Herfmann, aka “Chanel #2,” from September to November 2015.

She recorded the duet “E Più Ti Penso” with Italian recording artist Andrea Bocelli, released in October 2015 as the lead single from Bocelli’s album Cinema. She covered the song “Zero to Hero,” originally from the animated film Hercules, for the compilation album We Love Disney.

Grande also released her second Christmas EP, Christmas & Chill, in December 2015.

 

Grande began recording songs for her third studio album, Dangerous Woman (originally titled Moonlight), in 2015. In October of that year, she released the single “Focus,” initially intended as the lead single from the album. The song debuted at number seven on the Billboard Hot 100.

She made a cameo appearance in the comedy film Zoolander 2, starring Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson.

In March 2016, Grande released “Dangerous Woman” as the lead single from the retitled album of the same name. The single debuted at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100, making her the first artist to have the lead single from each of her first three albums debut in the top ten.

The same month, Grande appeared as host and musical guest of Saturday Night Live, where she performed “Dangerous Woman” and debuted the promotional single “Be Alright,” which charted at number forty-three on the Billboard Hot 100. Grande garnered positive reviews for her appearance, including praise for her impressions of various singers—some of which she had done on The Tonight Show. Grande won an online voting poll on Entertainment Weekly as the best host of the season.

In May 2016, Grande appeared on The Voice season ten finale, performing the second single from the album, “Into You,” which peaked at number thirteen in the United States, and duetted with Christina Aguilera on “Dangerous Woman.”

Grande released Dangerous Woman on May 20th, 2016. It debuted at number two on the Billboard 200. It also debuted at number two in Japan and at number one in several other markets, including Australia, the Netherlands, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Mark Savage, writing for BBC News, called the album “a mature, confident record.”

At the Summertime Ball at London’s Wembley Stadium in June, Grande performed three songs from the album as part of her set.

In August, Grande released a third single from the album, “Side to Side,” featuring rapper Nicki Minaj—her eighth top-ten entry on the Hot 100, which peaked at number four. Dangerous Woman was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Album, and the title track was nominated for Best Pop Solo Performance.

In August 2016, Grande performed a tribute to the late Whitney Houston on the season finale of the ABC television series Greatest Hits and headlined the opening night of the second annual Billboard Hot 100 Music Festival, performing a nearly hour-long set of her own songs.

Aside from music, Grande filmed a commercial for T-Mobile that premiered in October 2016 and played Penny Pingleton in the NBC television broadcast Hairspray Live!, which aired in December 2016. The same month, Grande and Stevie Wonder appeared on the season finale of the US competition TV series The Voice, performing their collaboration “Faith” from the soundtrack of the 2016 animated film Sing. “Faith” was nominated for Best Original Song at the 74th Golden Globe Awards.

At the end of the year, Grande participated in the Jingle Ball Tour 2016.

 

Grande recorded the title track of the soundtrack for the 2017 live-action remake of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast with John Legend, which was released in February 2017.

The same month, Grande embarked on her third concert tour, the Dangerous Woman Tour, to promote her album.

Then came May 22nd, 2017.

Her concert at the Manchester Arena was targeted by a suicide bomber. A shrapnel-laden homemade bomb, detonated by an Islamic extremist as people were leaving the arena. Twenty-three dead. Hundreds more injured.

Grande suspended the remainder of the tour.

On June 4th, she held a televised benefit concert: One Love Manchester. It raised $23 million to aid the bombing victims and affected families. The concert featured performances from Grande as well as Liam Gallagher, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Miley Cyrus, and other artists.

To recognize her efforts, the Manchester City Council named Grande the first honorary citizen of Manchester.

The tour resumed on June 7th in Paris and ended in September 2017.

In August 2017, she appeared in an Apple Music Carpool Karaoke episode, singing musical theater songs with Seth MacFarlane. In December 2017, Billboard named her Female Artist of the Year.

 

Grande began working on songs for her fourth studio album, Sweetener, with Pharrell Williams in 2016. But the events in Manchester gave a hard reset to the project’s expectations.

She released “No Tears Left to Cry” as the lead single from Sweetener in April 2018. The song debuted at number three on the Billboard Hot 100, making Grande the only artist to have debuted the first single from each of her first four albums in the top ten of the Hot 100.

The second single, “God Is a Woman,” peaked at number eight on the Hot 100 and became Grande’s tenth top-ten single in the US.

Released in August 2018, Sweetener debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and received acclaim from critics. The album also earned Grande her first Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Album at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards.

She gave four concerts to promote the album, billed as The Sweetener Sessions, at New York City’s Irving Plaza, The Vic Theatre in Chicago, Ace Theatre in Los Angeles, and KoKo in London between August 20th and September 4th, 2018.

In October 2018, Grande participated in the NBC broadcast A Very Wicked Halloween, singing “The Wizard and I” from the musical Wicked. The following month, the BBC aired a one-hour special, Ariana Grande at the BBC, featuring interviews and performances.

 

In November 2018, Grande released the single “Thank U, Next” and announced her fifth studio album of the same name.

The song debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100—becoming Grande’s first chart-topping single in the United States. It spent seven non-consecutive weeks atop the chart. Since then, it has been certified five times platinum in the United States.

The song’s music video broke records for most-watched music video on YouTube within twenty-four hours of release and fastest Vevo video to reach 100 million views. On Spotify, the song became the fastest to reach 100 million streams (in eleven days) and the most-streamed song by a female artist in a twenty-four-hour period—with 9.6 million streams. This was later surpassed by her own song “7 Rings” with nearly 15 million streams.

Later the same month, she released, in collaboration with YouTube, a four-part docuseries: Ariana Grande: Dangerous Woman Diaries. It showed behind-the-scenes and concert footage from Grande’s Dangerous Woman Tour, including moments from the One Love Manchester concert, and followed her professional life during the tour and the making of Sweetener. The series debuted on November 29th, 2018.

 

In January 2019, it was announced that Grande would be headlining the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival. She became the youngest—and only the fourth female artist ever—to headline the festival. According to reports, she was paid $8 million for both days on which she performed.

She performed with a number of other celebrities, including NSYNC, P. Diddy, Nicki Minaj, and Justin Bieber.

Grande’s second single from Thank U, Next, “7 Rings,” was released on January 18th, 2019, and debuted at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 for the week of February 2nd—becoming her second single in a row (and overall) to top the charts. It made Grande the third female artist with multiple number-one debuts after Mariah Carey and Britney Spears, and fifth artist overall after Justin Bieber and Drake. The song broke several streaming and recording industry records, spending eight non-consecutive weeks at number one. It became Grande’s most successful song on the chart and one of the best-selling singles worldwide.

Thank U, Next was released on February 8th, 2019, and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 while receiving acclaim from critics. It broke the records for the largest streaming week for a pop album and for a female album in the United States—with 307 million on-demand streams.

Grande became the first solo artist to occupy the top three spots on the Billboard Hot 100 simultaneously—with “7 Rings” at number one, her third single “Break Up with Your Girlfriend, I’m Bored” debuting at number two, and her lead single “Thank U, Next” rising to number three. She was the overall second artist to do so, since the Beatles in 1964 when they occupied the top five spots.

In the United Kingdom, Grande became the second female solo artist to simultaneously hold the number one and two spots—and the first musical artist to replace herself at number one twice consecutively.

On February 20th, 2019, Grande won a Brit Award for International Female Solo Artist. She also embarked on her third headlining tour, The Sweetener World Tour, to promote both Sweetener and Thank U, Next, which began on March 18th, 2019.

Grande was nominated for nine awards at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards, including Top Artist. She won two awards: Billboard Chart Achievement and Top Female Artist. On May 1st, 2019, Grande performed at the event via a pre-recorded performance from her Sweetener World Tour.

 

In June 2019, Grande announced that she co-executive produced the soundtrack to Charlie’s Angels. A collaboration with Miley Cyrus and Lana Del Rey titled “Don’t Call Me Angel” was released as the lead single from the soundtrack on September 13th, 2019. It was later nominated for Best Original Song at the 24th Satellite Awards.

In August 2019, she released a single titled “Boyfriend” with pop duo Social House. Grande co-wrote singer Normani’s debut solo single “Motivation,” which was released on August 16th, 2019.

Grande won three awards at the 2019 MTV Video Music Awards, including Artist of the Year. She was nominated for twelve awards in total, including Video of the Year for “Thank U, Next.”

She was featured on the remix of American singer and rapper Lizzo’s song “Good as Hell,” released on October 25th, 2019.

By the end of the year, Billboard named Grande the most accomplished female artist to debut in the 2010s, while NME named her one of the defining music artists of the decade. She also became the most-streamed female artist of the decade. Forbes ranked her among the highest-paid celebrities in 2019 at number sixty-two.

 

In January 2020, it was announced that Grande received multiple nominations for the 2020 iHeartRadio Music Awards, including Female Artist of the Year. The following month, she made a guest appearance in the second season of the television series Kidding, which stars Jim Carrey.

On April 22nd, it was confirmed that Grande would be featured on Lady Gaga’s sixth studio album Chromatica on a track called “Rain on Me.”

On May 1st, 2020, Grande announced that she and Justin Bieber would release a collaboration song entitled “Stuck with U” on May 8th, 2020. Proceeds from the sales of the song would be donated to the First Responders Children’s Foundation.

 

Grande’s music is generally described as pop and R&B, with elements of EDM, hip-hop, and trap. The latter first appeared prominently on her Christmas & Chill EP. While maintaining her typical pop-R&B tones, she has increased incorporation of trap into her music as her career has progressed. She has worked with record producer Tommy Brown on several occasions—most notably on “7 Rings,” which helped popularize the mixing of trap songs into pop records.

Lyrically, Grande’s songs have covered a wide variety of topics: love, sex, well-being, breakups, independence, empowerment, self-love, and moving on from the past.

Her debut album Yours Truly was complimented for recreating the R&B vibe and feel of the ’90s with the help of songwriter and producer Babyface. The follow-up, My Everything, was described as an evolution from her first album, with a new sound exploring EDM and electro-pop genres.

She followed her pop-R&B sound on Dangerous Woman and was praised by the Los Angeles Times for adapting to different styles—with the reggae-pop “Side to Side,” the dance-pop-influenced “Be Alright,” and the fusion of guitar and trap on “Sometimes.”

Trap music is heavily featured on Sweetener and Thank U, Next. In Sweetener, she explored elements of hip-hop, funk, and house music with themes of love and prosperity. Elias Leight from Rolling Stone stated that “Grande embraces the sound of hard-bitten southern hip hop” on the album. Craig Jenkins from Vulture believes that Grande had changed and approached her style to “trappin’ hip hop.”

Grande has said she grew up mainly listening to urban pop and ’90s music. She has cited Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey as her major vocal influences.

“I love Mariah Carey,” she says. “She is literally my favorite human being on the planet. And of course Whitney Houston as well. As far as vocal influences go, Whitney and Mariah pretty much cover it.”

She describes Gloria Estefan as the person who inspired her to pursue a career in the music industry—after Estefan complimented a performance she saw Grande give on a cruise ship when she was eight years old. She has also cited Fergie, Destiny’s Child, Beyoncé, India.Arie, and Brandy as influences or inspirations.

She has praised Imogen Heap’s intricate song structure and cited Judy Garland as a childhood influence, admiring Garland’s ability to tell a story when she sings.

She has expressed admiration for rappers who impact the music industry without a planned release date, telling Billboard: “My dream has always been to be—obviously not a rapper—but like to put out music in the way that a rapper does. I feel like there are certain standards that pop women are held to that men aren’t. It’s just like, bro, I just want to drop music the way these boys do.”

Empowerment and self-love are recurring themes.

 

Grande has a four-octave soprano vocal range and the whistle register. With the release of Yours Truly, critics compared her to Mariah Carey because of her wide vocal range, sound, and musical material.

Julianne Escobedo Shepherd of Billboard wrote that both Carey and Grande “have the talent to let their vocals do the talking. That’s not where the similarities end—Grande is subverting it with cute, comfortable, and on-trend dresses with a feminine slant.”

Grande responded to the comparisons: “It’s a huge compliment. But when you hear my entire album, you’ll see that Mariah’s sound is much different than mine.”

Steven J. Horowitz of Billboard wrote in 2014: “With her sophomore album, the ‘Problem’ singer no longer resembles Carey—and that’s okay.”

Mark Savage commented on BBC News: “Ariana Grande is one of pop’s most intriguing and gifted singers—a magnetic performer with unrivaled vocal control.”

In The New York Times, Jon Pareles wrote that Grande’s voice “can be silky, breathy, or cutting, swooping through long melismas or jabbing out short R&B staccato notes. It’s always supple and airborne, never forced.”

Composer and playwright Jason Robert Brown addressed Grande in a 2016 Time magazine article: “No matter how much you are underestimated, you are going to open your mouth and that unbelievable sound is going to come out. That extraordinary, versatile, limitless instrument that allows you to shut down every objection and every obstacle. That voice, powered by nothing but your remarkable empathy, your ravenous intelligence, your cool discipline, and your voracious ambition.”

 

Grande cited Audrey Hepburn as her biggest style influence during her early years but began to find imitating Hepburn’s style “a little boring” as her career progressed. She also drew inspiration from actresses of the 1950s and 1960s, including Ann-Margret, Nancy Sinatra, and Marilyn Monroe.

Grande’s modest look early in her career was described as age-appropriate compared to other pop stars who grew up in the public eye. Jim Farber of the New York Daily News wrote in 2014 that Grande received less attention for how little she wears or how graphically she moves than for how she sings.

That year, she began to wear short skirts and cropped tops with knee-high boots in performances and on red carpets. After years of dyeing her hair red to play Cat Valentine, Grande wore extensions.

Aimee Donohue of MTV News argued that her iconic ponytail receives more attention than her bold fashion choices.

Although Grande drew criticism for allegedly impolite interactions with reporters and fans in 2014, she dismissed these reports as “weird, inaccurate depictions.” Rolling Stone wrote: “Some may cry diva, but it’s also Grande just taking a stand to not allow others to control her image.”

In July 2015, Grande was seen on surveillance video in a donut shop licking doughnuts that were on display and saying, “I hate Americans. I hate America. This is disgusting,” referring to a tray of doughnuts.

She apologized, writing that she is “extremely proud to be an American” and that her comments related to American obesity. She later released a video apology for “behaving poorly.” The incident was parodied by The Muppets and featured in Miley Cyrus’s Saturday Night Live cover of “My Way” about the regrets of the summer of 2015.

Grande mocked the incident herself on Saturday Night Live in 2016, saying, “A lot of kids’ stars end up doing drugs or in jail or pregnant—or get caught licking a doughnut they didn’t pay for.”

 

Journalists and celebrities such as Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, and Rita Ora commented favorably on Grande’s empowering 2015 post on Twitter decrying the double standard and misogyny in the press’s focus on female musicians’ relationships and sex lives instead of their value as individuals.

Grande noted that she has more to talk about concerning her music and accomplishments than her romantic relationships.

In 2016, Elle writer Kendall Fisher called her a “feminist hero” in an essay examining Grande’s feminist statements. The same year, Grande was listed among Time’s 100 Most Influential People in the World. She was listed again in 2019.

She received praise for her grace and strength in organizing, posting, and performing at the One Love Manchester benefit concert. Madeleine Roth of MTV News wrote that the performance “bolstered courage among an audience that desperately needed it. Returning to the stage was a true act of bravery and resilience.”

New York magazine’s Vulture section ranked the event as the number-one concert of 2017.

Also in 2017, Mitchell Harrison of Billboard called Grande a “gay icon” for her LGBT-friendly lyrics, performances, and support for the LGBTQ community. The same year, Celia Almeida wrote an article for Miami New Times and believes that “of all the biggest pop stars of the past twenty years, Grande has made the most convincing transition from ingénue to independent female artist.”

 

All five of Grande’s full-length albums have been certified platinum or higher by the RIAA. She has amassed over 50 billion streams on platforms like YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Music. She is the most followed woman on YouTube and the most listened-to woman on Spotify.

She has won one Grammy Award out of eleven nominations, one Brit Award, five MTV Video Music Awards, three MTV Europe Music Awards, and three American Music Awards. She has received twenty-two Billboard Music Award nominations, winning two in 2019, including Top Female Artist.

Grande won a 2014 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Award for Favorite TV Actress for her performance on Sam & Cat. In 2014, she received the Breakthrough Artist of the Year award from the Music Business Association for excellence during her debut year. At the Bambi Awards, she received the award for Best Newcomer.

She has also received six iHeartRadio Music Awards, including the 2014 Young Influencer Award, as well as Pop Album of the Year for Sweetener and Artist of the Year in 2019. She received the Billboard Women in Music Rising Star award for her accomplishments in 2014. She has won twelve Teen Choice Awards.

In 2018, Billboard named her Woman of the Year.

 

Grande has achieved numerous milestones and records on the Billboard Hot 100.

She has ten top-ten debuts, starting with her first single, “The Way,” which debuted at number ten in 2013. From then on, all her lead singles from each of her studio albums debuted in the top ten—making her the only artist in history to do so.

In 2019, Grande became the first artist in history to have her first two number-one singles—”Thank U, Next” and “7 Rings”—debut at number one.

With the release of Sweetener, Grande charted nine songs from the album alongside charting her collaborative single “Bed” with Nicki Minaj. With ten songs in total, Grande became the fourth female artist to chart at least ten songs on the Billboard Hot 100, behind Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, and Cardi B. She would later break this record after the release of Thank U, Next, in which she charted all twelve songs. Eleven of the twelve songs charted within the top forty, making Grande the female artist with the most songs charting in the top forty simultaneously, surpassing Cardi B’s record of nine songs.

The three singles from Thank U, Next—”7 Rings,” “Break Up with Your Girlfriend, I’m Bored,” and “Thank U, Next”—charted at numbers one, two, and three respectively on the week of February 23rd, 2019. This made Grande the first solo artist in history to occupy the top three spots of the Billboard Hot 100 and the first artist to do so since the Beatles in 1964.

This wasn’t the first time Grande had three songs in the top ten simultaneously—she achieved this back in 2014 when “Bang Bang,” “Break Free,” and “Problem” all charted in the top ten at numbers ten, four, and seven respectively.

Grande has also broken records with her albums. Most notably, with the release of Thank U, Next, Grande set the record for the largest streaming week for a pop album with 307 million on-demand audio streams. She has the largest streaming week for both a pop album and for a female artist.

 

Grande has a massive following on social media.

By February 2020, her YouTube channel had accrued more than 40 million subscribers, and her music videos had been viewed a total of more than 16 billion times. Her Spotify profile had accumulated more than 40 million followers, ranking her as the third most followed artist and most followed woman on Spotify.

Her Instagram account had accumulated more than 175 million followers, ranking her as the second most followed person and most followed woman on Instagram. Her Twitter account had more than 70 million followers, making it the tenth most followed Twitter account. Her Facebook page had more than 30 million likes.

 

At the age of ten, Grande co-founded the South Florida youth singing group Kids Who Care, which performed for charitable fundraising events and raised over $500,000 for charities in 2007 alone.

In 2009, as a member of the charitable organization Broadway in South Africa, Grande—along with her brother Frankie—performed and taught music and dance to children in Gugulethu, South Africa.

She was featured with Bridgit Mendler and Kat Graham in Seventeen magazine in a 2013 public campaign to end online bullying called “Delete Digital Drama.” After watching the film Blackfish that year, she urged fans to stop supporting SeaWorld.

In September 2014, Grande participated in the charitable Stand Up to Cancer television program, performing her song “My Everything” in memory of her grandfather, who had died of cancer that July.

Grande has adopted several rescue dogs as pets and promoted pet adoption at some of her concerts.

In 2016, she launched with M·A·C Cosmetics a line of lip shades called “Ariana Grande’s M·A·C Viva Glam,” the profits of which benefit people affected by HIV and AIDS.

In 2015, Grande and Miley Cyrus performed a cover of Crowded House’s “Don’t Dream It’s Over” as part of Cyrus’s Backyard Sessions, to benefit her Happy Hippie Foundation, which helps homeless and LGBTQ youth. Later that year, Grande headlined the “Dance on the Pier” event, part of LGBT Pride Week in New York City.

In 2016, Grande joined Madonna to raise funds for orphaned children in Malawi.

That same year, Grande and Victoria Monét recorded “Better Days” in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

To aid the victims of the Manchester Arena bombing, Grande organized the One Love Manchester concert, donated the re-release of “One Last Time” and her live performance of “Over the Rainbow” at the concert, and released a live album of the concert. The total amount raised was reportedly $23 million (£17 million).

In September 2017, Grande performed in a concert for Charlottesville, benefiting the victims of the August 2017 white nationalists rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

In March 2018, she participated in March for Our Lives to support gun control legislation.

Grande donated the proceeds from the first show in Atlanta on her Sweetener World Tour to Planned Parenthood, in response to a number of anti-abortion laws being passed in several states, including Georgia.

During the 2019–2020 coronavirus pandemic, Grande donated $500 and $1,000 to a number of fans individually as financial support using Venmo. Grande also became one of the individuals to support the initiative including the COVID-19 fund named Project 100, to provide $1,000 digital payments to 100,000 families who have been greatly impacted during the pandemic.

On May 1st, 2020, Grande announced that with the release of her collaboration with Justin Bieber, “Stuck with U,” all net proceeds from the song’s streams and sales would be donated to the First Responders Children’s Foundation to fund grants and scholarships for children of frontline workers during the global pandemic.

In May 2020, Grande joined a Los Angeles protest for the death of George Floyd—after posting multiple times on her social media about injustice and asking her fans to sign a petition condemning the Minneapolis Police for the killing. Among listing resources, she highlighted white privilege and stated in her post that “there needs to be more activism outside social media.”

 

In October 2014, it was announced that Grande would join the bottled water brand WAT-AAH as an equity holder and partner.

In November 2015, she released a limited-edition handbag in collaboration with Coach. In January 2016, she launched a makeup collection with M·A·C Cosmetics, donating 100 percent of proceeds to the M·A·C AIDS Fund.

In February 2016, Grande launched a fashion line with Lipsy London. Later that year, she teamed up with the company Brookstone, using the concept art of artist Wenqing Yan to create cat ear headphones.

In September 2017, she became a brand ambassador for Reebok. In August 2018, she partnered with American Express for The Sweetener Sessions—a partnership which continued for the Sweetener World Tour in 2019, alongside a partnership with T-Mobile.

In March 2019, she partnered with Starbucks for the launch of the Cloud Macchiato beverage.

In May 2019, Grande was announced as the face of Giambattista Valli’s fall/winter campaign. The campaign was released in July and generated $25.13 million in media impact value.

Beats, Samsung, Fiat, Reebok, and guest products have been featured in Grande’s music videos. She has appeared in commercials for Macy’s, T-Mobile, and Apple, as well as for her own fragrances.

Grande has released seven fragrances with Lux Brands since 2015. She launched her debut fragrance, “Ari by Ariana Grande,” in 2015. After the success of the fragrance, she launched her second fragrance, “Sweet Like Candy,” in 2016. Her third fragrance, “Moonlight,” was launched in 2017. Her latest fragrances, “Cloud” and “Thank U, Next,” launched in 2018 and 2019, respectively. The collection also includes the limited-edition fragrances “Frankie” and “Sweet Like Candy (Limited Edition).”

The collection grossed over $150 million in global sales by 2017. Her fragrances have won The Fragrance Foundation Award multiple times, most recently in 2019 with “Cloud.”

 

Grande has stated that she is hypoglycemic.

She has also said that she has post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and anxiety following the Manchester Arena bombing. She commented on her social media that she almost pulled out of her performance in the 2018 broadcast A Very Wicked Halloween due to anxiety.

Grande also stated she has been in therapy for over a decade—first seeing a mental health professional shortly after her parents divorced.

Grande was raised a Roman Catholic but abandoned Catholicism during the pontificate of Pope Benedict XVI, citing opposition to the Church’s stance on homosexuality, noting that her half-brother Frankie is gay. She has followed Kabbalah teachings since the age of twelve, along with Frankie, believing the basis lies in the idea that “if you’re kind to others, good things will happen to you.”

Several of her songs, such as “Break Your Heart Right Back,” are supportive of LGBT rights.

In November 2019, Grande endorsed Senator Bernie Sanders’s second presidential bid.

 

Grande met actor Graham Phillips in the cast of the musical 13 in 2008 and dated him until 2011.

After recording “The Way” with Mac Miller in 2012, the two began dating in 2016. They collaborated on the single “My Favorite Part,” released in September 2016 on Miller’s 2016 album The Divine Feminine. The relationship ended by May 2018.

On September 7th, 2018, Miller died due to an accidental drug overdose. Grande expressed grief over his death on social media, calling Miller “my dearest friend.”

In May 2018, Grande began dating actor and comedian Pete Davidson. In June 2018, Davidson announced that he and Grande were engaged. The two called off their engagement and ended their relationship in October 2018.

 

From a red-haired sidekick on a children’s television show to the first solo artist since the Beatles to hold the top three spots on the Billboard Hot 100.

From a fifteen-year-old girl being told “who is going to buy a fourteen-year-old’s R&B album?” to a $1.7 billion fragrance empire and the most-watched Super Bowl halftime show of all time.

From the darkest night in Manchester to standing on a stage twenty-three days later, singing “Over the Rainbow” with tears streaming down her face, raising $23 million for the families of the dead.

She could have stopped. She could have retreated. She could have let the trauma define her.

Instead, she turned it into the most remarkable second act of her generation.

Ariana Grande was born on June 26th, 1993, in Boca Raton, Florida.

She is not done yet.