Trevor Noah to Host Grammys for the Sixth and Final Time
Trevor Noah will executive produce and host his sixth consecutive Grammys, becoming the first to do so since Andy Williams in the 1970s, before stepping down.
- The Recording Academy announced Trevor Noah will return one final time to host the Feb. 1 Grammys, marking his sixth consecutive year and serving as executive producer.
- Noah began hosting amid the COVID-19 pandemic and continued his run, with Ben Winston praising him as `the most phenomenal host of the show`; Noah will not pursue Andy Williams' record of seven telecasts.
- The telecast will air live from Crypto.com Arena, Los Angeles on Sunday, Feb. 1 at 8 PM ET/5 PM ET on CBS Television Network and stream on Paramount+, running three and a half hours.
- A four-time Grammy nominee, Trevor Noah is up this year for `Into The Uncut Grass`, as Kendrick Lamar leads with nine nods and Lady Gaga has seven.
- The CBS run ends with this telecast, which will also stream on Paramount+; the Grammys have aired on CBS since 1973, with a 10-year deal with Disney starting next year.
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97 Articles
This year, the South African comedian will bid farewell to the Academy of Recording awards after six years of hosting the awards
Trevor Noah set to host Grammy Awards in 2026
Trevor Noah is officially returning to the Grammy Awards stage for what has been billed as his "final" turn as host. The Recording Academy and CBS confirmed that the Emmy Award-winning comedian will host the 2026 Grammy Awards on Sunday, February 1, marking his sixth consecutive appearance as master of ceremonies. In addition to hosting, Noah will once again serve as an executive producer of the broadcast. The ceremony will take place at the Cry…
The comedian will return to present the music awards ceremony for the last time
Trevor Noah will host the Grammy Awards for the sixth consecutive year, but this time it's being billed as a farewell show. The Recording Academy announced that the South African comedian will return "one last time" for the February 1st show, where he will also serve as executive producer. Only singer Andy Williams, who hosted the Grammys seven times in the 1970s, has hosted more. Noah, a four-time Grammy nominee, is nominated this year for Best…
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