Times Colonist

Mendes, Eninem among MTV winners

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — Shawn Mendes beat Taylor Swift and Ed Sheeran to win the best-artist prize Sunday at the MTV EMAs, while U2 were proclaimed global icons in a show that celebrated London’s diverse culture, from pubs to pirate radio.

Mendes, the 19-year-old Canadian star, also won the best-song trophy for There’s Nothing Holdin’ Me Back, to the delight of fans standing in a polite onstage mosh-pit at the city’s SSE Arena. Fittingly, he also took the prize for best fans.

The show, formerly known as the MTV Europe Music Awards, opened with a clip of Eminem performing his new single Walk on Water in a London pub. He then emerged onstage in jeans and a black hoodie to perform the slow-burning number live, with Skylar Gray filling in on the duet duties Beyoncé performed on the recording.

Eminem was also named best hip-hop artist, and proclaimed surprise.

“I don’t know how I got this because I haven’t had an album out in a few years,” he said.

Sunday marked the awards’ return to London for the first time since 1996, and locally bred singer Rita Ora was a suitably chipper host. Taking the stage clad in a bathrobe and towel, she kept things moving, changed outfits every few minutes and gamely joshed in video clips with the stars of pirate-radio sitcom People Just Do Nothing.

The show featured plenty of visual dazzle, from the 50 dancers accompanyi­ng Demi Lovato on Sorry Not Sorry and Tell Me You Love Me to the giant animatroni­c bird carrying Travis Scott onto the stage.

Singer Camila Cabello, who won the best-pop prize, performed Havana with a troupe of dancers dressed as bathing beauties around a realistic projection of a pool. London grime artist Stormzy arrived in a police car and left in a blaze of fireworks after performing the rousing Big For Your Boots.

Performers ranged across genres and generation­s, and included singer-songwriter Kesha, electronic act Clean Bandit, rapper French Montana, rockers the Killers and former One Direction heartthrob Liam Payne.

Kendrick Lamar won best video for Humble, a lavish clip laced with religious and art-history imagery.

Coldplay was named best rock act, while the best-alternativ­e prize went to Thirty Seconds to Mars.

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