The Recording Academy’s official Grammy after-party—known as the Grammy Celebration—is traditionally an over-the-top affair, taking over a cavernous space within the west hall of the Los Angeles Convention Center (conveniently adjacent to the ceremony's home at the Staples Center) for about 5,500 guests. Underscoring the party’s feeling of hugeness on Sunday was this year’s theme: an interpretive twist on a circus. The Recording Academy’s Branden Chapman, Rex Supa, and Clay Upton worked with Along Came Mary to produce the spectacle (which began loading in Tuesday), backed by a giant team that included Wolfgang Puck for catering and Angel City Designs for decor.
“Everyone always asks me where I get my inspiration [for the party], and every year it changes,” said Chapman, the Recording Academy's vice president of production and process management. “A lot of people have asked me what I do as a producer, and I have described myself as a three-ring circus leader, [since] I have a bird’s-eye perspective, looking around at every detail and making sure everything runs smoothly. Plus, based on some of the concert tours this year—like Pink’s and Britney Spears’s—we decided this year’s natural theme was surreal circus.” Chapman put the scale and budget on par with past events.
“It was a circus theme but not in the true sense of the word—like a circus in the '30s, with a bit of a mysteriousness, a bit of a dark side to it,” said Along Came Mary’s Mary Micucci of the look, which included hay for seating and vintage-look circus posters. Acrobats, stilt walkers, and contortionists roamed the space, and additional acts performed in each of the three-ring-style stages. “It’s challenging when you’re dealing with a space that large—75,000 square feet, or three football fields—to make it feel roomy but intimate.”
Wolfgang Puck’s vast menu included all-American stations (herb-crusted rack of lamb with rosemary-mint jus, pan-roasted chicken with natural jus, garlic potato puree and shrimp Louie with avocado panna cotta); Asian stations (garlic candy shrimp with jasmine rice, Chinese chicken salad with crispy wontons and sesame honey dressing); New Orleans-inspired stations (gumbo ya-ya with chicken, shrimp and andouille sausage, whipped yams with vanilla bourbon butter and spicy candied pecans and slow braised collard greens with Tabasco fried onions), and an iced seafood station (chilled shrimp and crab claws, cocktail sauce, and spicy mustard).
Sweets included chocolate truffle cakes, caramel apple tarts, devil's food cupcakes with marshmallow frosting, caramel popcorn balls, lemon meringue tarts, and cotton candy. Patrón Tequila, Ultimat Vodka, Pyrat Rum, Forest Glen Wines, Domaine Laurier Champagne, Anheuser-Busch Beer, and Pepsi provided the beverages.
Puck used locally grown produce, dairy, and meat, plus environmentally sustainable packaging—compostable, biodegradable, and recyclable products—as part of the Recording Academy’s ongoing eco-friendly initiatives. Leftover food went to Angel Harvest.
Sam Moore, Ne-Yo, and DJ Mick Boogie performed on stage in the main space. A second event space within the party, Petree Hall, served as a jazz lounge with a design that evoked a fun house. The Jon Batiste Band and the Grammy Jazz Ensembles performed there.
Sponsor integrations included the MasterCard stage and MasterCard Jazz Lounge; a display of Hard Rock memorabilia, including a fedora from Michael Jackson and a clown costume from Madonna; and a lounge sponsored by Waste Management, which also collected all recyclable materials. “We continue to challenge ourselves to be more green year after year," Chapman said. "Every year we’re looking into making things more recyclable, sustainable, reusable."
A view of the circus-style Grammy Celebration
Photo: Line 8 Photography
The Recording Academy's official Grammy after-party, known as the Grammy Celebration, had a circus theme with an edge, and included an array of performers from Lucent Dossier Experience.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Fabric-covered hay bales served as stylized seating.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
A raw seafood bar was among Wolfgang Puck's vast catering stations.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Sequined cloths topped tables.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
An army of aerialists and performers from Lucent Dossier Experience entertained the crowd.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
A clown on a unicycle from Lucent Dossier Experience was among the performers.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Vintage-looking trucks and circus posters decorated the 75,000-square-foot hall.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
Fabric strips radiated from a central decor piece that hung overhead.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
About 5,500 guests dined at traditional tables, plus highboys and hay-bale seating.
Photo: Line 8 Photography
A giant clown face formed the entrance to the jazz lounge in Petree Hall.
Photo: Line 8 Photography