1999 MTV Video Music Awards

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1999 MTV Video Music Awards

The 1999 MTV Video Music Awards, which took place on September 9, 1999 (informally known as the 9/9/99 MTV Video Music Awards), honored the best music videos released between June 13, 1998, and June 11, 1999.[1] The ceremony was hosted by Chris Rock and held at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City.[2] Lauryn Hill was the biggest winner of the night, earning four awards,[3][4] including the prestigious Video of the Year for "Doo Wop (That Thing)", making it the first hip-hop video to win in that category.[5][6] Ricky Martin won two competitive awards for "Livin’ la Vida Loca": Best Pop Video and Best Dance Video.[7] In addition, he received three International Viewer's Choice Awards, which were presented at the ceremony.[8] Other notable winners included Korn, TLC, and Eminem.

Quick Facts Date, Location ...
1999 MTV Video Music Awards
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DateThursday, September 9, 1999
LocationMetropolitan Opera House, New York City
CountryUnited States
Hosted byChris Rock
Most awardsLauryn Hill (4)
Most nominationsRicky Martin and Korn (9 each)
Websitehttp://www.mtv.com/vma/1999/ 
Television/radio coverage
NetworkMTV
Produced bySalli Frattini
Dave Sirulnick
Directed byBeth McCarthy
 1998 · MTV Video Music Awards · 2000 
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Highlights of the show included Diana Ross jiggling Lil' Kim's exposed breast in response to her outfit, which left her entire left breast uncovered, but for a small pastie on her nipple. The mothers of slain rappers Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G., Afeni Shakur and Voletta Wallace, came together to present the Best Rap Video Award. The Beastie Boys' Adam Horovitz made a plea for peace in the wake of the sexual assaults at Woodstock '99. Near the end of the night, MTV staged a tribute to Madonna, the most-nominated artist in VMA history, by presenting a host of male drag performers dressed as the singer in her past music videos. Rapper DMX was scheduled to perform but was a no-show; as a result, Jay-Z's solo set was extended. Another moment of the ceremony was the debut of Britney Spears performing her debut single "...Baby One More Time", and then, NSYNC, performed their song "Tearin' Up My Heart".

As Backstreet Boys came up and accepted their award for Viewer's Choice, a stranger came onto the stage and said, "Wake up at 3". This person was later revealed to be John Del Signore, who crashed the ceremony in a failed attempt to sell Viacom a show idea.[9]

The awards show featured a line-up of sponsors and cross-promotions, most notably with SEGA, as the date of the show also coincided with the launch of their Dreamcast game console.

Background

After scouting locations in both New York and Los Angeles, MTV announced in May that the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards would be held at New York's Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center.[10] (MTV's traditional New York venue, Radio City Music Hall, was closed for renovations at the time.) Comedian Chris Rock was announced as the ceremony's host on June 30.[11] Nominations were announced at a press conference hosted by Rock, Carson Daly, and Ricky Martin and held at Lincoln Center on July 28.[12] For the first time, the ceremony was promoted with a "VMA Week" on Total Request Live, which would continue annually until that program's cancellation in 2008. The ceremony broadcast was preceded by the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards Opening Act. Hosted by Kurt Loder and Serena Altschul with reports from Chris Connelly, Carson Daly, Ananda Lewis, and John Norris, the broadcast featured red carpet interviews, a pre-taped interview with Trent Reznor, pre-taped features on Britney Spears' outfit selection and testing various singers' vocal ability to shatter glass, and performances from Smash Mouth and Blink-182.

Performances

Main show

Presenters

Pre-show

Main show

Winners and nominees

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Perspective

Winners are listed first and highlighted in bold.

More information Video of the Year, Best Male Video ...
Video of the Year Best Male Video
Best Female Video Best Group Video
Best New Artist in a Video Best Pop Video
Best Rock Video Best R&B Video
Best Rap Video Best Hip-Hop Video
Best Dance Video Best Video from a Film
Breakthrough Video Best Direction in a Video
Best Choreography in a Video Best Special Effects in a Video
Best Art Direction in a Video Best Editing in a Video
Best Cinematography in a Video Best Artist Website
Viewer's Choice International Viewer's Choice: MTV Australia
International Viewer's Choice: MTV Brasil International Viewer's Choice: MTV India
International Viewer's Choice: MTV Korea International Viewer's Choice: MTV Latin America (North)
International Viewer's Choice: MTV Latin America (South) International Viewer's Choice: MTV Mandarin
International Viewer's Choice: MTV Russia International Viewer's Choice: MTV Southeast Asia
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Artists with multiple wins and nominations

More information Wins, Artist ...
Artists who received multiple awards
Wins Artist
5 Ricky Martin
4 Lauryn Hill
3 Fatboy Slim
2 Korn
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See also

References

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