Who is Mae Muller? UK's Eurovision 2023 entry revealed
The pop star will perform break-up track I Wrote a Song at the grand final in Liverpool
Watch: Mae Muller to perform at Eurovision 2023
Rising pop star Mae Muller is preparing to represent the UK at the Eurovision Song Contest.
The 25-year-old Londoner will perform break-up banger I Wrote a Song at the pop extravaganza in Liverpool on Saturday, 13 May.
As Eurovision 2023 draws closer, here's everything you need to know about Mae Muller.
Who is Mae Muller?
The singer-songwriter, whose real name is Holly Mae Muller, was born in Kentish Town, north-west London, in 1997 – the year the UK last won Eurovision.
She grew up listening to iconic artists such as Prince, Sade and Simon & Garfunkel, and has described herself as a natural performer from a young age. "I have been an attention [seeker] since I was two," she told the Private Parts podcast. "Every Christmas or family thing, I was like, 'I want to put on a show. Everyone sit down, I wanna sing for you'."
Read more: When is Eurovision 2023?
Muller had her first brush with the pop industry aged just nine, when when she appeared in the music video for Mika's 2007 hit Grace Kelly. The song topped the charts for five weeks straight and was the year's third best-selling single (behind Leona Lewis' Bleeding Love and Rihanna's Umbrella). She said: "It was my favourite song ever, so that just made it even cooler, as a nine-year-old."
She was 19 when she wrote her first track, Close, which was produced by a family friend and "paid" for with wine in lieu of money. The musician uploaded her early demos to Instagram and Soundcloud, and signed her first publishing deal when she was working in a pub in Kentish Town.
"From there it just kind of snowballed," she told Glamour. "I started getting into sessions and just making more and more music and working on improving my writing skills." Muller's debut EP After Hours, released in early 2018, drew influence from female stars including Gwen Stefani, Florence Welch and Lily Allen.
She has since worked with chart-topping acts including girl group Little Mix, rapper Aitch and music producer and DJ Sigala. Her breakout hit was 2021's Better Days, a collaboration with Swedish group Neiked and US rapper Polo G which went viral on TikTok, which peaked at 32 on the UK charts and at 23 in the US.
Eurovision attracts a huge global TV audience but thankfully Muller already has experience playing in front of large crowds, which should help steady her nerves during the grand final.
She supported both Little Mix and One Direction's Liam Payne on tour, and has performed on The Voice US and The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon. She has also played at some of Britain's biggest music festivals, including Reading and Leeds and the Isle of White Festival.
Away from music, Muller will make her acting debut later this year with a role in British action-thriller Gassed Up, directed by George Amponsah.
What's her Eurovision song about?
Mae Muller's I Wrote a Song is an upbeat break-up track which features tongue-in-cheek lyrics about a cheating ex-boyfriend. The song was written when she was "going through a hard time" and "wanted to feel empowered about relationships".
Over a propulsive dance beat, Muller sings: "I could've cried at home/And spent the night alone/Instead I wrote a song/I feel much better now." She penned the track with two prolific songwriters: Karen Poole, who has worked with the likes of Kylie Minogue and Lily Allen, and Brit nominee Lewis Thompson.
Read more: How many times has the UK won Eurovision?
Muller, the UK's first female Eurovision entry since 2018, will hope to replicate – or even surpass – the success of Sam Ryder, who finished second with his song Space Man last year. She was picked as this year's hopeful after an "extensive search" by the BBC and music management firm TaP Music, which has counted Dua Lipa, Lana Del Rey and Ellie Goulding among its clients.
Muller said she was "so excited" to take part in the contest, which will be held in Liverpool on behalf of war-torn Ukraine. "I've loved watching Eurovision all my life, so to compete in such a massive music competition is simply brilliant," she said. "I'm a huge fan of so many of the artists that have found success at Eurovision, from ABBA to Maneskin."