Blue Ivy Carter drank from her Grammy statue with a straw

Blue Ivy Carter celebrated her big Grammy win on Sunday with a jeweled crown on her head and a straw to sip out of her gold statuette, a page removed right from her father Jay-Z’s book.

The photos of Blue and Jay-Z are almost indistinguishable, honoring 2013 photographs of the rapper drinking cognac out of his awards. The 51-year-old Brooklyn native has amassed 23 other Grammys throughout the years.

Presently, making history, Blue is the second-youngest winner to get a Grammy at only 9 years of age for Best Music Video for “Brown Skin Girl,” and she might be coming for her mother Beyoncé’s record.

In a video montage shared with her almost 170 million followers, Beyoncé shared pictures of every last bit of her Grammy prevails upon the years — breaking the record for the most-awarded female artist taking all things together 63 years of the award show. Toward the finish of the clip, we get a brief look at the playful side to her oldest kid.

The singer, 39, first shared a snap of Blue Ivy from the music video prior to sharing photographs of her daughter presenting with her first Grammy. In true, Queen B fashion, her crown shows she’s the heir to the new throne.

While Blue wasn’t at the Grammys to give her very own speech, mom tried to salute her daughter while tolerating her success for the best R&B Performance for “Black Parade.”

“Thank you guys so much . . . It has been such a difficult time so I wanted to uplift, encourage, and celebrate all of the beautiful Black queens and kings that continue to inspire me and inspire the whole world,” she gushed to the crowd. “Congratulations, Blue. She won a Grammy tonight. I’m so proud of you, and I’m so honored to be your mommy.”

Beyoncé has shared how significant “Brown Skin Girl” is to her and the representation of women of color. In a proclamation to “Good Morning America,” she shared, “It was so important to me in ‘Brown Skin Girl’ that we represented all different shades of brown. We wanted every character to be shot in a regal light . . . It was important that we are all in this together, and we’re all celebrating each other.”

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