Lola Young Returns at All Things Go Nyc After Onstage Collapse
Lola Young is set to return to all things go nyc on Sept. 25, headlining the festival’s opening night at Forest Hills Stadium in Queens after collapsing onstage there last September. The booking puts her back at the same New York City event that led to a cancellation of her North American tour and other dates.
Young framed the return in personal terms, saying, “All Things Go, we have unfinished business.” She added, “I feel blessed and ready to take it to the next level,” and, “Thank you for having me back.” For a festival that sells itself on new and returning names, that kind of comeback gives the opening night a specific narrative before a ticket is even scanned.
Forest Hills Stadium on Sept. 25
The 2026 edition runs for three days, from Sept. 25 through 27, at Forest Hills Stadium in Queens. Young will top the bill on opening night alongside Zara Larsson, while Brandi Carlile and Muna are also listed among the headliners. That makes the first night the most direct link between the festival’s current lineup and last year’s health scare.
The rest of the bill pushes the booking beyond a one-artist return. Additional performances include Carly Rae Jepsen, the Beaches, CMAT, Rebecca Black, Cara Delevingne, Jensen McRae, Hemlocke Springs, Grace Ives, Cherry Bomb, and Meg Stalter. All Things Go NYC is also one of three editions of the festival set for the same summer, with separate lineups in the Washington, D.C. area and Toronto.
Tickets Start at $99
Tickets go on sale Thursday, May 21, at 10 a.m. ET, after a presale set for May 20 at 10 a.m. ET. Single-day admission starts at $99, and three-day passes start at $225. Those price points give buyers a straightforward choice: pay for the opening-night return or commit to the full three-day run.
Young has already tied the collapse to a wider reset in her work and recovery, saying in a recent Rolling Stone cover story that the episode was “a breaking point which allowed me to then be able to be here today, allowed me to be better for my fans, better for the future, and better for myself.” She also said she paired addiction treatment with therapy and overhauled her relationship to work. The practical takeaway for festivalgoers is simple: this opening night now carries a return story, not just a lineup slot.