Grammy Award-winning singer and former American Idol contestant Mandisa Lynn Hundley, known professionally simply as Mandisa, died at 47.

The singer competed on the show’s fifth season, finishing in ninth place. After that, she went on to have a celebrated career in Christian music.

Her cause of death is unknown. She was found dead in her home in Nashville on April 18.


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In a 2017 interview with ABC News, Mandisa opened up about her struggles with depression, saying that she contemplated suicide.

‘Even more than her music, the Platinum-selling singer will forever be known for her huge heart and sincerity,’ Christian radio station K-Love said in a statement announcing her passing.

‘Mandisa loved Jesus and used her unusually extensive platform to talk about Him at every turn. Her kindness was epic, her smile electric, her voice massive, but it was no match for the size of her heart,’ the station’s media officer, David Pierce said.

‘Mandisa struggled and was vulnerable enough to share that with us, which helped us talk about our own struggles.’

Mandisa was a native of Citrus Heights, California, and studied vocal jazz at American River College in Sacramento and music at Fisk University in Tennessee.

Her debut album, True Beauty, was released in 2007, it was her 2013 album Overcomer which won a Grammy for Best Contemporary Christian Music Album and helped to propel her into being one of the biggest Christian music stars in the country.

The singer auditioned for American Idol in 2005, citing her musical influences as being everything from Def Leppard to Whitney Houston.

During her first appearance on the show, judge Simon Cowell made several jokes about her weight saying: ‘Do we have a bigger stage this year?’

When fellow host Paula Abdul said that Mandisa’s voice sounded ‘French,’ Cowell jumped in and said that a more appropriate comparison would be to the country of France.

The joke prompted complaints from the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance.

Later in the season, Mandisa finally responded to Cowell.

‘What I want to say to you is that, yes, you hurt me and I cried and it was painful, it really was. But I want you to know that I’ve forgiven you and that you don’t need someone to apologize in order to forgive somebody,’ she said.

I figure that if Jesus could die so that all of my wrongs could be forgiven, I can certainly extend that same grace to you.’

Cowell apologized and said he was ‘humbled’ by her words.