| |
Britney
Jean Spears, 2 December 1981,
Kentwood, Louisiana, USA. One of the
last teenage pop superstars of the
20th century, Spears enjoyed her
breakthrough success at the end of
1998. She appeared in local dance
revues and church choirs as a young
girl, and at the age of eight
auditioned for The Mickey Mouse
Club. Although she was too young to
join the series, a producer on the
show gave her an introduction to a
New York agent. She subsequently
spent three summers at the
Professional Performing Arts School
Center. She appeared in a number of
off-Broadway productions as a child
actor, including
Ruthless
(1991). She returned to the
Walt
Disney
Channel for a spot on
The Mickey Mouse Club,
where she was featured for two years
between the ages of 11 and 13. She
began to audition for pop bands in
the New York area, her demo tapes
eventually landing on the desk of
Jive Records'
Jeff Fenster. "Her vocal ability and
commercial appeal caught me right
away," he recalls...>>>
Book Britney Spears for Your Event
Spears was expensively groomed by
Jive, who put her in the studio with
Eric Foster White (producer and
writer for
Boyzone,
Whitney Houston
and others). They employed top R&B
writer Max Martin (of Backstreet
Boys fame) to produce her debut
single, "... Baby, One More Time',
and an album of the same title. They
also set up a promotional free phone
number where fans could listen to
Spears' music and interviews
throughout the summer of 1998. She
toured American venues for a series
of concerts sponsored by US teen
magazines, eventually joining
"N Sync on
tour. The careful planning paid off
when her debut album and single went
on to top the American charts at the
start of 1999. The album and single
enjoyed similar success in the UK
and Europe. The ballad "Sometimes"
and the funky "(You Drive Me) Crazy"
were also substantial transatlantic
hits, and "Born To Make You Happy"
topped the UK charts in January
2000.
By
now Spears had become a bona fide
media sensation, although the
discrepancy between her professed
sexual innocence and her titilating
image (notably dressing as a
schoolgirl for the video to "...
Baby, One More Time"), was the cause
for much debate about her status as
a role model for teenage girls. Her
success also prompted the emergence
of a new wave of teen divas, notably
Christina Aguilera,
Jessica Simpson
and Pink. The demand for new Spears
material was satisfied when her
second album,
Oops! ... I Did It
Again, was released in May
2000. The album contained the
expected quota of well-produced,
expertly crafted pop songs,
including the title track, "Lucky",
"Stronger" and "Don't Let Me Be The
Last To Know", alongside a risible
cover version of "(I Can't Get No)
Satisfaction'. The singer's
relationship with
"N Sync's
Justin
Timberlake meant she was rarely out
of the public eye, although Spears
was still rather half-heartedly
preaching abstinence until marriage.
Spears' self-titled third album was
a laboured attempt to cultivate a
more mature approach, with the
singer also going a long way towards
shedding her puritanical image.
Although its initial sales were not
as strong as her previous two
albums,
Britney
shot straight to the top of the US
album chart on its release in
November 2001 for a brief stay.
Spears' mainstream film debut,
Crossroads,
was released the following February
to a rousing chorus of critical
disapproval. Her fourth album saw
Spears moving further away from teen
pop, disposing of the services of
Max Martin and cultivating a
sexually charged adult image at odds
with the flirtatious schoolgirl of
her earlier albums. The album,
released in November 2003, included
a collaboration with
Madonna
on "Me Against The Music" (the two
singers had raised some eyebrows by
snogging on stage at the MTV Video
Music awards in August). Despite
mixed reviews,
In The Zone
debuted at the top of the US charts.
Spears also notched up her fourth UK
number one single when "Toxic"
topped the charts in March 2004.
>>>
Book Britney Spears for Your Event
|