
Britney Spears biography
More than any other single artist, Britney
Spears was the driving force behind the return of teen pop in the
late '90s. The blockbuster success of
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the Spice
Girls and Backstreet
Boys certainly paved the way for her own commercial breakthrough,
but Spears
didn't just become a star -- she was a bona fide pop phenomenon. Not only did
she sell millions of records, she was a media fixture regardless of what she
was (or wasn't) doing; among female singers of the era (many of whom followed
in her footsteps), her celebrity star power was rivaled
only by Jennifer
Lopez. From the outset, Spears'
sex appeal was an important part of her image; the video for her debut single,
"...Baby One More Time," outfitted her in full Catholic-school
regalia, and sent her well on the way to becoming an international sex symbol.
Yet Spears'
handlers seemed to be trying to have it both ways -- there was a definite
tension between the wholesome innocence Spears
tried to project for her female audience, and the titillating sexuality that
enticed so many male fans. Those marketing tactics made
Spears a somewhat controversial figure, the subject of endless debates concerning appropriate role models for
teenage girls. Early on, Spears tried to defuse the controversy
by preaching abstinence until marriage, and even denied that she
was consciously cultivating
such a sexualized image. Of course,
the more provocative and revealing her on-stage wardrobe became, the less
plausible that claim
seemed. But apart from her ability to tiptoe the line between virginal coquette
and brazen tart, Spears
had a secret weapon in Swedish pop mastermind Max Martin,
who had a hand in the vast majority of her hits as a writer and/or producer.
With Martin
crafting the sort of contemporary dance-pop and sentimental ballads that made
stars of the
Backstreet Boys, Spears
kept on delivering the goods commercially, as her first three albums all topped
the charts.
Britney Jean
Spears was born December 2, 1982, in the small town of
Spears
entered the studio with top writer/producers like Eric Foster White (Boyzone,
Whitney
Houston, Backstreet
Boys) and Max Martin
(Ace of Base,
Backstreet
Boys, *NSYNC).
In late 1998, Jive released her debut single, the Martin-penned
"...Baby One More Time." Powered by its video, in which Spears
and a troupe of dancers were dressed as Catholic-school jailbait, the single
shot to the top of the Billboard charts. When Spears'
debut album of the same title was released in early 1999, it entered the charts
at number one and stayed there for six weeks. Once the ubiquitous lead single
died down, the album kept spinning off hits: the Top Ten "(You Drive Me)
Crazy," the near-Top 20 ballad "Sometimes," and the Top 20
"From the Bottom of My Broken Heart." By the end of 1999, ...Baby One More Time had sold ten million copies, and
went on to sell a good three million more on top of that. Its success touched
off a wave of young pop divas that included Christina
Aguilera, Pink,
Jessica
Simpson, and Mandy Moore.
Spears
was a superstar, drooled over in countless magazines, including a Rolling Stone
cover that prompted immediate speculation about the still-17 year old having
gotten breast implants.
By the time ...Baby One More Time finally started to lose steam on the singles and album charts, Spears was ready to release her follow-up. Oops!...I Did It Again appeared in the spring of 2000, and the title track was an instant smash, racing into the Top Ten. The album entered the charts at number one and sold over a million copies in its first week of release, setting a new record for single-week sales by a female artist. Follow-up singles included "Lucky," the gold-selling "Stronger," and "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know," which was co-written by country diva Shania Twain
and her producer Mutt Lange. A year after its release, Oops!...I Did It Again had sold over nine million copies. Rumors that Spears was dating *N Sync heartthrob (and fellow ex-Mouseketeer) Justin Timberlake were eventually confirmed, which only added to the media attention lavished on her.For her next album, Spears
looked ahead to a not-so-distant future when both she and much of her audience
would be growing up. Released in late 2001, Britney tried to present the singer
as a more mature young woman, and was accompanied by mild hints that her
personal life wasn't always completely puritanical. It became her third
straight album to debut at number one, although this time around the singles
weren't as successful; "I'm a Slave 4 U," "I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet
a Woman," and "Overprotected" all missed the Top Ten. In early
2002, Spears'
feature-film debut, Crossroads, hit theaters, but its
commercial performance was somewhat disappointing; moreover, her romance with Timberlake
fizzled not long after. Spears
next made a cameo appearance in Mike Myers' Austin Powers: Goldmember,
and contributed a remix of "Boys" to the soundtrack. Meanwhile, sales
of Britney stalled at four million copies, perhaps in part because a new breed
of teenage female singer/songwriters, like Michelle
Branch and Avril Lavigne, was
emerging as an alternative to the highly packaged teen queens. Spears
took a break from recording and performing for several months, and began work
on a new album in early 2003. The results, In the Zone, reflected a wish to be
taken seriously as a mature (though still highly sexualized) adult.
Predictably, it topped the charts and launched several singles into orbit,
including the musically adventurous "Toxic," "Everytime," and "Me Against the Music."