sábado, 27 de septiembre de 2008

Britney Spears - Biografia - Biography

Britney Spears



"The english version of the Britney Spears's Biography is below of the spanish version separated for a picture"

El 2 de diciembre de 1981 nació en un pequeño pueblo de Estados Unidos una niña llamada Britney Jean Spears. Nadie entonces pudo imaginar que aquel bebé rubio y sonriente iba a convertirse no sólo en una cantante pop de éxito, sino en una figura mediática internacional y un símbolo para millones de jóvenes de todo el mundo.

La pequeña Britney

Britney Spears llegó a este mundo en la localidad estadounidense de McComb pero se trasladó de muy niña a Kentwood, una población de Lousiana. Es la hija mediana de una familia de clase media cuya madre lo dejó todo por apoyar la carrera artística de su hija Britney.


Britney Spears

Ya de pequeña Brit –el apodo con el que la conocen su familia y amigos– demostró inclinaciones artísticas. Participaba en concursos de baile locales y en el coro de su iglesia hasta que a los 8 años se presentó a una prueba para presentar el show del Club de Mickey Mouse de la cadena de televisión Disney. Los responsables del programa la consideraron demasiado joven para el puesto pero se dieron cuenta que tenía un gran talento. Por eso, la ayudaron a entrar en el Off-Broadway Dance Center y la Professional Performing Arts School. Ambas escuelas están en Nueva York, con lo que empezó una nueva vida para Britney y su madre cuando se trasladaron a la ciudad de los rascacielos para iniciar su formación artística.

Sus primeras actuaciones profesionales

Después de 3 años de estudios, actuaciones en el Off-Broadway y rodajes de anuncios Britney volvió a presentarse a las pruebas del Canal Disney. Esta vez consiguió que la admitieran para presentar el show televisivo del Club de Mickey Mouse. Fue un momento clave para su carrera artística, pues le permitió darse a conocer a nivel estatal y, además, tener como compañeros en el programa a futuros cantantes tan populares como Justin Timberlake o Christina Aguilera.



Después de sus dos temporadas como presentadora de televisión Britney decide volver a Kentwood y encaminar sus pasos hacia el mundo de la música. Siendo aún una adolescente que sueña con imitar a sus ídolos -Madonna, Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston...- firma como solista con la discográfica Jive Records pero no es hasta 1999 cuando esta joven con aspecto de Lolita ingenua saca al mercado su primer disco, Baby one more time...

Un boom internacional

Cuando Baby one more time... se estrenó Britney tan sólo tenía 17 años. Pese a ser todavía una niña en muchos aspectos logró que su single se situara ya en el número 1 de la lista Billboard durante su primera semana. Además, hizo historia porque el álbum del mismo nombre se encaramó también arriba de todo de la lista Billboard en cuanto apareció. Sometimes, el segundo single del disco obtuvo también un gran éxito. El mundo se dio cuenta de que había nacido La Princesa del Pop. Actuaciones en galas, apariciones en revistas y televisiones y cuatro premios MTV definen el mejor año en la vida de Britney Spears.

El gran éxito de su primer disco respaldó a Britney para el lanzamiento de su segundo álbum, Oops... I did it again en el año 2000. Tan sólo salir a la calle batió records. Se vendieron 1,3 millones de copias en Estados Unidos el primer fin de semana y fue número 1 en 20 países más. Temas como Lucky, Stronger, Don’t let me be the last to know o el propio Oops... la subieron a lo más alto de la industria discográfica del momento.

La consolidación

La carrera musical de Britney Spears continuó avanzando a pasos agigantados. Intervino en galas tan importantes como el intermedio de la Superbowl o el mítico festival de Rock in Río, donde actuó ante 25.000 personas. Es en esta época cuando presenta su tercer disco, Britney, una muestra de su evolución hacia la madurez musical con su primer single, I’m a Slave 4 U. Al escucharlo sus fans ven que Britney ya no es la niña adolescente a la que le gustan los colores estridentes e ir de compras.


Britney Spears en el concierto de la Superbowl

El último disco de Britney Spears se lanzó al mercado en el 2003. Se trata de In the zone, un cd que incluye canciones como Everytime o Me Against the Music, un tema que interpreta junto a su admirada Madonna y en el que cuenta con la colaboración de prestigiosos músicos.

En el año 2004 se publicó el primer recopilatorio de la cantante, Greatest Hits: My Prerogative. Se trata de un disco que reúne grandes éxitos de Britney junto con remezclas, duetos y canciones no publicadas hasta ahora. El nombre del cd se corresponde con el del primer single, que es una versión del éxito de Bobby Brown de 1988.

Más allá de la música

Britney Spears es una cantante reconocida según demuestran los numerosos premios que ha recibido a lo largo de su carrera (MTV, Billboard, Emmy, Golden Music...) pero es famosa en todo el mundo por otras cosas además de su música. Ha escrito libros en colaboración con su madre, ha hecho de protagonista en una película de Hollywood, tiene muñecas y chicles a su nombre e incluso ha creado una fundación para organizar campamentos de niños desfavorecidos.


Con Justin Timberlake

Pero la mayoría de portadas que ha acaparado Britney en los últimos años se deben a su agitada vida sentimental: su matrimonio actual, un breve enlace de unas horas con un amigo de la infancia y su relación con Justin Timberlake. También es destacable su amistad con Madonna, con quien protagonizó una comentada escena en los premios MTV del 2003 cuando la cantante las besó a ella y a Christina Aguilera en la boca mientras interpretaban las tres una canción.

La discofrfia aparece al final en la version en ingles "Briteny Spear's Biography"

Btiney Spear's Biography:



Britney Jean Spears (born December 2, 1981) is an American recording artist and entertainer. Born in McComb, Mississippi and raised in Kentwood, Louisiana, Spears first appeared on national television as a contestant on the Star Search program in 1992 and went on to star on the television series The New Mickey Mouse Club from 1993–1994. After a brief membership with the pop musical group Innosense, Spears signed a recording contract with Jive Records, releasing her debut album ...Baby One More Time in 1999. The album established her as a pop icon and "bona fide pop phenomenon", credited for influencing the revival of teen pop in the late 1990s.

The music video for "...Baby One More Time" and Spears's appearance on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine also established her as an international sex symbol, garnering controversy over the influence of her public image on teenage girls. With the release of In the Zone (2003), Spears became the first artist in the history of Nielsen SoundScan to have her first four consecutive albums debut at number one on the Billboard 200 album charts. Spears's personal life began to gain substantial media attention after her marriage to Kevin Federline in 2004. Their marriage ended two years later, resulting in an ongoing custody battle over their two children, born in 2005 and 2006. Amidst further media scrutiny, Spears released her fifth studio album Blackout in 2007 and began recording her sixth studio album Circus the following year.

Spears is ranked as the eighth best-selling female recording artist in the United States according to the Recording Industry Association of America with 31 million certified albums and one of the world's best-selling music artists having sold an estimated 83 million records worldwide. Spears was named as "Most Searched Person" in the 2007 and 2009 editions of the Guinness World Records.

Early life and career debut
Britney Spears was born in McComb, Mississippi,[7][8] and raised in Kentwood, Louisiana as a Southern Baptist. Her parents are Lynne Irene (née Bridges), a former elementary school teacher, and Jamie Parnell Spears, a building contractor. Spears's brother Bryan works as a manager for the Spears family interests[9] and her sister Jamie Lynn is an actress and singer. Her maternal grandmother Lillian Woolmore-Portell was an English war-bride of Italian-Maltese descent,[10][11] born in Tottenham, London[12] who met Spears's grandfather Barnett O'Field Bridges in England during World War II. Her paternal grandparents were June Austin Spears and Emma Jean Forbes.[11]

Spears was an accomplished gymnast, attending gymnastics classes until age nine and competing in state-level competitions.[13] She performed in local dance revues and sang in her local Baptist church choir. Spears entered New York City's Professional Performing Arts School when she was eight. At age eight she auditioned for the Disney Channel series The New Mickey Mouse Club. Although she was considered too young to join the series at the time, a producer on the show introduced her to a New York City agent.[13] Spears subsequently spent three summers at NYC's Professional Performing Arts School and also appeared in a number of off-Broadway productions. She was an understudy in the 1991 off-Broadway musical Ruthless!.[13] In 1992, she landed a spot on the popular television show Star Search. She won the first round of competition, but ultimately lost. At age eleven, Spears returned to the Disney Channel for a spot on the The New Mickey Mouse Club in Lakeland, Florida.[13] She was featured on the show from 1993 to 1994, until she was 13.[14] After the show ended, Spears returned to Kentwood and attended high school for a year.[15]

In 1997, Spears briefly joined the all-female pop group Innosense.[16] Later that same year, she recorded a demo solo and was signed by Jive Records.[13] She began a U.S. concert tour sponsored by American teen magazines, and eventually became an opening act for 'N Sync and the Backstreet Boys.[17]


1998–2000: ...Baby One More Time and Oops!... I Did It Again
Spears's debut single "...Baby One More Time", which was released in October 1998, peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in January 1999, and topped the chart for two weeks.[18][19] Spears commented, "I just wanted to be on the radio. I didn't think it would be on the Billboard charts! I was so excited, I wanted to cry".[19] Gillian G. Gaar, author of She's a Rebel: The History of Women in Rock & Roll (2002) documented that "eyebrows were raised over the schoolgirl-in-heat persona Spears projected in her [music video for ...Baby One More Time], along with an increasingly revealing series of stage outfits.[20] The album of the same name debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 album charts in January 1999.[21] Rolling Stone magazine wrote: "While several Cherion-crafted kiddie-funk jams serve up beefy hooks, shameless schlock slowies, like "E-Mail My Heart," are pure spam".[22] NME commented "[Spears's debut album and its title-track] are the kind of soullessness that saturates Stateside charts and consists of nothing but over-chewed bubblegum beats and saccharine sensibilities".[23] In contrast, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic wrote: "Like many teen pop albums, ...Baby One More Time has its share of well-crafted filler, but the singles, combined with Britney's burgeoning charisma, make this a pretty great piece of fluff".[24] ...Baby One More Time was later certified fourteen times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, denoting fourteen million units shipped within the United States.[25]

In March 1999, Tamara Conniff of Entertainment News Wire reported: "Only a few years ago, Spears was a Mouseketeer on the Disney Channel's "Mickey Mouse Club." Now, she's a 17-year-old pop superstar with a No. 1 album, a double-platinum single and a provocative video in heavy rotation on MTV. Spears's debut album and its title track, "... Baby One More Time," have taken the music world by storm".[26] Spears commented, "My main goal is just to make good music...And since I am so young, I can grow as an artist each time and hopefully be a legend or something, like Madonna".[26] By April 1999, Spears was described as "the Reigning Princess of Pop" by the Orlando Sentinel.[27]


Britney Spears featured on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. The overt sexual image combined with Spears's age and the age group of her primary audience garnered criticism.Spears posed for the cover of Rolling Stone magazine in April 1999, shot by photographer David LaChapelle.[28] Spears commented, "It was so much fun!...I loved the idea of me holding Tinky Winky and talking on the phone!"[29] Geoff Boucher of The Los Angeles Times reported, "there was no mistaking the titillation factor in the recent Spears cover story and accompanying photos in the April 15 issue of Rolling Stone, which sent eyebrows arching throughout the music industry, where several executives half-jokingly called it "child pornography."[30] Similarly, an editorial review from Iowa State Daily commented, "a distinction should be drawn between the cute teeny-boppers in cool outfits who make the boys and girls buy records by the truckload and the exploitation of a minor by her parents, her record company and the media... Pictures like these are only barely legal when taken by private citizens. But when Rolling Stone does it, it's just good business".[31] Gillian G. Gaar reported, "The American Family Association charged that the pictures, which showed Spears in push-up bras and a minuscule pair of shorts with "Baby" in rhinestones on the bottom, presented a "disturbing mix of childhood innocence and adult sexuality" and asked that all "God-loving Americans" boycott stores carrying her albums".[20] More controversy arose when Spears declared that she would "remain a virgin until marriage".[32] This pledge has been questioned due to her apparently sexual relationship with fellow pop singer Justin Timberlake.[33][34]

In late 1999, Spears appeared on the sitcom Sabrina, the Teenage Witch and performed the song "(You Drive Me) Crazy"; this cameo was a cross-promotion for the film Drive Me Crazy, which starred Sabrina's Melissa Joan Hart and was named after the song.[35]


on the Baby One More Time TourIn December 1999, she won four Billboard Music Awards, including Female Artist of the Year. A month later, she took home the Favorite Pop/Rock New Artist award at the American Music Awards.[36] At the 2000 Grammy Awards, Spears received two nominations in the categories of Best New Artist and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for ...Baby One More Time, but lost to American singer Christina Aguilera and Canadian musician-singer Sarah McLachlan, respectively.[37]

Following the success of her previous album, Spears released the album Oops!... I Did It Again in May 2000. It debuted at number one in the U.S. by selling 1,319,193 units during its first week of sales, breaking the SoundScan record for the highest album sales in its debut week by any solo artist.[38] The RIAA awarded the album with a diamond certification with 10 million copies sold in the U.S.[39][40][41] Concerning both musical content and sales, the album was very similar to Spears's debut, although it fared better with critics. Allmusic once again gave it 4 out of 5 stars, saying that the album "has the same combination of sweetly sentimental ballads and endearingly gaudy dance-pop that made One More Time."[42] Rolling Stone gave the album 3.5 stars out of 5 by noting the album as "fantastic pop cheese" and "Britney's demand for satisfaction is complex, fierce and downright scary."[43]

The album's lead single of the same name broke the record for most radio station additions in a single day, and quickly became a top ten hit in the U.S. and other countries.[44] The same year, Spears launched her first world tour, the "Oops!... I Did It Again World Tour". During the tour, she made a stop in New York for the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. As part of her performance, she ripped off a black suit to reveal a provocative nude-colored and crystal-adorned outfit that generated much controversy.[45] She finished the year with two more Billboard Music Awards,[46] and two Grammy nominations for Oops!... I Did It Again in the categories of Best Pop Vocal Album and Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.[47]


2001–2003: Britney, Crossroads, and In the Zone
Spears released her third studio album Britney in November 2001. Although not as successful as her previous albums,[41] she assumed some creative control by co-writing five of the album's tracks.[48] It surpassed Michael Jackson's album Invincible when it had a successful debut at number one in the U.S. by selling 745,744 units during its first week.[49] The album's success made her the only female artist in music history to have her first three albums debut at number one. The album fared well with critics such as Allmusic who gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars, describing the album's title tracks as being "pivotal moments on Britney Spears's third album, the record where she strives to deepen her persona, making it more adult while still recognizably Britney."[52] In contrast, Rolling Stone said of the album Britney "belabors the obvious: Spears is one month away from entering her twenties and clearly needs to grow up if she's going to bring her fans along."[48]

The singles did not perform as well; Britney's lead single "I'm a Slave 4 U" peaked at 27 on the Billboard Hot 100 making it the album's biggest hit.[53] To help promote the album, Spears embarked on the Dream Within a Dream Tour in November 2001. The tour was forced to cut short in Mexico City due to bad weather.[54] With the end to her tour, Spears announced she would take a six month break from her career.[55]

In early 2002, Spears's four-year relationship with Timberlake ended.[56] His 2002 song "Cry Me a River" and its music video, which featured an actress resembling Spears, caused speculation that Spears had been unfaithful;[57] Timberlake, however, denied that his song was meant to portray her.[58]

June 2002 saw the opening of Spears's restaurant, Nyla, in New York City, which served Louisianan and Italian cuisine. However, she was pulled out of the business venture in November as a result of debts and management issues. Nyla officially closed in 2003.[17] In the same year, Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst confirmed that he was in a relationship with Spears. Durst was also hired to help write and produce tracks for her album In the Zone, which were eventually scrapped.[59]

Spears had her first starring role in the 2002 film Crossroads,[60] in which she portrayed a high school graduate who travels to find her long-lost mother. The movie was poorly received,[61] as was her performance; Spears received Razzie Awards for Worst Actress and for Worst Original Song.[62] Nonetheless, the film grossed over $60 million worldwide.[63] Spears also made cameo appearances in Austin Powers in Goldmember and Longshot.[64] Footage of Spears appeared in the 2004 documentary Fahrenheit 9/11, which samples a 2003 CNN interview about the Iraq War in which Spears says, "Honestly, I think we should just trust our president in every decision he makes and should just support that, you know, and be faithful in what happens."[65][66] Spears made her third consecutive MTV Video Music Awards performance. While performing "I'm a Slave 4 U", she controversially utilized caged animals and danced erotically with a large albino python draped over her shoulders. Animal-rights organization PETA claimed that the animals featured in the performance were mistreated and cancelled plans for an anti-fur billboard that was to feature Spears.[67] Her career success was highlighted by Forbes magazine in 2002 as Spears was ranked the world's most powerful celebrity.[68] At a performance at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards, she appeared with Aguilera performing the song "Like a Virgin", and was later joined by American pop singer Madonna. Spears locked lips with Madonna in a highly-publicized kiss.[69][70][71]

Spears released her fourth studio album In the Zone in November 2003, jettisoning the Max Martin-produced synthpop of her earlier releases. The album took in lesser-known producers such as RedZone and big names including Moby and R. Kelly. Spears co-wrote eight of the album's thirteen songs and co-produced several pieces of her material for the first time. In the Zone reached number one in the U.S. charts during its debut week, selling over 609,000 copies. This made Spears the first female in the Nielsen SoundScan era to have her first four studio albums to debut at number one.[72] The album had a mild reception from critics. Stylus Magazine gave the album a D and even blamed Spears's career choices by stating, "Ultimately, In the Zone suffers greatly from Britney's uneasy transition from teen tart to sexually powerful woman. Had Britney been in charge of her career direction instead of mercilessly prostituted by her management, she might have been able to produce something with some semblance of musical vision."[73] The Guardian praised the album's melodies and her effort, giving it 4 out of 5 stars and writing, "Unlike previous Britney albums, In the Zone has no filler and no shoddy cover versions, just 57 varieties of blue-chip hit-factory pop. There is southern hip-hop, deep house, Neptunes-style R&B, the ubiquitous Diwali beat and, most importantly, oodles of Madonna."[74]

The album spawned the hit single "Toxic", winning Spears her first ever Grammy in the category of Best Dance Recording.[75]


2004–2005: Marriages, first child and compilation albums
Spears married childhood friend Jason Allen Alexander on January 3, 2004, at The Little White Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas.[76] The marriage lasted 55 hours, ending with an annulment stating that Spears "lacked understanding of her actions to the extent that she was incapable of agreeing to marriage because before entering into the marriage the Plaintiff and Defendant did not know each others' likes and dislikes, each others' desires to have or not have children, and each other's desires as to State of residency."[77][78]

Months after her Las Vegas marriage, Spears embarked on The Onyx Hotel Tour, which was canceled in June, after Spears injured her knee during the filming of the video for the single "Outrageous".[79] The tour's choreography generated much controversy and criticism, with the presence of young children in the audience.[80]She then became involved in the Kabbalah Centre in September 2004 through her friendship with Madonna.[81] However, she publicly left the religion in 2006, stating on her website, "I no longer study Kabbalah, my baby is my religion."[82]

In July 2004, Spears announced her engagement to Kevin Federline, three months after they met. Federline had recently been in a relationship with actress Shar Jackson, who was eight months pregnant with their second child.[83] These initial stages were chronicled in Spears's first reality show Britney & Kevin: Chaotic, which aired on UPN in May and June 2005.[84] On the night of September 18, Spears married Federline in a surprise, non-denominational ceremony at a residence in Studio City, California, filing legal papers on October 6.[85][86] After the marriage, Spears announced via her website that she would be taking another career break to start a family. She gave birth to her first child, Sean Preston Federline, nearly one year later, on September 14, 2005 in Santa Monica, California by a scheduled caesarean section.[2]

November 2004 saw the release of her first greatest hits collection, Greatest Hits: My Prerogative, which features all of Spears's singles with the exception of "From The Bottom Of My Broken Heart". It also featured three previously unreleased songs, them being a cover version of American R&B singer Bobby Brown's 1988 hit "My Prerogative", "Do Somethin'", produced by Bloodshy and Avant, whom she had worked with on In The Zone, and "I've Just Begun (Havin' My Fun)", which was a song recorded for Spears's fourth album, In The Zone, but did not make the final cut.[87] By the end of that year, Spears had become one of the best-selling artists in the world.

In November 2005, Spears released her first remix album, B In The Mix: The Remixes. The album ranged from "...Baby One More Time" to "Toxic". Her newest single "Someday (I Will Understand)" was also remixed. Another single, "And Then We Kiss", was only released in Asia, where it charted in many countries. The song peaked at number 15 on Billboard's Hot Dance Airplay chart,[88] despite it not being officially released in the U.S.[89]


2006–2007: Personal struggles, second child, divorce, and Blackout
In 2006, Spears guest-starred on the Will & Grace episode "Buy, Buy Baby" as a closeted lesbian. Her performance drew criticism from conservative Christian groups.[90] Spears announced her second pregnancy in May 2006 during an appearance on The Late Show with David Letterman.[91] She also appeared on Dateline the next month to discuss tabloid rumors about an impending divorce, and motherhood. She addressed an incident which occurred in February when photos revealed her driving with her son unrestrained in her lap,[92] explaining, "I see a bunch of photographers and I’m scared and I want to get out of the situation... They’re coming up on the sides of the car which is a scary situation for me… so I get my baby out of the car and I go home."[93] The month following the televised interview, Spears posed nude for the August 2006 cover of Harper's Bazaar.[94][95] Just two days before Sean's first birthday, Spears gave birth to her second son, Jayden James Federline on September 12 in Los Angeles.[3]

Spears's aunt Sandra Bridges Covington, with whom she had been very close, died of ovarian cancer on January 21, 2007.[96] Spears then stayed in an off-shore drug rehabilitation facility in Antigua for less than 24 hours on February 16.[97] The following night at a hair salon in Tarzana, California she shaved her head with electric clippers. A few days later, she admitted herself to another treatment facility in Malibu, California.[98] While leaving the facility briefly, she quickly returned on February 22.[99] The previous day, Kevin Federline had requested an emergency hearing regarding the custody of their children but then his attorney announced that Federline asked to cancel the court appearance. No further explanation was given.[100] Spears filed for divorce from Federline on November 7, 2006, citing irreconcilable differences and asking for both physical and legal custody of their two children, with visitation rights for Federline.[101] The following day, Federline filed a response to Spears's divorce petition, seeking physical and legal custody of their children.[102] American attorney Laura Wasser was hired to represent Spears in the case.[103] According to a representative for Federline's lawyer, the divorce filing "caught Kevin totally by surprise".[104] The couple reached a global settlement agreement in March 2007 and their divorce was finalized in July.[105][106] Throughout 2007, Spears's behavior received heightened media attention, including attacking a paparazzi vehicle with an umbrella.[107] Spears left the rehabilitation center on March 20 according to her manager, who said she was released after "successfully completing their program."[108] As the legal battle over the custody of their children continued, many members of her entourage have been summoned to testify about her parenting skills.[109]

In May 2007, she produced a mini-tour for the House of Blues just after she left a rehabilitation facility under the name The M+M's; with six shows altogether, she sang live during some lines of her songs.[110] She recorded her latest album with producers such as Sean Garrett, J. R. Rotem and Nate "Danja" Hills throughout 2006 and 2007.[111][112]

In September 2007, the official findings in Spears's custody battle were announced by the court. She was ordered to undergo random drug and alcohol testings and to attend parenting counseling. Spears and Federline continued to share joint custody of their two children on a conditional basis.[113] A few days later, she was officially charged with misdemeanor hit-and-run and driving without a license. If convicted, she could face a year in jail.[114] Spears lost physical custody of her children to Federline on October 1,[115][116] with the court ruling that Federline will keep full custody of the children.[117] The charges for her alleged hit-and-run that occurred in August 2007 were officially laid,[118] she was booked for the charges by the Los Angeles Police Department on October 15 but was not arrested.[119]

The release of Spears's fifth album, Blackout, was rescheduled to October 30, 2007 rather than November 13, 2007 due to online leaks.[120][121] Blackout debuted at number two on the U.S. Billboard 200.[122], making Spears the only female music artist to have her first five albums go to number one and two. It was fairly well received by critics.[123] Rolling Stone gave the album 3.5 out of 5 stars.[124] Allmusic also rated the album 3.5 out of 5 stars, calling Blackout "coherent and entertaining" and stating that "it holds together better than any of her other records".[125] Blackout's lead single, "Gimme More" leaked on the internet on August 30.[120] The song, which was Spears's first produced by Danja, peaked at number three on Billboard's Hot 100 on October 3, making it her most successful single in the U.S. since her debut, "...Baby One More Time".[126][127] Spears's highly-anticipated performance of "Gimme More" at the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards was panned.[128][129][130] The BBC stated that "her performance would go down in the history books as being one of the worst to grace the MTV Awards",[131] and The Times noted that "Spears was out of synch as she lip-synched and at times just stopped singing altogether".[132] Despite the criticism on her performance,[133] the single has achieved worldwide success.[134][135][136].


2008–present: Conservatorship, custody settlement and Circus
On the evening of January 3, 2008, after not sleeping for over four days, Spears refused to relinquish custody of her children to Federline's representatives. In response, police were called to Spears's home.[137] She was hospitalized at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center after she "appeared to be under the influence of an unknown substance",[138] though blood tests tested negative for any illicit substances.[139] She was held for psychiatric evaluation for two days.[140][141][142] Pending a February 19 hearing, Commissioner Scott Gordon issued an order on January 14 stating that her visitation rights have been suspended indefinitely. On January 31, a court placed Spears under temporary co-conservatorship of her father James Spears and attorney Andrew Wallete, giving them complete control of her assets.[143] As a result of an order placed by her psychiatrist, she was taken to UCLA Medical Center to be put on a 5150 involuntary psychiatric hold for the second time that month.[144] On February 1, a restraining order was issued against Sam Lutfi, a prominent figure in Spears's life.[145][146] She was released from the hospital on February 6, amid speculation that she has bipolar disorder,[147][148] although medical records are classified, and no confirmation has been made. Her parents expressed disappointment and concern at the decision to release her.[149] She has regained some visitation rights after coming to an agreement with Federline and his counsel.[150] On July 18, 2008, Spears and ex-husband Federline reached a custody settlement in which Federline retains sole custody while Spears keeps her visitation rights.[151]

In 2008, Spears guest-starred on CBS's television show How I Met Your Mother playing a receptionist.[152] She received positive reviews for her performance as well as bringing in the series highest ratings ever.[153][154] Spears reprised her role in May 2008, leaving the storyline open for a future return.[155]

On September 7, 2008, Spears opened the MTV Video Music Awards for the third time. Although having not performed, a skit with Jonah Hill was pre-taped, as well as an introduction speech to the official opening of the show. Spears won Best Female Video, Best Pop Video and Video Of The Year for "Piece of Me".[156]

On September 15, Jive released a statement announcing the title of her sixth studio album, Circus as well as the first single, "Womanizer". The single was released to radio stations on September 26, and the release date for the album is December 2, Spears's 27th birthday.

Spears is a soubrette[citation needed], a type of soprano vocal part. Her vocal strong points are falsetto and belting. Rami Yacoub, who co-produced Spears's debut album with its songwriter and lyricist Max Martin, commented, "I know from Denniz Pop and Max's previous productions, when we do songs, there's kind of a nasal thing. With N' Sync and the Backstreet Boys, we had to push for that mid-nasal voice. When Britney did that, she got this kind of raspy, sexy voice".[19] Following the release of her debut album, Chuck Taylor of Billboard observed, "Spears has become a consummate performer, with snappy dance moves, a clearly real-albeit young-and funkdified voice..."(You Drive Me) Crazy," her third single...demonstrates Spears's own development, proving that the 17-year-old is finding her own vocal personality after so many months of steadfast practice".[158] Spears later commented, "With [...Baby One More Time], I didn't get to show my voice off. The songs were great, but they weren't very challenging".[159]


Choreography
Joan Anderman of The Boston Globe cited Madonna and Janet Jackson as two of Spears's biggest influences", commenting that Spears adopted Madonna's "Truth or Dare"-era moves" and Janet Jackson's sexy-robot body language".[160] Judy Mitoma, author of Envisioning dance on film and video (2002) observed "[t]he music videos of the late 1990s and early 2000s enlist[ed] the popular dance vocabularies at the time...pounding feet into the floor and jabbing at the air with taunt arm movements, punctuating with bent knees and thrusting hips".[161] Britney Spears, among her contemporaries, became a "playfully carnal, provocatively dressed vixen...led by Madonna (and the first time she grabbed her crotch) [and] fueled by Janet Jackson, transformed from a soft-fleshed, innocent girl to a buffed and buxom woman".[161] In the book Madonnastyle (2002) by Carol Clerk, Spears is quoted saying: "I have been a huge fan of Madonna since I was a little girl. I would really, really like to be a legend like Madonna...Her choreography definitely opened the door for girls to go in there and do their own thing".[162]


Live performances
Kevin Johnson of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that his review of Spear's concert performance of her Oops!... I Did It Again World Tour in July 2000, garnered mix reactions. He stated: "It was the review of Spears's concert that got most readers writing - to disagree and agree. A Spears fan wrote, "I don't like you or your stinking, horrible, abusive report! ... I, however, love Britney." Another fan wrote, "Britney Spears is a legend, a great performer. She is our idol and nothing you say about that concert will change that. It still hurts to think you didn't see how many people she touched that night. ... What I saw was hard work and determination, great dance moves, catchy lyrics, and positive songs".[163] In contrast, Johnson also reported: "One reader said, "I was pleased the article was direct and told the simple truth: Britney can't sing. I attended the concert and had a great time, but unlike 95 percent of the crowd, I realized how ridiculous Britney Spears really is".[163] In August 2000, Joan Anderman wrote in her review of the concert, "Spears sang without the help of prerecorded tracks—that's both the good news and the bad news—avoiding the perils by having her two backup vocalists sing in unison with her much of the time, a wise move for someone whose vocal and emotional range are limited, and whose singing isn't even particularly appealing".[160]

The following year, at the beginning of Spears's Dream Within a Dream Tour, the Daily News reported: "Britney Spears is easy to criticize—those outfits, that coquette/ good-girl contradiction, those recycled pop hooks. But Tuesday night, surrounded by thousands of Britney devotees at the sold-out Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, she was easy to love as well...Because of all that dancing, thrashing and dodging fire on stage, Spears performed most of the show to a recorded track. It was hard to tell when she was really singing or just lip-syncing. But, in the context of a Britney Spears concert, does it really matter? Like a Vegas revue show, you don't go to hear the music, you go for the somewhat-ridiculous spectacle of it all".[164] In December 2001, Sean Piccoli of South Florida Sun-Sentinel reported: "[Spears's] contributions to pop are not generally founded in music. Wednesday's spectacle was pop inspired not by songs, but by cheerleader tryouts and beauty pageants. The point was not whether Spears could sing—her voice is a very small bag of heavy-breathing tricks—or even dance. What mattered was how she presents...By that standard, the show was a success. Spears had the biggest runway a girl could ask for and made good use of it, ensuring that every person from the floor to the nosebleed seats could see her fling her hair, swivel her hips or, in one sequence that was almost eerie, dance with a video projection of herself".[165]


Public image
In March 2007, Leonard Pitts, Jr. wrote that in the aftermath of Spears's personal struggles that have become widely publicized, Spears had been reduced to an abstract idea as opposed to being regarded as a real person.[166] "The abstraction is not surprising: Whatever media touch, they objectify... What must it be like to have your marriage and divorce, your relationship with your parents and kids... dissected by millions of strangers who think they know you?"[166] Pitts further commented that fame and fortune do not qualify the media scrutiny Spears has faced, but observed that fact has been overlooked by "our rush to a day of 'reality' television" and "tabloid journalism".[166] Though "[t]here is no reverence, no privacy, [and] nothing held back as sacred", Pitts argues "Britney Jean Spears is not an idea."[166]

Vanessa Grigoriadis reported in "The Tragedy of Britney Spears" (2008), her cover story for Rolling Stone, that "more than any other star today, Britney epitomizes the crucible of fame for the famous: loving it, hating it and never quite being able to stop it from destroying you."[167] Grigoriadis wrote that "every day in L.A., at least a hundred paparazzi, reporters and celebrity-magazine editors dash after her" and that paparazzi estimated Spears generated "up to twenty percent of their coverage for the past year."[167] She further documented that in addition to tabloid journalists, the Associated Press declared that everything Spears does is considered news.[167] "The paparazzi feed the celebrity magazines, which feed the mainstream press, while sources sell their dirtiest material to British tabloids, and then it trickles back to America," wrote Grigoriadis. "She's the canary in the coal mine of our culture, the most vivid representation of the excess of the past decade."[167]


Legacy
Britney Spears became a pop culture icon immediately after launching her recording career. Rolling Stone magazine wrote: "One of the most controversial and successful female vocalists of the 21st century," she "spearheaded the rise of post-millennial teen pop... Spears early on cultivated a mixture of innocence and experience that broke the bank".[168] She is listed by the Guinness World Records as having the "Best-selling album by a teenage solo artist" for her debut album ...Baby One More Time which sold over thirteen million copies in the United States.[169] Melissa Ruggieri of the Richmond Times-Dispatch reported, "She's also marked for being the best-selling teenage artist. Before she turned 20 in 2001, Spears sold more than 37 million albums worldwide".[170] Barbara Ellen of The Observer reported: "Spears is famously one of the 'oldest' teenagers pop has ever produced, almost middle aged in terms of focus and determination. Many 19-year-olds haven't even started working by that age, whereas Britney, a former Mouskateer, was that most unusual and volatile of American phenomena—a child with a full-time career. While other little girls were putting posters on their walls, Britney was wanting to be the poster on the wall. Whereas other children develop at their own pace, Britney was developing at a pace set by the ferociously competitive American entertainment industry".[171] Spears has been Yahoo!'s top searched artist the past seven consecutive years and was named as Most Searched Person in the Guinness World Records book edition 2007 and 2009.


Products and endorsements
Main article: Britney Spears products

Britney Spears perfume "Curious"In early 2001, Spears signed a multi-million dollar promotional deal with Pepsi that included television commercials, point-of-purchase promotions, and Internet ties between Spears and the company. Britney Spears has earned over US$370 million from her many, multi-million dollar advertisement and endorsement deals all around the World..[172] She has published four books, including A Mother's Gift, and released seven DVDs, including her self-produced 2005 reality series Britney & Kevin: Chaotic. Other Spears products include a doll and a video game. She participated in seven tours including "The Onyx Hotel Tour" in 2004. She has grossed over US$350 million from tour ticket sales and over $185 million in merchandise from her tours, the most ever grossed by a performer (male and female).[173][174][175]

Spears endorsed her first Elizabeth Arden fragrance "Curious" in 2004. In September 2005, Spears released the fragrance "Fantasy" with Elizabeth Arden, which also saw great success.[176] These were followed by the release of two more fragrances of "In Control" and "Midnight Fantasy" in 2006.[citation needed] Her latest Elizabeth Arden fragrance "Believe", was released in September 2007.[citation needed]


Discography
Main article: Britney Spears discography
Studio albums
1999: ...Baby One More Time
2000: Oops!... I Did It Again
2001: Britney
2003: In the Zone
2007: Blackout
2008: Circus
Other albums
2004: Greatest Hits: My Prerogative
2005: B in the Mix: The Remixes

DVDs
1999: Time Out with Britney Spears
2000: Live and More!
2001: Britney: The Videos
2002: Live from Las Vegas
2004: In the Zone
2004: Greatest Hits: My Prerogative
2005: Britney & Kevin: Chaotic
Tours
1999: Hair Zone Mall Tour
1999: ...Baby One More Time Tour
2000: Crazy 2K Tour
2000: Oops!... I Did It Again World Tour
2001/2002: Dream Within a Dream Tour
2004: The Onyx Hotel Tour
2007: The M+M's Tour

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