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Miley Cyrus photo ‘scandals’ reveal phenom’s growing pains
Jocelyn Noveck
NEW YORK—“You get the best of both worlds,” Miley Cyrus sings in the
theme song of her hugely popular Disney Channel show, “Hannah Montana.”
It’s a reference to her character’s secret double life as both a rock
star AND a normal schoolgirl. Offscreen, though, this 15-year-old phenom
is starting to learn how hard it really is to have the best of both
worlds: as a G-rated Disney superstar AND a real-life, growing teenager
with an eye on a long career. Cyrus, whose fresh, easy charm and
down-home southern appeal have catapulted her to an astonishing level of
celebrity, especially in the past year, found herself having to
apologize Sunday for some entirely un-Miley photos in Vanity Fair
magazine.
At a moment when she otherwise would have been relishing an amazing week
— a deal for her memoirs (reportedly seven figures), the cover of People
magazine and a feature in Vanity Fair — she issued a statement saying
how embarrassed she was. This came almost certainly at the behest of
worried executives at The Walt Disney Co., for whom she will reap a
reported $1 billion this year. For the record, only Cyrus’ back and
shoulders are bare in the most controversial shot by Annie Leibovitz,
the renowned celebrity photographer. Many an Oscar-night gown would show
as much skin. Cyrus herself told the magazine in an accompanying article
that she found the photo, in which she gathers a sheet around her,
“really artsy. It wasn’t in a skanky way. And you can’t say no to
Annie.”
But Cyrus IS 15, with a fan base that begins in preschool. And it’s what
the photo suggests rather than shows — the idea that she might be nude,
perhaps even in bed — that bothered some parents who poured their
feelings onto blogs over the weekend. She wan’t nude during the shoot,
nor in bed, but she does have a subtle come-hither expression. Leibovitz
said Monday that she and Cyrus had discussed the photos beforehand, and
Vanity Fair said “Miley’s parents and/or minders were on the set all day
... everyone thought it was a beautiful and natural portrait.” As for
Disney, it accused editors of creating a situation “to deliberately
manipulate a 15-year-old.” Disney declined to make anyone connected with
“Hannah Montana” available to speak for this article.
Unfortunately for Cyrus, the photos, taken in February, might not have
made nearly such a splash but for a bit of awkward timing: They emerged
just days after some attention-getting amateur shots of Cyrus hit the
Web. In one, she tugs down a tank top to reveal a bright green bra. In
another, she lies languidly on her back across a male friend, shirt
raised to bare her midriff. So the timing was terrible. But some
celebrity watchers saw the developments as an attempt by Cyrus and her
handlers — while not necessarily calculated — to look ahead a few years,
beyond the tween audience.
“She has to find a way to gain a new following,” said Peter Castro,
deputy managing editor of People magazine. He likened her situation to
that of a butterfly still trapped in the cocoon. “She began as a
caterpillar, and made a lot of money that way, but now she doesn’t know
which way to go. She’s thinking, soon I’ve got to be a butterfly.”
Biological analogies aside, Cyrus’ predicament evoked plenty of
references to the cautionary tale of Britney Spears, who started on the
Disney Channel about the same age as Cyrus and had her first huge hit,
“Baby One More Time,” at age 17. “Britney was in a Miley place,” said
Castro. Then she decided to break out, making her persona in “Baby One
More Time” a sexy schoolgirl, and doing a provocative photo shoot for
Rolling Stone. “She alienated parents, but gained a whole following of
older kids,” says Castro. But, he added, “I don’t know that Miley could
get away with that. I think her dad and management team are closely
following Britney’s career, saying, ‘Don’t let this ever happen to
you.’”
Unlike the 26-year-old Britney of today, for whom the phrase “train
wreck” has become an unwelcome cliche, the self-possessed and upbeat
Cyrus has worn the title of “role model” easily. She has been utterly
scandal-free until now, unless you count her failure to wear a seat belt
during a car ride in her concert movie (her dad apologized for that,
too). “Miley’s at the very top of our celebrity list,” said Joanna Saltz,
executive editor of Seventeen magazine, whose average reader is between
16 and 17. While Spears never appears in Seventeen, readers love Cyrus,
Saltz said, because she seems genuine, unproduced, comfortable in her
own skin.
“And she’s just exploded,” said Saltz. “A year ago she was the queen of
tweens, and now she’s a favourite of our readers. She’s crossed all age
groups.” Just how big is this young lady, whose 70-date concert tour in
2007 sold out within minutes, who had desperate parents filing lawsuits
and entering wacky endurance contests (like hanging onto a pole for six
days) to get tickets, who herself took home $1 million a week and
something close to $20 million from the tour? “Honestly, it’s
astounding,” said Rolling Stone editor Andy Greene. “She was selling
20,000-seat houses. She could have sold 80,000 a night. I spoke to one
dad who said the atmosphere in there was like nothing since the early
Beatles concerts. It’s hard to think of anything quite like this.”
“Hannah Montana” is the No. 1 cable series for kids aged 6-14, and if
you include the networks, second only to “American Idol.” And even
Cyrus’ consolation prize to fans who couldn’t get concert tickets, the
“Best of Both Worlds Concert” 3D movie, grossed more than $60 million, a
rare hit for a concert film.
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