




In 2001, Carey released the semi-autobiographical film Glitter, which was a commercial and critical flop. She also appeared on MTV’s Total Request Live, nearly disrobing in front of a baffled Carson Daly, amid rumors of a nervous breakdown. Carey, 38, has spent the years since atoning. “The whole ‘Glitter’ experience was very, very hard to go through, but I learned a lot from it,” she said in a statement.
In 2005, the Long Island, New York native made a big comeback with her multiplatinum album “The Emancipation of Mimi” and won rave reviews for her performance in “WiseGirls,” a comedy-drama that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. “She’s not a diva and she came to work — and work hard she did,” said “Tennessee” producer Lee Daniels, who acknowledged: “People do feel negatively about her as an actor.” But that didn’t stop him from offering her the lead female role. Daniels, producer of the Oscar-winning film Monster’s Ball, said he saw Carey in WiseGirls and decided “it was clear that she’s a very talented actress.”
Carey’s new album, E=MC2, shot to No. 1 on the U.S. pop chart, debuting with 463,000 sales in the week ended April 20, according to Nielsen SoundScan data. That was the best debut sales week of her career and the strongest of any artist this year. Figures for the week ended April 27 are out on Wednesday. Carey’s latest single, “Touch My Body,” is her 18th U.S. No. 1 — taking her past Elvis Presley — and just behind the Beatles, who managed 20 No. 1 songs.