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Mandy Moore

 
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Mandy Moore

Biography

Although teen dance-pop sensation Mandy Moore may rank alongside Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera as one of the most popular female singers of her generation, her midriff-free image and genuine vocal talents have propelled her from the recording studio to movie sets in projects that are both family friendly and positive in nature.

Born in Nashua, NH, and raised in Orlando, FL, Moore was inspired to pursue a career as a vocal artist after attending a stage performance of Oklahoma! and witnessing the entrancing effect the lead performer had on the audience. Honing her skills with singing lessons and countless bedroom performances of "The Wind Beneath My Wings," Moore took to musical theater and began regularly performing the National Anthem at local sporting events. It wasn't long before two producers who had heard her sing at a game asked if she would be interested in cutting a demo. Eagerly accepting the offer, the young songstress recorded her first album at 14, with film roles following close behind. Gaining confidence in front of the camera with her self-titled MTV show in addition to appearances on The Andy Dick Show and a children's video entitled Magic Al and the Mind Factory, Moore loaned her voice to the character of a Girl Bear Cub in Dr. Dolittle 2 before making her feature debut (much against type as she claims) as a mean cheerleader in The Princess Diaries (2001). Dying her blonde locks brunette for her first major role in A Walk to Remember (based on Nicholas Sparks' best-seller), Moore brought her comparatively chaste image to the screen in an innocent tale of young lovers from opposite sides of the spectrum. Low key and with a plot that leans toward Christian themes, Moore proved with her feature debut that her values come well before public image regardless of how un-chic they may color her in the public eye.

Publicly admitting that she was gravitating towards a career in front of the camera since it was easier than singing, Moore continued her onscreen career with the release of How to Deal in 2003. Though the film was immediately savaged by critics, many were quick to point out that the presence of young Moore was likely the movie's sole redeeming factor. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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Mandy Moore

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Singer

Mandy Moore, once known in her adopted hometown as the "National Anthem Girl," managed to parlay her reputation as a local curiosity into national fame as a recording artist, all by the time she was 15. By the age of 17, she had managed to build an even greater audience and move from music into acting.

Born on April 10, 1984, in Nashua, New Hampshire, Moore moved with parents Don and Stacy and older brother Scott to Orlando, Florida, a couple of months later. Younger brother Kyle was born after the family had settled into its new home in California. In Moore’s biography on the Mandy Moore website, she wrote about her early interest in music: "Ever since I was 6, 1 knew I wanted to be a performer. I went to see the play Oklahoma!, and the girl on stage was having so much fun, and everyone in the audience was so entranced watching her. I had this little karaoke machine in my room, and I would stand on my bed belting out songs like ‘Wind beneath My Wings.’ My parents thought it was just a phase, but after years of me begging them, they let me start singing lessons when I was 10."

The vocal training paid off, because before long Moore was performing in local musical theater productions and singing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at any Orlando-area sporting event that would have her. Mandy became so closely associated with the song in and around Orlando that she was known locally as the "National Anthem Girl," and the exposure provided her with her first big break. She was approached by a couple of record producers who’d heard her sing and asked if she would be interested in working on some songs with them. "It was so random—like, right place, right time," Moore wrote in her website biography. "Next thing I knew I was making a demo, which led to my record deal."

Moore’s first album, So Real, was released in December of 1999 and quickly went platinum. The first hit single off the album, "Candy," went gold and received heavy airplay from disc jockeys around the country. Never one to pay close attention to chart numbers, Mandy told on her website of her reaction to the news that the single was a hit: "… to me that just means a lot of people liked it. I guess the more people you can reach with your music, the better—I try to remind myself that that’s the goal."

Unlike some of her contemporaries on the teen rock scene, Moore is not an alumna of television’s Mickey Mouse Club, which has given the world such performers as Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears, and Justin Timberlake of ‘N Sync. Although she grew up in Orlando, home of the Disney-produced show, Moore concentrated her singing efforts on the national anthem and appearances in local productions of classic Broadway shows, including Guys & Dolls and South Pacific. She remains a big fan of live theater and says she would like to go back to doing it at some point in the

future. "I think even if you don’t go into the entertainment industry, it’s a really good way to build your self-confidence to branch off into anything," she said in an interview with Dr. Drew.com. "You don’t have to have any real talent to do it [live theater]—it’s just fun. I didn’t plan on being a singer or actress when I first did it, but I liked it so much that here I am."

Although she professes to love just about any kind of music, Moore does confess to a particular weakness for the music of Whitney Houston, Mariah Carey, Lauryn Hill, and Madonna. The songs from her first album, So Real, including the title song, "Quit Breakin’ My Heart," and "What You Want," reflect the diversity of her taste in music. Back home in Florida, she has been learning to play the guitar and hopes that eventually she will be able to write more of her own songs. Away from music, her favorite subjects in school are English and French, while her least favorite is mathematics. Other favorites of the teen singer include the movie Beaches, the book A Land Remembered, and actors Gwyneth Paltrow and Ryan Phillippe.

Moore’s second album, I Wanna Be with You, though little more than a remix of some of the songs from So Real, received a somewhat warmer reception from the critics and was an even greater commercial success than her first recording. Among the songs from So Real that were refashioned for I Wanna Be with You were "Candy," "Lock Me in Your Heart," "So Real," and "Walk Me Home." Critics were still more impressed with Moore’s third album, self-titled, that was released in June of 2001. Critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine said the album’s most winning quality was its consistency. Writing for the All Music Guide, Erlewine observed, "This may not hit tremendous heights, yet everybody involved is working so hard that they’ve managed to come up with a record that’s consistently satisfying. It doesn’t stretch the teen pop formula much, just enough to give the record character, and Moore delivers the songs sturdily, never taking the forefront, but blending into the lush, layered production, so the music just rolls forth as a whole. And that whole sounds great—immaculately crafted, precisely polished, exactly what a teen pop album should be."

In addition to her busy recording career, Moore is a national spokeswoman for Neutrogena products, appearing in the company’s print and broadcast advertising campaigns. She also is an almost constant presence on the MTV cable television network. Over the past couple of years, she has co-hosted Total Request Live, best known as simply TRL, and appeared in her own show as well as a number of specials, including "Mandy’s Mountain Makeover" and "Mandy’s Spring Breakover." In the summer of 2000, Mandy hit the big screen when she made her film debut in director Garry Marshall’s The Princess Diaries.

Outspoken about the dangers of drinking and drugs, Moore makes it clear that she has no room in her life for those bad habits. In her interview with Dr. Drew.com, she said of alcohol and drugs, "I don’t see why people do it. With drinking I think it’s just social pressure when you’re younger…. Oh, and smoking, too…. I get allergic when I’m around smoke. My eyes puff out and my throat gets closed up so I can just never be around it. I know it sounds corny, but just say no."

Selected discography
So Real, Epic/550 Music, 1999.
I Wanna Be with You, Sony Music, 2000.
Mandy Moore, Sony Music, 2001.

Sources
Periodicals
ELLEgirl, August 8, 2001.

Online
"About Mandy," MandyNow.com, http://www.mandynow.com/bio/index.shtml (September 19, 2001).
"Biography," Mandy Fanatic, http://mandyfanatic.com/new1/bio.html (September 19, 2001).
"Biography," MandyOnline.com, http://www.mandyonline.com/bio.html (September 19, 2001).
"Mandy Moore," About the Artist.com, http://abouttheartist.com/biography.asp?artist=mandy_moore (September 19, 2001).
"Mandy Moore: I’m Just a Girl," Dr. Drew.com, http://www.drdrew.com/article.asp?id=456 (December 28, 2001).
Mandy Moore Official Website, http://www.mandymoore.com (September 20, 2001).
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Although she never reached the commercial heights of Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, Mandy Moore proved to be one of the more resilient members of the late-'90s teen pop explosion. Making her studio debut at the age of 15, Moore initially modeled her music after her teenaged contemporaries, a formula that yielded moderate chart success but little credibility. She widened her range at an early age, however, outshining her pop peers' acting ability with a confident performance in A Walk to Remember and, beginning with the 2003 album Coverage, prizing mature songcraft above commercial dance-pop. As the 2000s progressed and numerous teen idols struggled with the transition into adulthood, Moore smoothly evolved from adolescent starlet to mature songwriter, continuing to distance herself from the scene that had launched her career one decade prior.

Amanda Leigh Moore was born in Nashua, NH, on April 10, 1984. After her family moved to the suburbs of Orlando, FL, she took an interest in theater and starred in several local productions. Moore also began performing the National Anthem at Orlando-based sporting events, thus raising her profile in a town populated by music executives and producers. Epic Records took notice and brought her aboard their roster in 1999, hoping to penetrate the teen pop scene with a superstar of their own.

Moore's debut album, So Real, arrived in December 1999, just several months after the multi-platinum releases of Britney Spears' ...Baby One More Time and Christina Aguilera's self-titled debut. Although the album spawned a Top 40 hit with "Candy" and went platinum within three months, such success was trivial compared to the overwhelming popularity of teen pop's biggest stars. Epic responded in May 2000 by releasing I Wanna Be with You, a retooled version of Moore's debut with remixed tracks and scant new material. The title track peaked at number 24 on the singles charts, giving Moore another hit but failing to gain her admittance into pop's inner circle. A proper sophomore effort, 2001's self-titled Mandy Moore, suffered a similar fate, yet Moore bounced back the following year by landing a leading role in A Walk to Remember, a popular film adaptation of Nicholas Sparks' book.

Additional film roles followed in 2003, as did the release of Coverage. Featuring covers of songs by Carole King, Joe Jackson, Joni Mitchell, and Carly Simon, the album represented a leap forward for the maturing singer. Sales were low, however, prompting Epic to drop Moore from their roster. To fulfill her contract, the label released several compilations during the following years; meanwhile, Moore launched a clothing line and focused on her acting career, turning in humorous performances in American Dreamz and the indie film Saved! She also made forays into television with roles in Entourage, The Simpsons, and Scrubs.

Although Moore had originally signed with Sire Records after leaving Epic's roster, no albums appeared during her two-year stint with the label. She ultimately left Sire in May 2006 and partnered with EMI, who allowed her more artistic control. For the first time in her career, Moore began writing original material, collaborating with the likes of Lori McKenna, Rachael Yamagata, the Weepies, and Chantal Kreviazuk. She then decamped to upstate New York in late 2006 to record Wild Hope, which received a warm critical reception upon its release in 2007. Subsequent tours alongside the likes of Yamagata, Ben Lee, Paula Cole, and Vanessa Hudgens helped Moore reestablish herself as an adult artist, and she returned two years later with Amanda Leigh, a reflective album that took its title from Mandy's original name. Co-written and produced by power pop powerhouse Mike Viola, the album was also informed by Moore's fondness for Todd Rundgren, Joni Mitchell, and CSNY. ~ Andrew Leahey, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Mandy Moore

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Mandy Moore
Moore smiling faintly at a 2009 concert promoted by Gain Detergent. She wears a dark blazer and a black and white striped blouse, and the word "Gain" is visible in the background.
Moore at 83rd Academy Awards, February 27, 2011
Background information
Birth name Amanda Leigh Moore
Born (1984-04-10) April 10, 1984 (age 28)
Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S.
Origin Orlando, Florida, U.S.
Genres Pop, dance,[1] folk pop, pop rock[2]
Occupations Singer-songwriter, actress, model, fashion designer
Years active 1999–present
Labels Epic, Sire, The Firm Music, EMI, Storefront Recordings, RED Distribution
Website www.mandymoore.com

Amanda Leigh "Mandy" Moore (born April 10, 1984) is an American singer-songwriter, actress and fashion designer. Moore became famous as a teenager in the late 1990s, after the release of her teen pop albums So Real, I Wanna Be with You, and Mandy Moore. In 2007, she took an adult pop-folk direction with the release of Wild Hope. Her most recent album, Amanda Leigh, was released on May 26, 2009.[3] Moore has sold more than 10 million records worldwide.[4] Moore subsequently branched out into film, starring in 2002's A Walk to Remember and later in other movies, such as Chasing Liberty, Saved! and License to Wed. Most recently Moore provided the voice of Rapunzel in Tangled. In April 2011, she ranked 5th in People's annual Most Beautiful issue.[5]

Contents

Early life

Moore was born in Nashua, New Hampshire. Her mother, Stacy (née Friedman), is a former news reporter who once worked for the Orlando Sentinel, and her father, Donald "Don" Moore, is a pilot for American Airlines.[6][7][8] Moore's father is of Irish and Cherokee descent, and her mother is of half-English and half-Jewish ancestry.[9][10] Moore, who has an older brother Scott and a younger brother Kyle, grew up in Longwood, Florida, outside of Orlando, where the family moved shortly after her birth because of her father's job as an airline pilot.[11] She was raised Catholic (though she is no longer practicing),[12] and attended Bishop Moore High School,[13] in Orlando, as well as Lake Brantley High School in Altamonte Springs.

Moore's interest in singing grew after seeing the musical Oklahoma!.[citation needed] She was also encouraged to perform by her English-born maternal grandmother, who was her inspiration.[10] Some of Moore's first public exposure occurred when she sang the national anthem at several Florida sporting events.[citation needed] She subsequently came to the attention of the head of the artists and repertoire department at Epic Records after his friend, a FedEx employee, overheard her as she sang at a recording studio.[14]

Music career

1999–2002

So Real

Moore toured with N'SYNC throughout the first half of 1999.[11] Her debut album, So Real, was released in December 1999 and reached No.31 on the U.S. Billboard 200 album charts.[15] Unfortunately for her image, at the time of the album's release, reviewers considered Moore the latest in a series of heavily-marketed female teen singers described as "pop princesses," akin to Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera.[16] Entertainment Weekly Magazine's review of So Real, written by Elizabeth Vincentelli, accused Moore's songs of revolving around "not-yet-experienced love," of having been performed with "suffocating professionalism," and called the album's ballads "nauseating."[17]

Moore reached mainstream radio later, and at a younger age, than Aguilera and Spears had, and she was initially not as successful as they were. However, So Real was still certified platinum in the U.S. in early 2000 and sold nearly one million copies.[18] Moore's debut teen-oriented pop hit single "Candy," which Yahoo! Movies described as "strangely provocative,"[7] peaked just outside the top 40 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100[19] charts, and was certified gold.[15] The single was more successful in Europe, especially in the UK, where it reached number 6.[citation needed] Allmusic called the single "mediocre" and "typical," containing lyrics that described love "in terms of sugar treats."[20]

I Wanna Be with You

Moore released I Wanna Be with You in May 2000.[21] The album, which was mostly completed with synthesizers, bass, guitar, and drums[22] comprised new songs alongside tracks and remixes from So Real. Several reviewers criticized it on the basis that it was a remix album and not a true follow-up,[23][24] with Allmusic accusing its style of being "trashier, flashier, gaudier, and altogether more disposable" than that of So Real.[25] It peaked at No.21 on the Billboard 200, was certified gold in the U.S., selling nearly 1,000,000 copies.[18] The title track, "I Wanna Be with You," was the album's only single and reached No.24 on the Hot 100,[19] Moore's highest peak to date.[citation needed] It was also featured on the soundtrack of the film Center Stage in 2000.[26]

Mandy Moore

In June 2001, Moore released her second full-length album, her third overall, the self-titled album Mandy Moore. She promoted the album with her first headlining concert, "Mandy Moore Live@ShoutBack."[citation needed] The album contained uptempo tracks and influences from Eastern music,[27] and Allmusic described it as a "lush, layered production."[28] It received mixed reviews from other critics.[29] The album debuted at No.35 on the Billboard 200, and was later certified gold in the U.S., selling 443,000 copies.[18] The lead single was "In My Pocket," which Entertainment Weekly said contained "pumping, Indian influenced Euro disco."[30] The album's follow-up single was titled "Crush." The early 2002 release of the final single, "Cry", tied in with the film A Walk to Remember, Moore's debut as a lead actress.[citation needed]

In 2006, Moore commented on her early albums, noting that although she believed that her first album was appropriate for her age at the time when she released it,[10][31] she felt it "sucked"[32] and that her first albums were "just awful."[16] Moore also said that she "would give a refund to everyone who bought my first two albums" if she could;[33] during a radio interview in April 2006, the show's co-host—who had seen her comments—asked her for a refund on the first album, a request that Moore fulfilled.[32]

2003–2006

In October 2003, Moore released her fourth album Coverage,[34] which Allmusic characterized as a "leap to musical maturity"[35] and which Entertainment Weekly called an "effort to shed her bubblegum-blond image".[36] The album peaked at No.14 on the Billboard 200;[15] but "Have a Little Faith in Me" and "Senses Working Overtime", its only two singles, did not perform well on the charts.[15] Moore's cover of "I Feel the Earth Move" appeared on Love Rocks, a compilation CD of songs from gay rights supporters.[37]

Due to creative differences between Moore and her label, a split was announced.[citation needed] The company released the hits compilation album The Best of Mandy Moore, which reached No.148 on the Billboard 200[38] in November 2004 as a final obligation to Moore's contract.[39] Another compilation, Candy, followed in 2005. During this time period, the only music Moore had recorded was a song demo, "Hey!", written by James Renald, and a cover version of Lori McKenna's "Beautiful Man".[citation needed] Moore also voiced the character "Nita" in the 2006 film, Brother Bear 2.

2007–2009

In early 2006, Moore stated that she missed her music career and that singing is what she was the "most passionate about."[16] Moore had signed to Sire Records after her contract with Epic Records ended, but she left the company in May 2006.[citation needed] She signed with a new EMI Music-owned record company, The Firm, in July that year, describing her new contract as "especially exciting,"[40] and adding that she left Sire Records because she did not want to "follow the mainstream," but rather have "complete control and freedom" over her work.[41] Moore's new album, Wild Hope, was released on June 19, 2007,[42] and includes collaborations with artists Chantal Kreviazuk, Rachael Yamagata, Lori McKenna and The Weepies.[43] Moore stayed alone in a house in Woodstock in Upstate New York while recording the album in late 2006.[44] She performed new material from Wild Hope at the Sundance Film Festival;[citation needed] her first single, "Extraordinary," premiered on her MySpace profile on January 29, 2007.[citation needed] Moore performed the song at the Brick Awards on April 12, 2007[45] and launched a tour in the summer of 2007.[46]

The album was released in the USA in June 2007 to positive reviews.[citation needed] It fared moderately well on the charts, debuting at number thirty on the Billboard 200 (Moore's third highest charting album in the U.S.), and at number 84 in Canada.[citation needed] In August 2007, Moore toured with Paula Cole, and Rachael Yamagata, playing at mid-size venues in the United States and Canada.[citation needed] Wild Hope was placed at number 10 on Entertainment Weekly's "The Must List" and also named Reader's Choice for that August 10 issue, two months after its release.[citation needed] Moore surprised many with a free concert in Boston on July 18, 2007.[47]

On February 23, 2008, Moore released Wild Hope in Australia, and subsequently toured with Ben Lee and the West Australian Symphony Orchestra in Western Australia, supporting Kelly Clarkson on her tour.[citation needed] In October 2008, Moore posted on her website blog live videos of three new songs she's been working on, along with singer-songwriter, pianist and guitarist Mike Viola. It was at first expected to a be a duo album between the two, but then in January 2009, it was revealed it would be a solo album with a collaboration with him, slated for release in April 2009.[48]

On June 2009, Moore performed 5 tracks of her new Amanda Leigh album, including “Nothing Everything” and “Love To Love Me Back,” at the Walmart Soundcheck show.[49]

In May 2009, she released her latest album, Amanda Leigh, to generally positive reviews. Rolling Stone said about the album: "the title is taken from the singer's real first and middle names, the acoustic instrumentation emits a cozy campfire glow, and the album was recorded in a modest basement home studio. Message: This is real music, not computerized starlet pop."[citation needed] Time Magazine said that the album was "impeccably recorded."[citation needed] An article on the album by Paper Magazine said, "Mandy (in the album)... shows real thoughtful and emotional depth." Paper concluded that "Moore is a far better musician than she's often given credit for."[50][51][52]

Moore has a total of singles sales in Australia of more than 241,000 copies, and was ranked at # 281 on the 1000 artists chart of ARIA Music Decade Charts (1980–2010).[53]

2010–present

In 2010, Moore voiced Rapunzel in Disney animation film Tangled and recorded several songs for the soundtrack,[54] including I See the Light,[55] which she performed live during the Oscar presentation in February 2011.

Acting career

2000–2002

During the summer of 2000, Moore hosted a half-hour MTV talk show, The Mandy Moore Show, which was renamed Mandy a year later.[56] Moore was also a Neutrogena spokesperson, appearing in commercials and print ads for the product.[7] She has modelled for Penshoppe in the Philippines,[citation needed] Coach handbags in Japan,[57] and was a spokesperson for the School and Youth Programs of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.[58] Her first acting role was in the straight-to-video children's film Magic Al and the Mind Factory in which she plays the character of Brittany Foster.[citation needed]

In 2001, Moore appeared in a small part as the mean and popular cheerleader Lana Thomas opposite actresses Anne Hathaway and Julie Andrews in the film The Princess Diaries. During the film, Moore's character performs "Stupid Cupid," a song from the film's soundtrack. She also had a voiceover role in Dr. Dolittle 2 as the Girl Bear Cub. In 2002, Moore had her first starring role in a major feature film in A Walk to Remember, which co-starred Shane West. Based on the novel by Nicholas Sparks, the film revolved around the developing romance between a Protestant minister's daughter Jamie Sullivan (Moore) and an unruly teenager Landon Carter (West). The film was moderately successful, bringing in $41 million in the United States,[59] and establishing Moore's status as a lead actress. Although the film received mainly negative reviews,[60] Moore received several positive notices for her performance, with critic Roger Ebert calling her "quietly convincing".[61] At that summer's MTV Movie Awards, Moore won an award for "Breakthrough Female Performance" for the role.[62] The same year, she voiced the Final Fantasy VII character Aerith Gainsborough in the Square-Disney crossover video game Kingdom Hearts, was featured in the music video for Elton John's "Original Sin", and was ranked number sixty-seven in Stuff magazine's "102 Sexiest Women in the World".[63]

2003–2005

In 2003, Moore starred in the romantic comedy film How to Deal, which failed to draw in teenage crowds in the U.S. and grossed a total of $14 million domestically.[59] Her next film was 2004's Chasing Liberty, a romantic comedy that grossed approximately $12 million.[59] Both films received negative reviews;[64] however, Ebert once again singled Moore's performances out, noting in his review of How to Deal that Moore has "an unaffected natural charm" and "almost makes the movie worth seeing,"[65] and adding in his Chasing Liberty review that she has "undeniable screen presence and inspires instant affection."[66] Other critics described her as an "actress of limited range,"[67] though one review of Chasing Liberty noted that she was the "most painless of former pop princesses."[68] Later in 2004, Moore appeared in a lead role in the religion satire Saved! in which she played Hilary Faye, a proper and popular girl at a Christian school. The film was positively reviewed,[69] though it did not receive a wide release. Moore received praise for her performance,[70] with one critic calling her a "demented delight"[71] and another naming it her best performance to date.[72] She sang a cover version of The Beach Boys 1966 hit "God Only Knows", with Michael Stipe, that bookended the movie.

In 2005, Moore lent her voice to the film Racing Stripes as Sandy the white horse and appeared on the television series Entourage; she was also originally scheduled to star in the films Cursed, Havoc, and The Upside of Anger, all of which were eventually released in 2005 without Moore's involvement.[13]

2006–2007

In 2006, Moore guest-starred in two episodes of Scrubs: "My Half-Acre" and "Her Story II". The same year, she lent her voice to The Simpsons, playing Tabitha Vixx in the episode "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play".[73]

Moore also appeared in the film American Dreamz, which was released in April 2006. In the film, she played a deranged contestant on a television series modeled after American Idol. Director Paul Weitz stated that he had Moore in mind for the role before she was cast, explaining that "there's something inherently sweet about Mandy; it makes it all the more interesting to see her in a villainess role".[74] Moore has said that she enjoys playing mean-spirited characters but fears being typecast as a villain.[75] American Dreamz opened at number nine at the U.S. box office,[76] eventually totaling barely $7 million,[77] and received mixed reviews;[78] critic Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly, however, wrote that Moore and co-star Hugh Grant have a "wicked barbed chemistry" in their roles,[79] while Variety's Robert Koehler said Moore's role was a "pitch-perfect study of a woman for whom a reality show is reality".[80]

Later that year, in what ComingSoon.net's review described as a "surprisingly good performance", Moore voiced Nita, the heroine of the Disney animated sequel Brother Bear 2, which was released directly-to-DVD on August 29.[81] She was also originally cast to appear in that year's ensemble film Bobby, but was replaced by Mary Elizabeth Winstead.[82]

Moore, citing her conservative upbringing, has expressed dissatisfaction with her appearance on a May 2006 cover of Cosmopolitan; the magazine's headline is "orgasms unlimited", which refers to an article unrelated to her.[83] In her movie following this, Because I Said So, co-starring Gabriel Macht, Lauren Graham and Diane Keaton, Moore's character describes in detail the feeling of an orgasm to her mother. It was released on February 2, 2007 and received mixed reviews.[84] In License to Wed, Moore portrays a young bride-to-be who has to complete a three-week prenup course before her wedding. Co-starring John Krasinski as her fiance and Robin Williams as a priest, the film was released on July 3, 2007 to mostly negative reviews. Nevertheless, Variety described Moore's performance as "appealing."[85][86][87] In 2007, Moore returned to the small screen in an episode of How I Met Your Mother entitled "Wait for It".

2009–present

After a break of almost two years from big screen roles, Moore filmed the romantic comedy Swinging with the Finkels in the United Kingdom in 2009 for a 2011 release.[88] Moore also starred with actor Kellan Lutz in the 2010 film, Love, Wedding, Marriage.[89][90] She was a guest star on the sixth season finale of Grey's Anatomy on May 20, 2010, her first television role since 2007.[91] She returned in a guest role for an episode of the show's seventh season.[citation needed] Also that year, Moore voiced Princess Rapunzel in the CGI animated film Tangled. Moore, alongside Zachary Levi, performed the film's theme song, "I See the Light" at the 83rd Academy Awards where it was nominated for Best Original Song.[92]

In October 2011, it was announced that she is set to star in an ABC comedy titled Us and Them.[93] The series was eventually not picked up by ABC.[94]

Along with her voice role in the upcoming 2012 Tron: Uprising animated series, she is also set to be the title character voice in the Disney Junior series Oki’s Oasis.[95]

Fashion career

Moore branched into the fashion world in 2005 with her own fashion line named Mblem., a brand of contemporary knitwear and cashmere. One of her aims was to provide clothing for taller women (Moore herself is 5'10).[96] In February 2009, Moore announced that the line would be shutting down, but that she hoped to reenter the fashion world again under different circumstances in the future.[3]

Philanthropy

According to a press release from her own official website, Moore was involved in teaming up with nonprofit organization Population Services International (PSI), and its subsidiary, Five & Alive, which addresses health crises facing children under the age of five and their families.[97][98]

According to USA Today, Moore was also involved in serving as the Honorary Chairperson of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's division on awareness for youth. She served as a spokesperson by helping young people be aware of the seriousness of leukemia and lymphoma.[99] She also serves as the spokesperson for Cervical Cancer Awareness Month, held every January.[100] In addition, to increase cervical cancer awareness, Moore teamed up with Dr. Yvonne Collins, The Gynecologic Cancer Foundation (GCF), and GlaxoSmithKline (GSK).[101]

Personal life

Her relationships with Adam Goldstein aka DJ AM, singer Billy Crawford, tennis player Andy Roddick,[102] and actors Wilmer Valderrama[103] and Zach Braff,[104] as well as her marriage to singer Ryan Adams, have become the subject of media coverage. Moore and Adams were married on March 10, 2009, in Savannah.[105][106]

Moore has become a fan of mixed martial arts, often attending UFC events.[107]

As to her religious beliefs, Moore considers herself spiritual, and has said that she does not think of herself as Christian.[12]

Reporters have mentioned that Moore has a slight lisp in her performances,[108] but Moore denied having one when asked by a fan on her official blog.[109]

Social networking

Moore is the ambassador for the UN Foundations’s “Nothing But Net’s” campaign. The campaign launched a mass distribution of mosquito nets, ensuring that young children, women and newborn babies are not infected with malaria.[110] Through her use of social networking she has brought awareness to the cause. In August 2011, the campaign used the Town hall function on Facebook for the first time ever. Almost $5,000 was raised immediately. With nearly two million twitter followers, Moore continues to tweet about fundraising for the foundation.[110] For further awareness of the cause she created a page on the commonly used site, crowdrise.com.

Discography

Studio albums

Compilations

DVDs

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
2000 Magic Al and the Mind Factory Brittany Foster
2001 The Princess Diaries Lana Thomas
2001 Dr. Dolittle 2 Girl Bear Cub Voice
2002 A Walk to Remember Jamie Sullivan MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance – Female
Teen Choice Award for Choice Breakout Performance – Female
Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Chemistry (Shared with Shane West)
Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actress – Drama/Action Adventure
2002 All I Want Lisa
2003 How to Deal Halley Martin
2004 Chasing Liberty Anna Foster Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Actress – Drama/Action Adventure
2004 Saved! Hilary Faye Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Hissy Fit
Nominated—Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie Sleazebage
2005 Racing Stripes Sandy Voice
2006 American Dreamz Sally Kendoo
2006 Brother Bear 2 Nita Voice
2006 Romance & Cigarettes Baby Murder
2007 Because I Said So Milly Wilder
2007 License to Wed Sadie Jones
2007 Dedication Lucy Riley
2007 Southland Tales Madeline Frost Santaros
2010 Swinging with the Finkels Sarah Finkel
2010 Tangled Rapunzel Voice
2011 Love, Wedding, Marriage
2012 Tangled Ever After Short Film Rapunzel Voice
Ava
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2003 Clone High Herself? 1 episode
2003 Punk'd Herself 1 episode
2005 Criss Angel: Mindfreak Herself 1 episode
2005 Entourage Herself/ Aquagirl "Oh, Mandy" (Season 2, Episode 8)
"I Love You Too" (Season 2, Episode 9)
"The Bat Mitzvah" (Season 2, Episode 10)
"Blue Balls Lagoon" (Season 2, Episode 11)
"Exodus" (Season 2, Episode 13)
2006 Scrubs Julie Quinn "My Half-Acre" (Season 5, Episode 9)
"Her Story II" (Season 5, Episode 10)
2006 The Simpsons Tabitha Vixx (voice) "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play" (Season 17, Episode 22)
2007 How I Met Your Mother Amy "Wait for It" (Season 3, Episode 1)
2010 Grey's Anatomy Mary Portman "Sanctuary" (Season 6, Episode 23)
"Death and All His Friends" (Season 6, Episode 24)
"That's Me Trying" (Season 7, Episode 7)
"These Arms of Mine" (Season 7, Episode 6)
2012 Tron: Uprising Mara Voice (In production)
Video game
Year Title Role Notes
2002 Kingdom Hearts Aerith Gainsborough Voice (English version)

References

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  105. ^ "Mandy Moore Cozies Up With Ryan Adams". Celebrity Gossip/Gossip Girls. http://www.celebrity-gossip.net/celebrities/hollywood/mandy-moore-cozies-up-with-ryan-adams-204793/. Retrieved June 6, 2008. 
  106. ^ "Mandy Moore Gets Engaged!". People. February 11, 2009. http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20258604,00.html. 
  107. ^ UFC 86 telecast, during Griffin's introduction
  108. ^ Wieselman, Jarett (November 11, 2010). "Why can't we seem to get more Mandy". New York Post. http://www.nypost.com/p/blogs/popwrap/want_more_mandy_4Dd6Gxtei8JAkliqpRij1H. 
  109. ^ "Mandy Moore Says She Doesn’t Have A Lisp". popdirt.com. February 9, 2002. http://popdirt.com/mandy-moore-says-she-doesnt-have-a-lisp/2262/. Retrieved April 10, 2012. 
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External links


 
 
Related topics:
Mandy Moore: The Best Of (2004 Music Film)
Mindfreak: Blind: Criss Angel (TV Episode) (2005 Reality Show TV Episode)
Now, Vol. 4 (2000 Album by Various Artists)

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