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01523_Field_113.cap.txt
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1996-03-14
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@
Madonna Louise
Veronica Ciccone
was an Eighties
phenomenon.
Almost from the
moment she had
her first hit
single, Holiday
in 1983, she
became for
teenage girls an
icon of sexual
assertiveness
and independence
#
Madonna's first
film break,
combined with
over ten million
record sales and a
much-publicised
marriage to actor
Sean Penn, fuelled
a formidable
publicity machine.
Soon Madonna's
private life, her
music and her
films were all just
part of one big
celebrity package
#
Some felt that the
way Madonna
single-mindedly
constructed her
own career and
her own image,
making millions
of dollars along
the way, was a
sign of greed and
self-obsession;
others were
impressed to see
a woman take
command of her
own destiny
#
Madonna's
marriage, like
everything in
her life, was
public property
from the start.
The marriage
lasted only three
years, and Mr
and Mrs Penn's
relationship with
the press was far
from easy
#
"What is a control
freak?" said
Madonna.
"Somebody who
needs to know
what is going on;
somebody who
needs to have
everything taken
care of; somebody
that requires
everybody to do
their job and do it
good. If that is a
control freak,
then I am."
#
Madonna's Blond
Ambition tour
became the
subject of her
film, Truth or
Dare: In Bed With
Madonna. At the
time she was
dating Warren
Beatty, and even
he, an expert in
stardom, was
surprised by her
obsessive media-
awareness: "She
doesn't want to
live off camera,
much less talk."
#
Always happiest
when courting
controversy,
Madonna
managed to turn
the threat of
arrest into more
hype for the
show
@
Madonna was master of the "anti-photo-opportunity". She went
jogging in Hyde Park to publicise her presence in London, but any
journalist or photographer who tried to get near her risked being
flattened by her bodyguards
#
Millions of words
were written to
try to fathom
the Madonna
phenomenon.
It seems that
part of the
explanation
is that she was
in the end,
plain ordinary -
and so endlessly
re-inventable
#
The marketing of
a megastar is a
highly lucrative
business.
Madonna has
always known
her worth and
insists on tight
control of her
public image
including tough
contracts for
photographic
sessions
#
Madonna's book
Sex was sold
with "ultra
secure packaging"
ensuring no pre-
purchase peeking.
Madonna promised
a book "based on
fantasies . . a
dream world, it's
pretend, OK."
Nevertheless, the
book caused yet
another round of
media frenzy and
controversy
#
The publication of
Sex was tied in
to the release of
Madonna's album,
Erotica. The
book and the
record were
published
simultaneously
for maximum
impact. Madonna
was accused of
appropriating gay
culture for her
own ends
@
Madonna's conical
bra, designed by
Jean-Paul
Gaultier, soon
became a kind of
trademark, like
Charlie Chaplin's
bowler hat or the
Beatles' moptop
haircuts
#
In 1992
Madonna's own
"multi-media
entertainment
company",
Maverick, was
formed. Madonna
called it "a
vehicle to
entertain as well
as enlighten,
provoke, and
naturally, make a
profit."
#
Madonna started
as a singer and
dancer, became
the biggest star in
the world, and
then turned into
a sociological
phenomenon to
be immortalised
in academic
theses
#
Madonna's fame
inevitably led to
a backlash. Her
acting abilities
came in for
particular scorn,
but Madonna
remained deadly
serious about
herself: "Every
time I reach a
new peak, I see a
new one I want
to climb. Maybe I
should rest and
admire the view,
but I can't. I've
got to keep on
pushing."
#
Madonna's
ambition seems
greatest in the
area where she is
weakest: "I
always had a
great interest in
films, and the
thought that I
could only make
records for the
rest of my life
filled me with
horror. Ultimately
I want to direct."
#
After "Sex" and
"Truth or Dare: In
Bed with Madonna",
the world was left
waiting to see
what she will
come up with
next. Her records
still sell in their
millions, and she
remains just as
ambitious as ever