Moore toured with the
Backstreet Boys throughout 1999.
[4] Her first album,
So Real, was released in December of that year and reached number thirty-
one on the U.S. Billboard 200 album chart.
[9] At the
time of the album's release, reviewers considered
Moore the latest in a series of heavily-marketed female singers described as "
pop princesses",
akin to
Britney Spears,
Christina Aguilera and
Jessica Simpson.
[10] Entertainment Weekly's
review noted that
Moore's songs, revolving around "not-yet-experienced
love", were performed with "suffocating professionalism", and that the album's ballads were "nauseating".
[11] Moore was the last and youngest of
Simpson, Aguilera and Spears to reach
mainstream radio and was initially not as successful as they were, although
So Real was certified
platinum in the U.S. in
early 2000 and sold nearly
one million copies.
[12] Moore's debut
teen pop hit single "
Candy", which Yahoo!
Movies described as "strangely provocative",
[1] peaked
just outside the top forty on the U.S. Billboard
Hot 100
[13] and was certified gold.
[9] All
Music Guide noted the single was "mediocre" and "typical", containing lyrics that described
love "in terms of
sugar treats".
[14] Moore released
I Wanna Be with You, a re-worked version of her debut album, in
May 2000.
[15] The album, which was mostly completed with synthesizers, bass, guitar, and drums,
[16] 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 followup,
[17][18] with All
Music Guide writing that its style was "trashier, flashier, gaudier, and
altogether more disposable" than its predecessor.
[19] It peaked at number twenty-
one on the Billboard 200, was certified gold in the U.S. and sold nearly 792,000 copies.
[12] The title track "I
Wanna Be with You" was the album's only single and reached number twenty-four on the
Hot 100,
[13] Moore's highest
peak to
date. It was also featured on the
soundtrack of the film
Center Stage (2000).
[20] Moore released the self-titled album
Mandy Moore — which included the songs "Saturate Me" (a hip-hop ballad), "You Remind Me" and "In My Pocket" — in
June 2001. It contained uptempo
tracks and influences from
Eastern Music[21] and was described as a "
lush, layered production" by All
Music Guide.
[22] It received mixed reviews from critics,
[23] although
Entertainment Weekly noted that
Moore tried out "new sounds" and "a breathy
Natalie Imbruglia vibe [on the album] ... as
teen pop goes, it could be a lot worse",
[24] while
Rolling Stone magazine positively described
Moore as "more protorocker than R&B
Wanna-be" and said
She was taking the "
high road" compared to her first two albums.
[25] The album debuted at number thirty-five on the Billboard 200, was later certified gold in the U.S. and sold 443,000 copies.
[12] Lead single "In My Pocket", which
Entertainment Weekly said contained "pumping, Indian
influenced Euro disco",
[26] did not appear on the
Hot 100;
Moore performed the song
live several times, including on the 2001
Fox network television special
Teenapalooza.
[27] The album's follow-up single, "
Crush", also failed to appear on the U.S. chart, although
MTV aired the
Music video frequently (it was
Moore's first number-
one video on
TRL). 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.
In 2006,
Moore commented on her
early albums with ill
feelings, noting that although
She believed her first was appropriate for her age,
[3][28] She felt it "sucked"
[29] and that her first albums were "
just awful".
[10] Moore also said that
She "would
give a refund to everyone who bought my first two albums" if
She could;
[30] 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 fulfilledre
She was subsequently signed to a
record deal.
In October of 2003,
Moore released her fourth album
Coverage,
[31] which All
Music Guide characterised as a "
leap to musical maturity"
[32] and which
Entertainment Weekly called an "effort to
shed her bubblegum-blond
image".
[33] It consisted of covers of 1970s and 1980s songs that
influenced Moore as a child;
Moore noted that
She did not want to "top the original artist[s]", but rather offer her "own interpretation" of
their music.
[31] Entertainment Weekly described the album's style as "overblown with
strings, turntable scratching, and arena-rock pomp", while E! Online said that
Moore's
voice has grown "stronger" and that
She "sounds
at home" performing the re-mixes.
[34] Coverage peaked at number fourteen on the Billboard 200 (her highest ranking to
date),
[9] but "Have a Little
Faith in Me", its only single, did not perform well on the charts, although it did debut within the top forty.
[9] Moore's cover of "I Feel the
Earth Move" appeared on
love Rocks, a compilation CD of songs from
gay rights supporters.
[35]Because of low
sales for
Coverage, Sony's
Epic Records dropped
Moore. The company released the hits compilation album
The Best of Mandy Moore, which reached number 148 on the Billboard 200,
[36] in November 2004 as a final obligation to
Moore's contract.
[37] Another compilation,
Candy, followed in 2005.
[edit] Television and film career
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. 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 revolves around the developing
romance between a Protestant minister's daughter (played by
Moore) and an unruly teenager (played by
West). The film was moderately successful, bringing in $41 million in the
United States, and establishing
Moore's
status as a
Lead actress.
[43] Although critics received it negatively,
[44] Moore received several positive notices for her
performance, with critic
Roger Ebert calling her "quietly convincing".
[45] At that
summer's
MTV Movie Awards,
Moore won an award for "
Breakthrough Female
performance" for her role.
[46] The same year,
She voiced the
Final Fantasy VII character Aerith
Gainsborough in the
Square Enix-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".
[47]In 2003,
Moore starred in the romantic comedy film
How to deal, which failed to draw in the teenage crowds in the U.S. and grossed a
total of $14 million domestically.
[43] Her
next film was 2004's
Chasing Liberty, a romantic comedy that grossed approximately $12 million.
[43] Both films received negative reviews;
[48] critic 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",
[49] and adding that
She has "undeniable screen presence and inspires instant affection" in his
Chasing Liberty review.
[50] Other critics described her as an "actress of limited range",
[51] though
one review of
Chasing Liberty noted that
She is the "most painless of former
pop princesses".
[52] Later that
summer,
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,
[53] though it did not receive a wide release.
Moore received praise for her
performance,
[54] with
one critic calling her a "demented
delight"
[55] and another naming it her
Best performance to
date.
[56]In 2005,
Moore lent her
voice to the film
Racing Stripes;
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.
[6] Moore has appeared on the television series
Entourage and guest-starred in two episodes of
Scrubs in 2006. The same year,
She lent her
voice to
The Simpsons, playing
Tabitha Vixx in an episode which aired in
May.
[57]Moore next appeared in the parody
American Dreamz, which opened in
April of 2006. In the film,
She played a
deranged contestant on a television series modelled after
American Idol. Director
Paul Weitz said he had
Moore in mind for the role even 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".
[58] Moore has said that
She enjoys playing mean-spirited
characters but fears being typecast as a villain.
[59] American Dreamz opened at
number nine at the U.S. box
office[60] and received mixed reviews;
[61] critic
Owen Gleiberman of
Entertainment Weekly, however, wrote that
Moore and co-
star Hugh Grant have a "
wicked barbed
chemistry" in their roles,
[62] while
Variety's
Robert Koehler said
Moore's role was a "pitch-perfect study of a woman for whom a
reality show is
reality".
[63] In the same year, in what ComingSoon.net's
review described as a "surprisingly good
performance",
Moore voiced Nita, a
bear, in the animated
sequel Brother bear 2, which was released directly-to-DVD on
August 29.
[64]