Mariah Carey gets real for E!
The Kardashians, Caitlyn Jenner and the female wrestlers of “Total Divas” will welcome a new neighbor to the E! lineup later this year: the singer Mariah Carey.
Carey will be the star of a new eight-part documentary series ,“Maria h’ s World ,” whichwill followher as she goes on a tour in Europe and South Africa that began Tuesday, and plans her wedding to her billionaire fiancé, which is to take place this spring. (No date has been set yet.)
But whatever you do, don’t use the R-word when discussing the series with Carey.
“I refuse to call it a reality show,” she said in a telephone interview. The series, she said, is all about getting to know her better and not, as she put it, “Here I am, getting my nails done.”
“I thought it would be a good opportunity to kind of, like, show my personality and who I am, even though I feel like my real fans have an idea of who I am,” she explained. “A lot of people have misperceptions about this andthat.”
The show began filming two weeks ago, as Carey wrapped up a Las Vegas concert series, and will move to her international tour with members of her entourage — including singers, dancers and her manager — serving as costars.
E! is positively giddy at the prospect of showcasing someone with Carey’s celebrity status, and expressed hope that this will be the first season of a con- tinuing series. “We haven’t seen a star of her level and her history” appear on television quite this way, Jeff Olde, E!’s executive vice president for program development, said.
Carey’s life has, at times, played out like a soap opera. Her romances over the years, whether with Tommy Mottola or Nick Cannon (both of whom she married) or Derek Jeter, have been prime tabloid fodder.
But even if there are questions about her voice, and her continued ability to sell albums, she remains a genuine global superstar. She has sold about 64 million albums in the United States, according to the Recording Industry Association of America, and maintains a huge international following.
Still, forays into television by major musicians over the years have been bumpy experiments. Whitney Houston’s appearance on “Being Bobby Brown” and Paula Abdul’s one-year Bravo show didn’t exactly provide the sort of exposure that helps album sales or burnishes Hall of Fame reputations, which might be partly why Carey is reluctant to call hers a reality show.
She also stressed that she has veto power over material she doesn’t want filmed or broadcast. (Producers for the show suggested that it would be a collaboration.) And some things are strictly off limits: her 4-year-old twins, for instance.
Similarly, Carey said that her fiancé, the Australian James Packer, does not want to be filmed .“He’ sale- git businessman,’’ she said. “It’s not really his thing to be, like, traipsing all over Europe and hanging out with all my crew and dancers and singers.”
The show is being produced by Bunim/Murray Productions, the same group behind “Keeping Up With the Kardashians,” “I Am Cait” and “The Real World.” Jeff Jenkins, executive vice president for programming and development at Bunim/Murray, said that “Mariah’s World” would be shot differently from the company’s other shows.
“Keeping Up With the Kardashians,” for example, is shot in the spirit of a soap opera, with rapid cuts, wall-to-wall music and in-studio interviews, but “Mariah’s World” will adhere a few degrees closer to the standards of a documentary, hesaid.
Jenkins also said he was interested in breaking the fourth wall and blending his production crew into the television show. He referred to a scene in Madonna’s famous documentary, “Truth or Dare.”
“Remember when Madonna’ s getting ac hiro pr ac- tic adjustment,” Jenkins recalled, and noticed that the director was following her. “And she says, ‘You’re following me into the adjustment?’ And he said, ‘Yeah, we’re shooting everything, remember?’ And she says, ‘Not my adjustment!’ He said, ‘Yeah, we’re shooting everything,’ and she says, ‘OK.’ That’s kind of where I’m at right now with Mariah.”
In 2002, Carey showed off her TriBeCa penthouse in the MTV show “Cribs”; since then the episode has gained a kind of cult status. In it, Carey’s occasional antics were on full display, including whens he showed off a walk-in lingerie closet and dropped into a bathtub wearing little more than a towel.
A new generation of fans has written love letters to the segment: A 2014 Buzz Feed post called it “legendary,” and an MTV post last year called it “transcendental.”
When asked if fans of that segment would be pleased with Carey’s new show, Jenkins didn’t hesitate.
“I don’t think they’ll be disappointed,” he said.