The Hamilton Spectator

Mariah Carey’s New Year’s Eve nightmare

- PATRICK HEALY

Mariah Carey suffered through a performanc­e train wreck in Times Square on New Year’s Eve as malfunctio­ns left her at a loss vocally during her hit song “Emotions,” struggling to reach notes and to sync the lyrics and music.

The trouble continued when she gave up on another of her bestknown numbers, “We Belong Together,” while a recording of the song continued to play, a confirmati­on that she had been lipsyncing.

But on Sunday, a dispute erupted between Carey’s representa­tives and producers of ABC’s “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest,” on which the singer was performing.

Carey’s manager, Stella Bulochniko­v, charged that the show’s producers had been aware of technical problems but did not fix them — and chose to continue showing Carey’s messy performanc­e “to get ratings.”

“I will never know the truth, but I do know that we told them three times that her mike pack was not working and it was a disastrous production,” Bulochniko­v told Us Weekly magazine on Sunday. “I’m certainly not calling the FBI to investigat­e. It is what it is: New Year’s Eve in Times Square. Mariah did them a favour. She was the biggest star there, and they did not have their” act together.

Dick Clark Production­s, which produced the show, issued a statement Sunday night saying Carey’s performanc­e woes had nothing to do with the production, and that any suggestion that the company “would ever intentiona­lly compromise the success of any artist is defamatory, outrageous and frankly absurd.”

“In very rare instances, there are of course technical errors that can occur with live television,” the statement said, adding that an initial investigat­ion suggested that the production company “”had no involvemen­t in the challenges associated with Ms. Carey’s New Year’s Eve performanc­e.”

A veteran audio producer, Robert Goldstein of Maryland Sound Internatio­nal, a company that has worked on the Times Square event for years, also said in an email that there had been no malfunctio­ns with the sound equipment he oversaw.

“Every monitor and in-ear device worked perfectly,” Goldstein said. “I can’t comment beyond that and don’t know what her non-technical issue may have been.”

A spokespers­on for Carey said on Sunday that the singer was not at fault for her performanc­e.

“Unfortunat­ely there was nothing she could do to continue with the performanc­e given the circumstan­ces,” the spokespers­on, Nicole Perna, told The Associated Press.

It was a rare meltdown on national television by one of the top-selling recording artists of all time. Carey, a pop phenomenon in the 1990s who won five Grammys out of 34 nomination­s over the years, was the final premidnigh­t act on ABC’s “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest.” She had just finished “Auld Lang Syne” when her star turn began to spiral out of control.

“We can’t hear,” she said in the opening seconds of “Emotions” after she sashayed down the stage before more than 1 million people who had gathered to watch the ball drop in New York.

Standing still with her left hand on her hip while music played, Carey told the audience that there had not been a proper sound check before her performanc­e. Then she said, “We’ll just sing,” and noted proudly of her song, “It went to No. 1.”

But she could not manage the notes that followed, and she either forgot lyrics or did not want to deliver a subpar performanc­e.

“We’re missing some of these vocals, but it is what it is,” she said. “Let the audience sing.”

ABC quickly cut to shots of the Times Square crowd as Carey tried to perform some of her choreograp­hy. She continued suggesting fixes from the stage, and at one point seemed to defend herself. “I’m trying to be a good sport here,” she said.

When the number ended, the crowd cheered her. “That was” she said, pausing for effect, “amazing.”

She seemed to recover at first with “We Belong Together,” but there appeared to be another malfunctio­n, and Carey again stopped singing. But this time, the prerecorde­d number kept playing.

“It just don’t get any better,” she said, and then left the stage.

The cause of the problem was not immediatel­y clear. After the performanc­e, Carey posted a mildly profane slang phrase on Twitter with an “upset” emoji, then wrote: “Have a happy and healthy new year everybody! Here’s to making more headlines in 2017.”

An ABC spokespers­on said on Sunday that the network would not comment.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Mariah Carey’s disastrous New Year’s Eve show in Times Square.
GETTY IMAGES Mariah Carey’s disastrous New Year’s Eve show in Times Square.

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