The Star Malaysia - Star2

Next step: World domination

Sexy Brazilian artiste Anitta’s rags-to-riches tale.

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FIRST, Anitta conquered Brazil. Now, the singer best known abroad for her smoulderin­g, booty-shaking video Vai Malandra, has her eyes set on the rest of the world.

It’s been a fast but long ride from the rough Rio de Janeiro neighbourh­ood of Honorio Gurgel – where Anitta, 25, grew up – to the palm-lined condo she now calls home.

But as Brazil’s biggest pop star explained to AFP, it’s not so much a fairy tale as a story of social media savvy and hard-headed business strategies.

“An artiste has to know who she is and to be consistent in building her career,” she said in an interview at her lavish house in Rio’s upmarket western area of Barra da Tijuca.

Born Larissa Machado, she began singing in church with her family and at 17 she was discovered by a producer who saw her in a YouTube video.

Five years later, Anitta found fame in Brazil with Meiga e Abusada (Sweet And Sassy) and Show das Poderosas (Show Of The Powerful), but her skills at navigating the online markets have been the key, helping catapult her to rapidly growing internatio­nal stardom.

She has 28 million followers on Instagram and her 2015 song Bang has been watched 343 million times on YouTube.

Vai Malandra (Go Naughty), which features Anitta twerking to the sultry rhythm of baile funkstyle rap, set social networks on fire and became the first Brazilian song to enter Spotify’s Top 20 Global.

The video is set in a Rio favela and celebrates the often violence-plagued neighbourh­oods’ vibrant and sexy street culture, complete with women using electrical tape to create perfect tan lines and sculpted men with peroxide-blond hair and gold chains.

The fact that she didn’t airbrush out the cellulite on her now famously quivering backside only fuelled the social media frenzy – and boosted her credential­s as a singer who preaches female empowermen­t.

Brazil is Latin America’s biggest country but Anitta says it’s not big enough for her.

“I thought I would get to where I wanted to in Brazil when I was about 30, but by 22, I was already doing great,” she told a conference Harvard hosted for Brazilian business leaders, where she was a surprise guest this April.

“I like challenges, so I studied the internatio­nal market.”

Singing in English and Spanish overcomes the hurdle of having Portuguese as her native language.

Although Brazil has a huge market, the rest of the continent speaks Spanish – and that’s before you start looking further afield.

While English is “the universal language”, she is also focusing on Spanish-language songs to reach the rest of the Latino world, recording alongside Colombian artistes Maluma and J Balvin.

She spent two years visiting clubs in Spain, the United States and Mexico to get a feel for the market and her potential fans, seeing herself as Brazil’s answer to the border-hopping Latin sensations Ricky Martin and Alejandro Sanz.

“I just went ahead and tried to seize the moment,” she said.

The strategy worked as she was featured at the 2016 Rio Olympics opening ceremony.

This summer, she’ll be pushing the Anitta brand with shows at Rock in Rio Lisboa in Portugal, and in Paris and London.

Billboard magazine named her No. 10 on a list of the most influentia­l artistes of social networks last December, while this February, Vogue magazine places her among the world’s most influentia­l people.

With its jacuzzi, palm trees and large swimming pool, Anitta’s three-floor house is the cliche pop star’s abode. But despite that and her large retinue of assistants, she says she keeps herself grounded.

“I may have my diva moments but I don’t want to get to where I’m considered untouchabl­e,” she said. In person, Anitta barely resembles the pouting, swaggering star of Vai Malandra. She is diminutive, neatly dressed in black pants and a yellow sweater, and her hair falls in golden curls, rather than the dark braids of the video.

That chameleon-like adaptabili­ty, helped by several rounds of plastic surgery, is a big part of her rise. Her mantra, “is to do things differentl­y. I research the market but only so that I can do something other than follow the trends. I look for things that haven’t been explored yet”.

And she clearly doesn’t lack self-belief.

“All my dreams that I had, I’ve fulfilled,” she said. “I wanted to show people that it’s possible to do everything that they say is impossible.” – AFP

 ??  ?? From Honório Gurgel neighbourh­ood – in the violent outskirts of Rio – to stardom, Brazilian singer Anitta has had a meteoric career despite her young age. At only 25, she managed to become one of the main names of pop music in Brazil. — AFP
From Honório Gurgel neighbourh­ood – in the violent outskirts of Rio – to stardom, Brazilian singer Anitta has had a meteoric career despite her young age. At only 25, she managed to become one of the main names of pop music in Brazil. — AFP
 ??  ?? Anitta performs at the Sao Paulo Fashion Week in Brazil last month. — AFP
Anitta performs at the Sao Paulo Fashion Week in Brazil last month. — AFP

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