Sunday Tribune

Mariah: I have bipolar disorder

Grammy winner says she was afraid if she spoke out earlier about her struggles with mental illness, it would have destroyed her musical career there and then, writes Jonah Engel Bromwich

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MARIAH Carey, the superstar singer who has lived in the public eye for three decades, has acknowledg­ed that, in 2001, she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

Carey disclosed the diagnosis in an interview with People magazine’s editor in chief, Jess Cagle.

The interview marks one of the first instances in which a celebrity of Carey’s stature has acknowledg­ed her struggles with mental illness. In the interview, she explained why she had not previously revealed the diagnosis.

“I didn’t want to carry around the stigma of a lifelong disease that would define me and potentiall­y end my career,” she said. “I was so terrified of losing everything.”

Carey said that she had lived in “denial and isolation and in constant fear someone would expose me”, and that she had come forward after the burden became too heavy to bear. She is in therapy and taking medication for bipolar II disorder, a disease that can cause sudden and extreme shifts in mood, among other symptoms.

People magazine declined to explain how the interview had come about, saying only that

Carey had trusted Cagle to tell her story. A publicist for Carey did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Carey was a teenager in the late 1980s when she was recruited by Tommy Mottola, the president of what was then CBS Records, to become a pop star. Her fame was swift with the backing of the label, and that placed enormous pressure on her from the beginning.

She spent long hours in the studio recording her debut, Mariah Carey, and was nominated for four Grammys in 1991. She won two that year, including the award for best new artist. Her third album, 1993’s Music Box, was also an enormous commercial success. By 2000, Billboard had crowned her the artist of the decade.

But the money behind Carey’s rise led to suspicion. Industry observers questioned the singer’s initial unwillingn­ess to tour and asked whether her voice was less impressive than it sounded on record. The scrutiny increased in 1997 when Carey and Mottola parted ways.

In the summer of 2001, after a drawn-out feud with her label, and the release of a new single, Carey was admitted to hospital for exhaustion. Soon after, her film project Glitter was released and widely panned by critics.

The latter half of her career has been characteri­sed by inconsiste­nt performanc­es and a string of high-profile relationsh­ips that have been obsessivel­y covered by the tabloids.

She retained her hit-making abilities (the blockbuste­r songs

We Belong Together and Touch My Body were released during this period).

For many critics, Carey’s music had become less of a focus than her public persona and live performanc­es. Last year, she was widely ridiculed for her failed lip-syncing performanc­e on Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest in Times Square.

Carey’s disclosure of her diagnosis follows admissions of mental health problems by other celebritie­s. Last year, Chrissy Teigen wrote an essay about her experience with post-partum depression for Glamour magazine and Selena Gomez told Vogue about her struggles with anxiety and depression.

But Carey started her career during a different era, and her interview with Cagle breaks new ground. She told People that she had decided to speak partly on behalf of others.

“I’m hopeful we can get to a place where the stigma is lifted from people going through anything alone,” she said. “It can be incredibly isolating.

“It does not have to define you, and I refuse to allow it to define me or control me.” – The New

York Times

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