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Like former
Mouseketeers Justin Timberlake, Christina Aguilera, and Britney Spears,
teen sensation Hilary Duff also owes much of her fame to Disney, but she
was not merely a member of the Mickey Mouse Club. Rather, in 2001 Duff
landed the starring role in the Disney Channel series Lizzie McGuire and
won the hearts of tween TV viewers in the U.S. and abroad.
Like many teen stars, Duff began her showbiz career at an early age.
When she was a mere six, she was hired as a dancer with the Columbus
Ballet Met touring company of The Nutcracker. Television commercials and
appearances soon followed, as did acting roles in such TV films at
Casper Meets Wendy in 1998. However, Duff's big-screen breakthrough in
2003 took place after she had already established herself as a star on
Lizzie McGuire. First there was Agent Cody Banks, which she co-starred
in with male teen star Frankie Munoz. That was followed by the
big-screen version of her TV alter-ego in The Lizzie McGuire Movie, a
franchise that Disney had such high-hopes for, it hired a writer to pen
the screenplay to the sequel even before Duff had signed on herself.
Although negotiations between Duff and Disney fell apart, leaving any
future Lizzie McGuire offerings in limbo, the film and TV show launched
Duff's career as a singer. In August 2002, Duff made her singing debut
on "I Can't Wait" on the Lizzie McGuire TV soundtrack. After that proved
to be a success on Radio Disney, it was followed by Santa Claus Lane, a
Christmas album featuring Duff's duets with Christina Milian and Lil'
Romeo, and other tracks.
More of Duff's potential as a pop starlet was revealed on the soundtrack
to The Lizzie McGuire Movie, which featured two Duff songs--"What Dreams
Are Made Of" and "Why Not"--and a remix of the latter.
Duff hoped to complete her transformation into a full-fledge pop star
with her first proper solo album, Metamorphosis, released in August
2003.
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