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Neither could Hilary Duff, though not due to lack of effort. While her career as a pop diva skyrocketed she released two platinum albums and a best-selling greatest-hits disc in just three years the former Disney child star found her acting career stalling. Despite her considerable star wattage, Hollywood had difficulty seeing Duff beyond her past sugary sweet roles and good girl persona (no rehab or pantyless partying here).
"It always shocks me the lack of openness, the lack of imagination that some casting directors have," Duff, 19, says in her girlish voice, sitting in a back corner of one of her favorite restaurant haunts, brunette hair peeking out of a black suede cap.
"I would read a script and be so in love with that, and someone would be like, 'Hilary Duff? Oh no, we don't want her for that.'"
As bad scripts and rejections kept coming, Duff decided to stop the balancing act and put 100 percent into her music career.
Working again with songwriter Kara DioGuardi, she plunged into recording "Dignity," which was released this week. It's a club-oriented record filled with pulsating grooves, but also tackles some of the more serious issues she's faced since her last record, including a breakup with Good Charlotte's Joel Madden and her parents' split.
"Every experience that I had for the last two years, they were certain things that made me want to write about in song," says Duff, who co-wrote all but one song on the disc the first time she has written so extensively for a CD. "I really got to have fun. It's a new side of me and part of me. All the songs are so self-explanatory. It was very liberating writing it is like a therapy session."
"She was very honest about where she was in her life, and very open, which made it very easy to collaborate," says DioGuardi. "I think she's really become an adult on this record. She's a young adult, in the way that she feels, in the way that she acts, in the way that she interprets what she's singing about."
While recording "Dignity," Duff was in transition, in both her personal life and her professional one. One of the bigger jolts was the end of her romance with rocker Madden. Though the pair first raised eyebrows because of their seven-year age difference he was in his 20s and she was under 18 when they first started dating they seemed like a solid couple, and he even worked on her greatest hits disc, providing an edgier sound then the bouncy pop that had become her signature.
But Duff says she broke it off last year when she had a feeling that "this isn't right anymore. I didn't know how to trust that feeling but I knew I had it."
Source: http://movies.yahoo.com
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