As time went on, she found herself seeking the spotlight. "As I got older, I started to feel like I didn't want to be in the choir. I wanted to sing louder than everyone else. If I was in a musical, I hogged the microphone!"
Her early focus was on dance and she was on the competition circuit, which also included vocal contests. When her dance instructor noticed that her pupil had an affinity for singing, she encouraged her to enter a competition, and in her first stab at it, she won. When word came of a chance to audition for the new Mickey Mouse Club, the 12-year-old jumped at it. "I did a dance to 'Ice Ice Baby' and an a cappella version of 'Amazing Grace.' There were 50,000 kids who auditioned and I got to go to Florida with the final eight."
She was crushed when she received a letter from Disney saying she hadn't made it, particularly when so many people she knew did: Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Justin Timberlake, Ryan Gosling and Keri Russell. "My mom told me not to worry, that I would see those kids again somewhere down the road. Even though I didn't make the show, I think it was then that my parents realized maybe they weren't being just proud parents, that maybe there was something there within me."
Not long afterwards, Jessica was invited to contribute to an album recorded with a gospel choir in New Jersey, which led to recording her first solo albumalso gospel, in Nashville. Like her Mickey Mouse Club rejection, it was another setback for the 15-year-old. "I was telling my friends and people at my school that I was making a record that would be on the radio. But the label folded right before the record was to be pressed. When you're that young and someone promises you something, you believe them. I was so disappointed."
Her grandmother ended up paying for the record to be pressed, and the Simpsons sold it as they toured the Christian music circuit. It was one of those recordings that eventually caught the ear of mega music biz mogul Tommy Mottola, who signed her to a pop music deal with Columbia Records and released her label debut, Sweet Kisses, in 1999.
Fast forward through a lightning-fast rise to the top of the pop charts: double-platinum certification for Sweet Kisses, its breakthrough hit 'I Wanna Love You Forever'; the 2002 follow-up CD, Irresistible which crossed over to four different charts.
It was in making her third album that she was first introduced to the Nashville songwriting community. "I wanted to do some writing for the record and my A&R person at the time pointed me to Nashville, where some of her favorite writers were. I loved it, but the label thought what I was writing with them was too country, and they had signed me to sing pop. I would listen to those demos over the years and knew I would go back to Nashville one day."
But meanwhile, the whirlwind of her increasingly successful professional life and increasingly public personal life took on a virtual life of its own, with the line between the two becoming nearly indistinguishable. Almost simultaneous with the release of In This Skin in 2003 was the launch of the massively successful reality show documenting every moment of her marriage to new husband Nick Lachey, "Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica." Though the programwhich ran for 41 episodes until March 30, 2005ratcheted up both album sales and Jessica's star quotient, it also contributed to the public's perception of the blonde bombshell as ditzy and dimwitted, an assessment that family and friends knew to be inaccurate and hurtful.

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