NewsBite

Britney Spears treated like ‘a toddler’, says Claude Kelly

A key songwriter for Britney Spears is speaking out about the singer’s situation, saying she’s handled “like a toddler with no rights”.

Framing Britney Spears official trailer

She was the biggest female pop star in the world but Britney Spears is now being treated like a “toddler who has no rights” by her controlling dad.

The astonishing claim from one of her songwriters is the latest twist in an ongoing scandal engulfing the Hit Me Baby One More Time singer.

Claude Kelly, who worked on her 2008 album Circus, lashed out as documentary Framing Britney Spears examines growing evidence that the former Mickey Mouse Club star was unfairly painted as an unfit mother and incapable of looking after herself.

RELATED: Most shocking moments from Framing Britney Spears

Britney Spears is being treated ‘like a toddler’.
Britney Spears is being treated ‘like a toddler’.

RELATED: How can I watch Framing Britney Spears in Australia?

The controversial move to give her dad Jamie control over her finances, business and personal life – known as a conservatorship – was introduced in February 2008.

It followed a tumultuous year in which she divorced backing dancer Kevin Federline, 42, shaved her head, attacked a paparazzo’s car with an umbrella and entered rehab.

Spears lost custody of sons Sean, 15, and Jayden, 14, in October 2007 and three months later was rushed to hospital and placed on a psychiatric hold.

The documentary is at the centre of the #FreeBritney movement by her fans who say they are fighting to free the star from the shackles of a “conservatorship”.

Kelly, who teamed up with Spears shortly after Jamie, 68, took control, told The Sun: “She’s 39 and she’s been doing this a long time. It doesn’t make sense that she’s being handled like a toddler who has no rights.

Kelly penned the title track to Britney’s 2008 comeback album Circus. Picture: AP
Kelly penned the title track to Britney’s 2008 comeback album Circus. Picture: AP

“The whole thing brings up a bigger issue of human rights and it doesn’t make sense to remove the right for people to live the way they want to live.

“There’s hundreds of other celebrities that have had pretty tough times like public breakdowns, public divorces or embarrassments and they haven’t needed to lose all of their rights.

“If that’s the case then we should all be worried because we are all going to f**k up, fall short and make mistakes.

“God forbid that someone can come in, whether it’s your father or your mother, your husband or your wife or whatever and decide, ‘You no longer have the right to decide how you live your life.’”

RELATED: Spears emotional after seeing doco

Claude Kelly worked with Spears on several songs for the album Circus.
Claude Kelly worked with Spears on several songs for the album Circus.

RELATED: Britney’s most shocking interview explained

DOCUMENTARY SHOCKS

Kelly is the latest in a long line of acquaintances to defend the star, whose apparent treatment at the hands of her dad and a manipulative media machine is laid bare in excruciating detail in Framing Britney Spears.

The doco claims that in the years leading up to her breakdown she was the victim of relentless intrusion by paparazzi in Los Angeles and painted as a disaster in the pop industry.

Her ex-boyfriend Justin Timberlake made a public apology to her last week following the documentary’s release in the US.

The singer, who dated Spears for three years while he was in boyband NSYNC, faced backlash after it highlighted his actions following their break-up in 2002.

Framing Britney Spears features an old radio interview in which Justin bragged about bedding his ex, despite her claiming she would stay celibate until marriage.

It is also touched on his 2002 Cry Me A River video, which alluded to Spears cheating on him, and how this affected her image at the time.

She has had a glittering career, selling more than 100 million records since the release of her 1999 debut album, Baby One More Time.

Under the conservatorship, she has released four albums, performed several tours, been a judge on The X Factor USA and completed a Las Vegas residency.

Those close to the singer insist that if she is well enough to take on such a workload, she should be able to have control of her life.

Spears, seen here at the GLAAD Media Awards in April 2018, hasn’t performed publicly in more than two years. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP
Spears, seen here at the GLAAD Media Awards in April 2018, hasn’t performed publicly in more than two years. Picture: Valerie Macon/AFP

Spears has spent the past year fighting in court for her father to be removed as conservator, with legal papers saying she is “afraid” of him.

There are also claims he has made business decisions without her knowledge.

On top of that, her former business manager Lou Taylor will be the subject of a court hearing on March 17 for allegedly charging excessive fees to Britney’s estate.

Spears had asked the courts in August 2019 to have her dad replaced as conservator by “a qualified corporate fiduciary”.

And she had a small victory last Thursday when financial company Bessemer Trust was appointed co-conservator, meaning Jamie will no longer have full control over her life.

But the #FreeBritney movement has gathered pace and gained the support of stars including Miley Cyrus, Ellie Goulding, Paloma Faith, Cher and Sam Smith.

Last week, Spears’ boyfriend of almost five years, model Sam Asghari, 26, branded Jamie a “dick” and added he has “zero respect for someone trying to control our relationship and constantly throwing obstacles our way”.

CARE AND PROTECTION

Britney Spears is fighting to have her father Jamie removed from her conservatorship.
Britney Spears is fighting to have her father Jamie removed from her conservatorship.

On Sunday her cousin and former assistant Alli Sims also came forward to allege Jamie had threatened her in a bid to stop her contacting Spears.

She claimed: “He 100 per cent was threatening me with my life. I really do believe he would have done something if I didn’t remove myself from the situation.”

In December, Jamie said he had been on good terms with his daughter until August, but admitted they hadn’t spoken since.

Defending his role as her legal guardian, he said: “I love my daughter and I miss her very much. When a family member needs special care and protection, families need to step up, as I have done for the last 12-plus years.

“I have and will continue to provide unwavering love and fierce protection against those with self-serving interests and those who seek to harm her or my family.”

But Spears’ former label boss Kim Kaiman claims in the documentary that it was in fact the singer’s mum Lynne, 65, who helped navigate her early career.

She recalled: “The only thing Jamie ever said to me was, ‘My daughter’s gonna be so rich, she’s gonna buy me a boat.’ That’s all I’m gonna say about Jamie.”

The star has long been opposed to the conservatorship and lawyer Adam Streisand says in the documentary that she has told him: “I don’t want my father to be my conservator.”

And an unearthed clip shows Spears admitting she has struggled with the legal control.

Speaking in 2008, she said: “If I wasn’t under the restraints I’m under right now, with all the lawyers and doctors and people analysing me every day, I’d feel so liberated and feel like myself.

“When I tell them the way I feel, it’s like they hear but they’re really not listening. But I’m sad.”

Her sister Jamie Lynn, 29, took part in a digital #FreeBritney rally last week, while brother Bryan, 43, said of the conservatorship: “She’s always wanted to get out of it.”

Britney has solely communicated with fans through her Instagram for the past few years.
Britney has solely communicated with fans through her Instagram for the past few years.

SENDING MESSAGES

Meanwhile, there is confusion among fans over what is really going on in Spears’ inner circle. They are convinced she is being silenced and believe she is dropping clues as cries for help through her Instagram feed.

There were claims last week that she is working on her own documentary about her life, which has sparked a bidding war between channels, while Netflix is making its own special.

That is expected to re-examine the troubling events leading up to the conservatorship, when paparazzi could make more than a million dollars from a single picture of the star.

Hit songwriter Kelly has also worked with Whitney Houston, Christina Aguilera and Jessie J over the years but said he was shocked by the intense scrutiny which Spears was subjected to.

He recalled: “The studio we worked at has really high fences and they were climbing the fences and cutting holes through the mesh to get shots of her.

“It was literally mayhem. And she was actually very quiet, very shy and kept to herself.

“What I got was that clearly she had been mistreated and taken advantage of enough that she had a huge wall up.

“But what I remember the most is that for someone who had been painted as all over the place, a mess, tragic and sloppy, she was incredibly professional.

“Much like a professional dancer, when it comes to the art, she’s a machine. It’s everything around her that’s insane.”

Spears hasn’t worked since January 2019, when she cancelled a Las Vegas residency shortly after her dad was hospitalised.

She said at the time that she wanted “to focus on family”. Three months later, the star voluntarily entered a rehab facility.

It has since been claimed Spears is refusing to perform publicly or make music as long as Jamie is one of her conservators.

It is now uncertain whether there will be any new music from the singer, whose last album Glory came out in 2016.

However, Kelly says he recorded several demos with her which are among “thousands” of unreleased tracks she made.

He insisted: “Anyone is capable of putting out a great new body of work from her at any time. We’re talking about a mega star.

“She’s not a has-been. She’s a genius at it and you can never, ever, ever count out a brilliant musician like that. She’s always a hit away.”

This story originally appeared on The Sun and is republished here with permission

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/music/britney-spears-treated-like-a-toddler-says-claude-kelly/news-story/cdc87d7dfbc6d05d5f9981648bab3164