Mariah Carey in psychiatric care
   Singer Mariah Carey is under psychiatric care after suffering an emotional and physical  breakdown. The star was admitted to hospital last week, and was said to have been suffering  from "extreme exhaustion" at the time. She did have an emotional and physical breakdown  but there was no suicide attempt.
    She was due to promote a new film and album in the next month - the first fruits of her  signing with Virgin Records, which was reported to be the most expensive record deal ever.  Her publicist Cindi Berger denied reports that Carey had attempted suicide by cutting herself.  "She did have an emotional and physical breakdown but there was no suicide attempt," she said. "She did break some dishes and glasses, and she may have stepped on them."
    The singer, 31, is best-known for hits I'll Be There, Without You, Fantasy and Open Arms.  She was forced to cancel an appearance at MTV's 20th birthday concert on 1 August, where she  was to be the star guest. The music channel had to create a new finale for the show after  Carey's withdrawal.
    She had recently been promoting the single Loverboy, from the Glitter soundtrack, in the UK  and US. But it only reached number 12 in Britain and failed to make an impact in America -  until her record company dropped the price to 49 cents. Ms Berger said all promotional duties for Carey's film and album have now been postponed.
    "I'm taking it one day at a time, she's getting a little stronger each day," she told BBC  News Online. "Right now, everything is on hold." Carey had also finished another film, WiseGirls, in which she stars alongside Mira Sorvino.
    The star was raised by her mother, a former opera singer and began singing at the age of four.  She began to write songs while she was at school and soon after graduation had broken into the  recording industry, making her debut on Columbia Records in 1990. She was the biggest-selling  artist of the 1990s and her single Heartbreaker made her one of the most successful artists ever  in 1999, when it became her 14th American number one single, a feat rivalled only by the Beatles  (20) and Elvis Presley (17).   (BBC News) 
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