In Bed With The BSB
In Bed With... The Backstreet Boys
Say "wassup" to the new kids on the block:
1998 song-and-dance pinups the Backstreet Boys.
Their young fans absolutely adore them, but, Maureen Callahan wonders, is the feeling entirely mutual?
Tiffany, is like, shaking. She has just smelled a Backstreet Boy. "He was wearing cologne!" she shrieks, as she pogos outside Disney World's House of Blues. The venue itself, where the Backstreet Boys will later perform to a sellout crowd whose average age is 12, is more apt: An antiseptic franchise inspired by similarly successful ventures, it's practically a metaphor for the Boys themselves. But to the girls who swarm around Tiffany on this bright Florida afternoon, Backstreet inspire nothing less than reverence. "I was close to Nick once," says a solemn 15-year-old named Jana. "But I was so shocked I couldn't say anything."
Having borrowed liberally not just from now-defunct, sexually nonthreatening Euro boy bands such as Take That and East 17 but also from the American daddy of them all - New Kids on the Block - the Backstreet Boys have emerged as the teenybopper band of the moment. "I've tried everything to meet them," says a shy, chubby fan named Katie, who would really rather worship from afar; she's happy to sit with her copy of Hangin' With the Backstreet Boys: An Unauthorized Biography, and reread factoids about Nick. "We have a lot in common," she says, readjusting her wire-rimmed glasses. "We both like to play Nintendo, and we both like sports, and� ooooh, he's fine!"
Eighteen-year-old Nick Carter is by far the most popular Boy - he's the youngest and looks a lot like Leonardo DiCaprio. Then there's 20-year-old AJ. "Bone" McLean, who - with his three tattoos, wacky facial hair, and 200 pairs of tinted sunglasses - is either clich_ or kinda dangerous, depending on your age. Howie Dorough, 24, answers to Howie D. or Sweet D. He lives at home, and aside from a Corvette Stingray, his most extravagant post-fame purchase has been central heat and AC. Howie hooked up with Nick and AJ back in 1993, when they were all auditioning for TV shows here in their native Orlando. Kevin Richardson, now 27, responded to an ad placed by a talent agency; he then called his cousin, Brian Littrell. Unlike the others, who were looking to get famous any way they could, 23-year-old Brian had nursed dreams of singing professionally. In fact, back in high school, he'd wander the halls crooning New Kids tunes. "People looked at me like it was sissy thing," Brian says, "but I don't care. I would've given anything to do what they were doing."
Today, thanks to their manager, Johnny Wright, he is. Wright had just come off four years as the New Kids' road manager, working under uber-Svengali Maurice Starr, when, in 1993, he heard about a quintet of pretty white boys who could harmonize like an R&B group. He immediately saw the possibilities. "It was all hip-hop and alternative music then," says Wright, "but I knew that the girls who had been New Kids fans had little sisters."
Though they may be five men who dress alike, pop-and-lock in sync, and routinely dodge stuffed animals onstage, the Backstreet Boys - and Wright - predictably run away from any and all comparisons to NKOTB. Still, while creating and refining their image, Wright called ex-New Kid Donnie Wahlberg and asked him to give Backstreet advice. Wahlberg passed. "Johnny Wright learned a lot from us," Wahlberg says ruefully. Now 28 years old and cobbling together an acting career, Wahlberg understands all too well the ups and downs of being a teen heartthrob. "If there's any resistance to the Backstreet Boys," he says, "it's probably because of us."
Three hours before the show, the House of Blues opens its doors to 17-year-old Leslie, who is confined to a wheelchair. The band's tour publicist, Denise (who is AJ's mom), had mentioned the Boys would be busy entertaining "a little handicapped girl" before the concert, but Leslie isn't the only one. She doesn't care; it's her birthday, and she's just spotted Nick roaming the hall. She's so rattled that she inadvertently crumples her Backstreet Boys calendar. As Nick perfunctorily wishes Leslie a happy birthday, he spies two able-bodied girls lurking not five feet away, and he's off. Later, as he passes Leslie on his way backstage, she goes for it again: "Nick! Nick!" she implores, hands clawing air. Nick, who possesses a finely calibrated sense of detachment, pretends not to hear her. "Oh," Leslie whispers to herself. "Bye."
Back in the dressing room, Nick and the others huddle with Wright. It was Wright who devised the plan of attack that broke Backstreet: While the alt-rock revolution was raging in the States, Wright took them to Europe and slapped them on every boy-band bill he could, exploiting their all-American wholesomeness. ("At one point I had them run across the stage with the American flag," he says proudly.
At home, Wright was forced to go the direct-market route, quietly dispatching the Boys to theme parks and junior highs across the nation. "Teenage male vocal groups were not going to meet with acceptance in America," says Jeff Fenster, VP of A&R at their record label, Jive. "So the idea was to make a record that would appeal to the global marketplace." Fenster hired Swedish writing/producing duo Denniz PoP and Max Martin, who had penned hits for Robyn, and produced Ace of Base and Ireland's version of Backstreet, Boyzone. The Euro strategy worked: Backstreet's self-titled debut album, a slick collection of New Jack posturings, went on to sell 12 million copies overseas. Eventually, pop groups such as Hanson and the Spice Girls eased Backstreet's reentry Stateside (their album is now quadruple platinum here); likewise, their success has spawned a slew of harmonizing teen hopefuls, such as 'N Sync, Five, No Authority, and 911 - one of which have yet to register with the kids. As the Boys can testify, winning over the jaded youth of America can be a bitch. "Those were the most intimidating, cruelest crowds," says Kevin of the band's days on the junior-high circuit. "Little teenage dudes coming up to us saying, 'Backstreet Boys? Who are you?' "
Though Wright maintains that the Boys are "very much in control of what they do," both Kevin and Howie have flinched over Wright's tactics. "We don't wanna be in a certain situation," says Howie, gently alluding to the New Kids' career trajectory, "but we have links to certain situations." After making the video for "Quit Playing Games (With My Heart)," Kevin, aghast at the sight of himself bare-chested and wet, demanded a reshoot. The record company shooed him away. After their album was finally released here last August, Kevin called the president of Jive and griped that all the merchandising - Sweet Valley High inserts, throw pillows, bandannas, key chains - was out of hand. He was told to suck it up. "There's always gonna be a market of little girls who wanna hang cute boys on their walls," says Dave McPherson, Jive's assistant VP of A&R, who signed the Boys in May 1994. Wahlberg is even less tolerant of such whining: "Look, if you're lucky enough to be in the right place at the right time, you're gonna tap into a frenzied marketplace," he says. "Teenage girls have an insatiable appetite."
Despite the short shelf life of most boy bands, Backstreet plan on a long-term career. They're all learning to write and play instruments, and McPherson says they have a shot. His major issue is with their lyrics, which are pure Hallmark. Only one line on their album remotely smacks of do-me abandon ("Am I sexual?"), and when they deliver it in Orlando, the girls roar and pound the floorboards so violently two roadies rush to secure the speakers. Still, the real highlight of any show comes during "I'll Never Break Your Heart," when Howie, Kevin, and Nick - in a move conceived by Wright - serenade three lucky fans, pre-plucked by security. As the girls tremble under spotlights, the Boys, swathed in white, gallantly seat each at a small table, then fall to their knees like lovesick troubadours. Tonight, Howie and Kevin pull it off aplomb; Nick, however, is laughing so hard he's reduced to lip-syncing. He gives his girl a buddy pat on the back; she shoots him a quizzical look, but he keeps his head bowed. He's still laughing.
That's when Liz Arana passes out - not at this show, but at this same moment. "Oh, that is so beautiful when they sing to the girls," she gasps. Liz a soft-spoken 15-year-old who, with her sloped eyelids and slight heft, seems like the kind of girl who yearns silently from her Long Island bedroom. But at last year's New York City Backstreet Boys show, her first ever, she was drunk with adrenaline. "Okay," she begins. "I pushed my way to the front of the stage, and there was some 12-year-old standing in from of me on a crate!" So: Liz knocked the girl down, climbed onto the crate, ripped off her bra and threw it at Nick, and then completely lost it. "When they sang 'I'll Never Break Your Heart', I just burst out crying, and then I passed out." Liz, who bursts out crying whenever she sees anything of theirs for the first time - a video, a photograph, a TV appearance - says it's awful. "I missed three songs!"
Liz spends suburban afternoons watching her compilation tape of Backstreet appearances, or pasting phots into her Backstreet scrapbook, or staring at her walls, which are plastered with Backstreet pinups. The walls, she says, are a problem. "My mom just painted them," she says, "and she wants the posters down. So does my boyfriend." Robbie, whom Liz has been dating for a month ("He's my first serious, serious boyfriend"), loathes the Backstreet Boys. "He says they're faggots and they can't sing," she says. "I'm like, 'Your point is�?' "
This is the first time Liz has ever been so enthralled with a band - she says she has spent more than $1,000 on Boys merchandise - and she, like millions of other girls before, is slightly embarrassed by the depths of her passion. She only feels comfortable talking about it with other girls, girls who, like her, are beginning to date real boys but who feel safer longing for the unattainable ones- the Nick Carters. She cradles a slip of memo paper and reads a quote of Nick's that she copied: "Everyone wants a girl with a perfect personality; it doesn't really matter how they look." Does she believe boys when they say stuff like that? "Not all boys," she answers softly. "But Nick, I believe."
A couple of days after the House of Blues gig, the Boys are in New York City for a photo shoot. They hug - they perform this ritual constantly, even after only a half-hour apart - then circle a gaggle of models as though they've encountered unidentified life forms. Johnny Wright says that during the junior-high tour, he made sure that the kids knew that "AJ loves cars, Howie loves clothes, and Nick, Brian, and Kevin love sports. We wanted to show that these are regular guys" - ie., not gay. The courtship of teen girls dictates that the Boys remain publicly unattached, and this makes them sensitive to the notion they are anything but heterosexual. Howie understands it's "not macho" to be into Backstreet, but says if the band were black, they'd get compared to Boyz II Men or Shai, and boys would be down. Here, too, Donnie Wahlberg can empathize. "But instead of worrying about who's not paying attention to them," Wahlberg says, "they should worry about who is. Because once these girls get older and start drinking beer and piercing their noses," he says, "theys are going away."
While the others chat up the models, Brian stands off in the back. He's the only Boy who's not really comfortable schmoozing or even accepting compliments; by nature, he's quiet and reserved. (While the rest of the Boys went clubbing after the Orlando show, Brian hung with his 50-year-old dad, who was visiting from Kentucky.) Right now, he can't get his mind off the "little handicapped girl" AJ's mom brought backstage in Orlando; she's actually battling two forms of cancer. "I didn't know how to approach her," says Brian, whose most vivid childhood memory is of doctors strapping him to his hospital bed and beating his chest till he was in tears, hoping to break up a staph infection that went straight to his heart. (About a year ago, Brian's heart began leaking blood, and he underwent surgery last month.) "I wanted to say, 'Listen, I'm getting ready to have an operation, too.' So I went over to her mother and told her that, and her mother said, 'Oh, my daughter could tell you a lot of things.'" His eyes widen. "Can you imagine?"
The next morning, the Boys are on Regis & Kathie Lee, performing "As Long As You Love Me", a sparkly ode to unconditional love. Nick shares lead vocals with Brian and sings to his own image in the monitor. During the Q&A, Kathie Lee, eyes dewy, offers to set Brian up with her niece, who's also had heart surgery. As soon as the segment is completed, they clamber into a waiting van. The garage door shimmies open, and girls begin crawling all over the van, smushing their faces up against the glass. Nick turns to Brian. "You know, if we don't go out there," he says wearily, "we're gonna look like real pricks."
Having fulfilled all obligations, Nick and Brian head to the nearest Blimpie. Nick orders a tuna fish hero and, as he blithely stares at himself in the mirror, tries to discern the nature of teen girl fandom. He comes up empty: "It's real hard to put yourself in their shoes," he says finally. But Nick's obviously amused by the frenzied adulation - for instance, he could barely contain himself onstage just four nights ago. "The joke was on Howie," says Brian, who explains that security likes to play "little pranks" to break up the monotony. Nick bounces with delight, like a baby in a high chair. "Howie ended up with a not-so-pretty girl," he says, wiping errant chunks of tuna from his chin. "Do you remember her? Do you?" Oh, sure - she was one of the heavier ones right? "Aaaahhhh, yeah," Nick says, with strained diplomacy. "I got my girl, Kevin got his girl, and the last girl was Howie's. He got stuck, and made this face like, 'I'm gonna kill somebody.'" He shrugs. "It was funny."
On the way back to the hotel, Nick and Brian are intercepted by yet more fans. They pose for pictures and hurriedly scrawl autographs; a couple of girls hang back and speak in hushed tones. "You know, I saw Nick sign an autograph for one girl and then he threw it back to her. I want to know why he's like that."
"You know what I wonder?" says her friend. "I want to know if he would ever date a fan."
Spin magazine, July 1998