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A lot is misunderstood about Mariah Carey the person and Mariah Carey the artist. Some people claim Mariah didn't have to work to get where she is, and many people don't give Mariah the credit she deserves as an artist. Through these blogs I hope to shed some light on what Mariah has gone through, and how she has influenced music.

If you have any questions that you would like me to address, please email me at jason@mariahdaily.com. The best topics will be posted here.

Jason


For more detailed information on Mariah's creative process and the inspiration for her #1 songs, please look here:
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Home » Archives » January 2007 » Shedding The Cocoon: Symbolism In The Butterfly Videos

[Previous entry: "Setting The Holiday Standard"] [Next entry: "Mariah The Writer: Simple, Memorable, And Absolutely True"]

01/10/2007: "Shedding The Cocoon: Symbolism In The Butterfly Videos"
When Mariah Carey divorced Tommy Mottola in 1997, she felt free to do a lot of things that she couldn't do when married. Mariah has said she felt stifled in her marriage with Tommy, and her 1997 album Butterfly chronicles a lot of what Mariah was going through at the time. Not coincidentally, the videos from the album seem to be her most symbolic. Mariah has denied some of the connections to her personal life and validated others, so let me state for the record that a lot of what you are about to read is pure speculation.


"Honey" - The video that introduced pop culture to a post-divorce Mariah was "Honey." Mariah has said that the concept of the "Honey" video was influenced by the 'Bond Girls' from James Bond movies, and she has said the video was just an excuse for her to wear different outfits. A lot of people thought there was more meaning in the video than Mariah let on. In the opening of the video, Mariah is being held captive by an Italian mobster, perhaps a reference to her Italian ex-husband Tommy who likened himself to 'The Don'. In the video Mariah escapes her captors, jumps off a balcony into a pool, and emerges in a bikini. The bikini in the pool scene is modeled after Bond girl Honey Ryder, who emerged from the ocean in a similar biniki in Dr. No. Bond girls are typically thought of as 'eye candy' in the James Bond movies, and they are usually victim roles. In the "Honey" video, however, Mariah escapes from her captors and rides away from them on a jet ski. Mariah was assumed to be a victim in her marriage, so just as Mariah broke free from Tommy, perhaps she was breaking free from the Bond girl stereotype. One of Mariah's captors seemed similar to Tommy, and he was holding Mariah captive in a mansion. Tommy and Mariah were living in a mansion in Bedford up until their separation, and Mariah has dubbed the mansion 'Sing Sing' because it felt like a prison to her. Or, as Mariah's co-producer Walter Afanasieff told Entertainment Weekly, "Everything in the video is 'Fuck you, Tommy.'"


"Butterfly" - The next video to be released was "Butterfly." Mariah has stated that the opening scene of the video was inspired by the Tennessee Williams play Baby Doll. That play centers on a young woman who is married to a businessman who wants a more intimate relationship with her than she wants. The play is basically about her boredom and exploitation by a seductive Italian and her abusive older husband. It isn't hard to see the parallels to Tommy's restrictions on Mariah and her subsequent relationship with Derek Jeter. The older man peeps at her in the opening of the play (like in the opening of the video), and is frustrated that he cannot see more of her. Tommy spied on Mariah in general, and perhaps wanted more from her physically (Mariah has said there wasn't a lot of sex in the marriage). In Baby Doll, Archie's failures as a businessman add to his failure to get intimate with Baby Doll. In a story reported by Vanity Fair and other sources, Mariah taunted Tommy after the 1996 Grammys by criticizing his lacking enough power to get her a Grammy. Baby Doll is a woman-child, which Mariah actually describes herself as in the Butterfly song "Close My Eyes" (and has a song titled "Babydoll" on that album). The "Butterfly" video shows Mariah visiting different parts of the house during the day as the male figure is presumably off at work. The one thing that seems to bring her happiness is a horse, which she ultimately sets free. In the Here Is Mariah Carey TV special, Mariah rides horses at the home she shared with Tommy. Perhaps letting the horse go in "Butterfly" was symbolic of letting Tommy go. In the play, Baby Doll's husband also talks about the position he holds in the town and how many people are on his side. That would be a parallel for Tommy holding the position of the head of Mariah's record label. Mariah told MTV that the scene in the video where she cuts her hands on a barbed wire fence came from a dream she had. In dreams, barbed wire is known to represent difficulty in breaking through and feeling trapped in a relationship. That clearly parallels Mariah's relationship with Tommy.


"My All" - Another video with clear symbols is "My All." Some of the images were modeled after Boticelli's The Birth Of Venus. Venus was the god of love and beauty, and some say she sprang from the sea and floated to the shore in a shell. Venus also represents the feminine, and she shines brightly as a star sometimes, but also diminishes (like feminine power). Vulcan worked to make objects that pleased Venus, but she was unable to meet his need for monogamy. Venus was torn between her husband Vulcan (Tommy), the god of destructive fire, and her true love Mars (Derek), the god of spring/fertility. She has been waiting to speak, and perhaps the man in the lighthouse represents Mars. The video could also tie into the Sirens of mythology, who were seductive and pulled mariners to their islands with their singing and eventually killed them.


"The Roof" - The video for "The Roof" found Mariah reflecting back on a rooftop party from 1983. She drives around in a limo reflecting back to a night from her past, perhaps remembering the last time she felt really free as a person. Mariah has talked about being eternally stuck in 8th grade, and 1983 wouldn't have been too far removed from that time. The most symbolic moment of the video comes toward the end when Mariah rises up through the sunroof in the limo. As Slant magazine details, "When Mariah rises through the limo's sunroof to relish the warm November rain, she's not drunk on the bubbly but on the memory of a fleeting moment of liberation." That's a fitting image to use as an end to this blog; Mariah is both liberated and vulnerable.

Comments:
Mariah Carey | Thursday, March 6, 2008
Crap.

Adam | Thursday, September 13, 2007
Just wanted to make a slight correction to one of your statements. In the September, 07 issue of "Interview" Magazine, Mariah, herself, mentions that the lyrics from "Butterfly" were words that she wished Tommy would have sang to her. She said, "At that point I really believed that I was going to go back to the marriage - I didn't think I was going to leave forever." It wasn't so much that Mariah was letting Tommy go, but the opposite.

Nonetheless, I am in complete agreement with all of your articles. You have an amazing perspective and strangely equal to the same defensive side I take when battling non-Mimi supporters. Amazing!

MirageMC | Wednesday, February 28, 2007
I've always said that Butterfly IS Mariah as an artist and as a person.
Great work, it's quite interesting!
And I think that Butterfly it's the real emancipation of Mariah! smile

Andy | Saturday, January 13, 2007
Re: Jason

My bad dude.

Jason | Friday, January 12, 2007
This is Jason, the author of the article, with some replies:

Andy - This is about the videos, not lyrics, which is why "Babydoll" and other are not mentioned.

baddarc/Curtis - While Mariah may not realize all of it, she has admitted to some of it (like the parallels to BABY DOLL), so it's not all speculation.

Jeramiah - I said at the start a lot of it is speculation (i.e. opinion). You may have a different opinion on some of it, but that doesn't make it fact.

Andy | Thursday, January 11, 2007
Great article. Your analysis is thoughtful and it makes me appreciate Butterfly as a creative, indepth piece of work moreso, although it already is my favourite Mariah record. My only wish is that you expand your analyses to the rest of the Butterfly album. There is a lot of great content in Breakdown, Babydoll, Close My Eyes, and Outside that can be examined as well. Maybe another time. Regardless, it was an interesting read.

Curtis | Thursday, January 11, 2007
nice entry, interesting, i don't think it's as deep as you made it seem and i don't think even mariah realized all this, but its still interesting reading it, you should analyze lyrics, theres much more there.

Jeramiah | Thursday, January 11, 2007
I love where you went with this, but I've got some qualms with this article. There's so much other things he could've touched on, like the fact that in Butterly, she was basically being held captive, with her captor only coming in to check on her rarely. Like the way Tommy was in their marriage. & the whole heir of abandonment that the house had. Then he says Tommy was the horse. No, the horse symbolized Mariah & when she let it free, she then lived vicariously through it.

Then in Honey, when she finally escapes the wrath of the man in the mansion she emerges in a bikini which is like the unveiling of a sexier side of her. She's not trying to escape the bond girl cliche at all, but rather is finally getting her chance to play out that role. Then she finds the new guy @ the end, that could symbolize the new guy, Derek.

The writer later goes on to say that the My All video was inspired by the Birth of Venus, but I've never heard it explained as such & in fact it's said that the TEOM cover was the thing that's actually inspired by the famous painting.

He doesn't even mention Breakdown or the My All/Stay Awhile Remix video, for lack of symbolism I'm guessing, but both are full of it. I think the MA/SA vid shows Mariah taking loooong strides to whipe clear the very conservatie, non-threatening image that Columbia built for her as she host her own star-studded hip-hop house party but even then, she spends most of her time sitting in the corner singing to herself.

Then Breakdown, carries on the lonesome motif. As we see Mariah in some many different stages of stardom. In the vid she's on the stage doing her routine, then dancing again in the head dress, chillin in the casino, walking the runway, then lastly she's in bed. But if you notice, during the performances, she looks flawess but she never really looks up, never engages & you just get this sense of overwhelming sadness eminating from her. Then in the Runway scene, she appears happy for once, just thinking & singing to herself, but if you notice, there's really nobody else there to comfort her. Even when she's in the casino, amongst the crowd she gets no attention, she has to sit on the craps table & even then they just play around her. When she finally reluctantly leaves the place [the cowboy hat scene] she goes home alone, left only to toss & turn on a bed full of glitter. The messages in this video convey the overall sense of solitude that Mariah's suffered since she's become a star & possibly even the fact that no one wanted to know the real her, or know her problems & could generally care less for her when she wasn't singing her lonely songs. Not to mention all the messages in the song itself, Breakdown may be one of her most message-ridden videos to date, yet it doesn't get a single mention.

babybash | Thursday, January 11, 2007
what about BREAKDOWN? Update pls! smile

static | Thursday, January 11, 2007
hey! nice read! Maybe you could include your speculations about the Charmbracelet songs, since mc quite implies that each song reveals a part of her life... lol

baddarc | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
umm, it was very interesting to read...i just think your reading way too much into this i mean shes a singer it really isnt as deep as you might think.
p.s- im sure the directors helped out with alot of the symbolism if any

DeVante' | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Very interesting. I've always thought that Butterfly, the album, its lyrics, & videos are MC best and I've noticed things similiar to her personal life, but never known they related spp much to art, mythology, etc.

Alex' | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Quite a nice article to read. And I love how you compared the videos you mentioned to other artistic stuff previously done wink

Alex'

Tommie | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
There's so much to love about this girl, and she will never stop surprising! She's incredibly deep. Thanks for shedding new light on these videos!

carrie | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
wow! very intriguing comparisons. big grin

Michael | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Interesting, indeed. I'm going to sound like a broken record, but great blog entry. cool eh?

theroof | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Cool info!Especially about Butterfly.

Kate | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
interesting article and a great writing idea!
there are two other observation about the butterfly video i made, both are kind of metaphoric. crystal/glass and stairs are two common symbols in film analysis, crystal (here: the crystal chandelier) is basically a symbol for fragility and vulnerabilty, while stairs represent a narrowness of decisions. i doubt that mariah knowingly added those symbols to the clip but they match the whole theme perfectly. smile

DM | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Where is Whenever You Call? LOL But seriously, what about Breakdown?

As someone who was big on the Bond, I don't know if I agree with where you said,

"Bond girls are typically thought of as 'eye candy' in the James Bond movies, and they are usually victim roles."

A lot of them were like that, but I think not enough to make an encompassing statement like that, and actually they were actually strong women.

But, I think you could still use the Bond Girl analogy in thinking of Mariah as strong there.

Marc | Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Interesting.

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