Mandy Moore

Pop Singer

Mandy Moore was born in Nashua, New Hampshire, United States on April 10th, 1984 and is the Pop Singer. At the age of 40, Mandy Moore biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Mandah, Mandy
Date of Birth
April 10, 1984
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Nashua, New Hampshire, United States
Age
40 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$14 Million
Profession
Actor, Composer, Fashion Designer, Film Actor, Model, Singer, Singer-songwriter, Television Actor, Voice Actor
Social Media
Mandy Moore Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 40 years old, Mandy Moore has this physical status:

Height
178cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Light Brown
Eye Color
Hazel
Build
Slim
Measurements
Not Available
Mandy Moore Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Jewish
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Park Maitland School, The Maile School
Mandy Moore Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Ryan Adams (m. 2009 – 2016), Taylor Goldsmith (m. 2018)
Children
August Harrison Goldsmith
Dating / Affair
Wilmer Valderrama (2000-2002), Brian McFayden (2001), Billy Crawford (2002), Andy Roddick (2002-2004), Zach Braff (2004-2006), Adam Goldstein (2007), Greg Laswell (2007), Ryan Adams (2008-2016), James Roday (2014-2015), Taylor Goldsmith (2015-Present)
Parents
Donald Moore, Stacy Moore
Siblings
Scott Moore (Older Brother), Kyle Moore (Younger Brother)
Other Family
Benjamin B. Moore, Jr. (Paternal Grandfather), Mildred Karen Croley (Paternal Grandmother), Julian Leonard Friedman (Maternal Grandfather), Eileen Mary Hardy (Maternal Grandmother)
Mandy Moore Life

Amanda Leigh Moore (born April 10, 1984) is an American singer-songwriter and actress.

She signed with Epic Records in 1999 and came to fame with the release of her debut single "Candy", which peaked at number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Her debut studio album, So Real (1999), received a platinum certification from the RIAA.

The title single from her second studio album, I Wanna Be With You (2000), became Moore's first top 30 song in the U.S., peaking at number 24 on the Hot 100.

Moore subsequently released the studio albums Mandy Moore (2001), Coverage (2003), Wild Hope (2007), and Amanda Leigh (2009).

As of 2009, Billboard reported that Moore had sold more than ten million albums worldwide. Moore made her feature film debut in 2001, with a minor voice role in the comedy film Dr.

Dolittle 2, before starring as Lana Thomas in the comedy film The Princess Diaries.

She received recognition for her starring role as Jamie Sullivan in the romantic drama film A Walk to Remember (2002), and starred in the films Chasing Liberty (2004), Racing Stripes (2005), Because I Said So (2007), License to Wed (2007), Love, Wedding, Marriage (2011), 47 Meters Down (2017), The Darkest Minds (2018), and Midway (2019).

Moore also voiced Princess Rapunzel in the Disney animated fantasy musical comedy film Tangled (2010), the short film Tangled Ever After (2012), and the Disney Channel television series Tangled: The Series (2017–present). Since 2016, Moore has starred as Rebecca Pearson in the NBC family comedy-drama series This Is Us.

For her performance, she was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, and won two Screen Actors Guild Awards for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. In 2019, Moore was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Early life

Moore was born on April 10, 1984, in Nashua, New Hampshire, to Stacy (née Friedman), a former news reporter who once worked for the Orlando Sentinel, and Donald Moore, a pilot for American Airlines. Moore was raised Catholic, but stopped practicing by 2004 and has since developed a "hotchpotch of things" that she believes. Moore is of Russian Jewish (from her maternal grandfather), English, Scottish and Irish descent. She has an older brother, Scott, and a younger brother, Kyle. When Moore was two months old, she and her family moved to Longwood, Florida, outside of Orlando, because of her father's job. From 1998 to 1999, Moore went to the Bishop Moore Catholic High School in Orlando.

Personal life

Moore dated former Scrubs star Zach Braff from 2004 to 2006. In 2008, Moore began dating former Whiskeytown frontman Ryan Adams. They became engaged in February 2009 and married on March 10, 2009, in Savannah, Georgia. In January 2015, Moore filed for divorce from Adams while he was in New York, citing "irreconcilable differences". Moore and Adams later released a joint statement explaining their decision, calling it a "respectful, amicable parting of ways", but in 2019 she called him emotionally abusive. Court documents obtained later revealed that they had been legally separated for nearly six months before the filing. The divorce was finalized in June 2016.

In 2015, Moore began dating Dawes frontman Taylor Goldsmith. They were engaged in September 2017 and married on November 18, 2018, in Los Angeles, California. In February 2021, Moore gave birth to the couple's first child, a boy.

In 2018, Moore appeared on the eleventh season of Who Do You Think You Are?, during which historian Turtle Bunbury revealed how her great-great-great-great-grandmother Mary Flynn had died at the age of 40 in an Irish workhouse.

In 2019, Moore, accompanied by friends and fellow hikers reached the Everest base camp which has an elevation of 17,598 ft.

In June 2022, Moore announced that she is expecting her second son with Goldsmith. On October 21, 2022, Moore announced that her second son was born.

Moore has been diagnosed with immune thrombocytopenic purpura, an autoimmune disease that causes abnormally low levels of platelets.

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Mandy Moore Career

Career

Moore became interested in singing and acting at a young age, and Eileen Friedman, a professional ballerina in London, was one of her inspirations. "My parents thought this was just a phase I'd grow out of." Moore said. "I stuck to it and begged them for acting lessons, not for voice lessons."

Moore has appeared in lead roles in a number of local productions as well as at a variety of events in Orlando. She was only twelve years old when she attended the Stagedoor Manor performing arts camp, where other celebrities, including actress Natalie Portman, had attended. Moore "She was a quiet, sweet child" who earned a few solos, but "She wasn't a spotlight seeker," production director Konnie Kittrell said of her.

Moore began performing by herself when she was thirteen years old. Victor Cade, a FedEx delivery man who had a friend who worked in A&R at Epic Records, was overheard one day while working in an Orlando studio. Cade gave this friend a copy of Moore's unfinished demo, but Moore continued to carry the mark.

Moore began working on her debut album after signing with Epic Records. Moore was forced to leave Bishop Moore Catholic High School when she was just in the ninth grade, but tutors continued to instruct her. Moore formed NSYNC in 1999, during the summer. Moore performed with the Backstreet Boys later this year.

"Candy," Moore's debut single in the United States, was released on August 17, 1999. The single was a commercial success in a variety of countries, but it was immediately compared to Jessica Simpson, Christina Aguilera, and Britney Spears' singles. It debuted at number 88 on the Billboard Hot 100 before peaking at number 41 on the chart. The single was later awarded a Gold medal by the Royal Institute of British Agricultural Association for sales in the United States exceeding 500,000 copies. The single was the most popular in Australia, where it debuted on the ARIA Charts at number two and received a Platinum award.

So Real, Moore's debut studio album, was released by 550 Music through Epic Records on December 7, 1999. The album was limited to just a few countries. When it was first published, critics generally disagreed, and Moore continued to be compared to other teen pop singers. "Fifteen-year-old Mandy Moore's debut album seemed to be inspired almost entirely by listening to recent hit songs by 'N Sync, the Backstreet Boys, and Britney Spears," Allmusic said about the album. In their review, Entertainment Weekly had a similar reaction to the album and gave it a C+.

According to Billboard's 200 chart, the album debuted at number 77. The album then continued to rise to the top of the charts until it reached number 31. The RIAA later awarded it a Platinum Award for sales exceeding one million copies in the United States alone. "Walk Me Home," the album's second single, was released on the same day as the album. The single had no success with its predecessor, and it did not appear on any major charts.

Moore had already begun to work on more music before the promotion of So Real had ended. On July 11, 2000, the single "I Wanta Be With You" was released. During its ninth week on the chart, "I Want to Be With You" spent 16 weeks on the chart and hit its high of 24. The album debuted on the Billboard Pop Songs chart, where it debuted at number 11 for the first time. The single was also Moore's second Top 20 hit in Australia, where it reached its high rank at number 13. On the German Media Control Charts, it was also a marginal success, peaking at number 70. The single received mixed to favorable reviews. Billboard praised the song and said, "Top 40 programmers and listeners alike will love Moore more with this song," and Allmusic dubbed Moore "a highlight track from the album."

On May 9, 2000, So Real, a reissue of So Real, titled I Want to Be With You, was published. The album, which was marketed as "a new interpretation of Mandy's debut," was a collection of new songs, remixes, and songs from Moore's debut album So Real. I Wanna Be With You, Moore's debut album, was not released internationally, but there are several alternative track listings. The album received mainly mixed feedback and was chastised for not being a true sequel. Allmusic referred to the album as "trashier, flashier, gaudier, and generally more disposable" than its predecessor So Real. The album was a commercial success, debuting and peaking at number 21 on the United States' charts, and it reached No. 21. Billboard's 200 chart. The RIAA awarded it a Gold medal for its sales over 500,000 copies in the United States alone. In 2000, Moore was selected for Favorite Rising Star for the album by the Kids' Choice Awards. "Walk Me Home" was re-released in the United States as the second single from I Wanna Be With You, and it was marginally more popular than its predecessor's debut, peaking at number 38 on the Billboard Pop Songs chart. On June 13, 2000, the album's final single, "So Real," was exclusive to a select market. The single became Australia's second top 40 hit, peaking at number 21 on the ARIA Charts. The single debuted at number 18 on the Official New Zealand Music Chart, despite its being ranked 18th on the Official New Zealand Music Chart.

Moore began recording her second studio album in 2001, which was expected to shift away from the "bubblegum pop" sound and image she was best known for. "All of the music has started to look and sound the same" and that she wanted to move in a new musical direction, Moore said in an interview with Billboard magazine. Moore also stated that she wanted more live instruments in performances, and that she wanted "no more dancers, no more singing to tracks." I got sick of it in a big way."

"In My Pocket," the album's lead single, was released on May 29, 2001. According to Entertainment Weekly, the single had "pumping, Indian-influenced Eurodisco." It failed to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, but it reached number 2 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart, reaching number 21 on the Billboard Pop Songs chart. The song became Australia's third Top 20 hit, with the song debuting at number 11 on the ARIA charts.

Mandy Moore, Moore's self-titled second studio album, was released on June 19, 2001. The album featured upbeat dance and pop songs with Middle Eastern music as well as Middle Eastern influences. Critics generally gave the album mixed to average praises. The album was dubbed a "lush, layered opus," according to Allmusic. The album debuted and peaked at number 35 on the Billboard 200 chart, and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIAA) later awarded the RIAA Gold medal. According to statistics, the album has been out of print in over 1.5 million countries. The album also ranked 37 on the ARIA charts in Australia, the highest peak in the region to date. "Crush," the album's second single, debuted on August 28, 2001; it peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Pop Songs chart, and climbed to number 25 on the ARIA charts.

Moore appeared in Dr. Dolittle 2, which starred Eddie Murphy, on her debut in 2001. Moore co-starred Anne Hathaway in The Princess Diaries, based on Meg Cabot's book of the same name, and was published on August 3, 2001. Lana Thomas, Mia Thermopolis' rival, appeared on (Hathaway). Moore wrote "I'm the crude popular girl who gets ice cream in her mouth." In its first weekend, the film opened in 2,537 theaters in North America and grossed $22,862,269. In North America, it earned $165,335,153 worldwide, with $108,956 in North America and $57,086,197 in other countries. The film received mixed to glowing reviews. Rotten Tomatoes said that 47% of the film's 113 sampled commentators gave the film favorable feedback and that it received a rating average of 5.2 out of 10. Moore did a cover of Connie Francis' 1958 film "Stupid Cupid" at a beach party.

Moore made her acting debut with Shane West and Peter Coyote in A Walk to Remember, based on Nicholas Sparks' book of the same name. Jamie Sullivan, Reverend Sullivan's unpopular daughter (Coyote), was played by her. In the first weekend, the film debuted at #3 at the US box office raking in $12,177,488, behind Snow Dogs and Black Hawk Down. Moore and West's "quietly convincing" performances were generally critical, but Chicago Sun-Times reporter Roger Ebert praised Moore and West's "quietly convincing" performances. It was a modest box office hit in Asia, earning $41,281,092 in the United States alone, and it was a sleeper hit in Asia. The total income earned in the country was $47,494,916. Moore received a number of accolades and accolades for her role in the film.

"Cry," Moore's third and final single on his record, was released on November 4, 2001 to help promote the film. "It was my first film, and I know some say it's cliché and it's cheesy," she said, but for me, it's the thing she's most proud of."

Moore began working on her third studio album in 2003, which later revealed to be a cover album named Coverage. The collection featured 1970s and 1980s hits as well as John Fields' production. Moore's interpretation of John Hiatt's 1987 album "Have a Little Faith in Me" was released as the album's lead single, but it didn't make it to the top charts. The album was released on October 21, 2003, and there were generally mixed comments. Allmusic characterized the album as a "leap to musical maturity," but Entertainment Weekly characterized it as a "effort to shed her bubblegum-blond image."

With first-week sales of 53,000, the album debuted at number 14 on the Billboard 200 chart. Moore's debut on the charts and highest-peaking album to date, but it is her lowest-selling, and first album not to be acknowledged by the RIAA. Moore's interpretation of XTC's 1982 song "Senses Working Overtime" was released as the album's second single and also failed to have any chart success. The cover of Carole King's 1971 album "I Feel the Earth Move" was also on the LGBT rights charity Love Rocks compilation album. Moore resigned after five years of service in 2004 due to cultural differences. Moore and the label released The Best of Mandy Moore, a compilation of hits songs that had no new songs, on November 16, 2004, to come to an end. On the Billboard 200, the album debuted at number 148. Candy, Moore's third compilation album, was released on April 5, 2005.

Moore co-starred Allison Janney, Peter Gallagher, and Trent Ford in the romantic comedy-drama How to Deal, which was based on Sarah Dessen's book That Summer and Somebody Like You. Halley Martin, a cynical and insurgent seventeen-year-old girl who struggles with falling in love with Macon Forrester (Ford), the new child at her kindergarten, her family and friends, was portrayed by her. The film struggled to attract teenage audiences in the United States and earned a total of $14 million domestically.

Moore co-starred Matthew Goode in the romantic comedy Chasing Liberty in 2004. Anna Foster, the vivacious eighteen-year-old "First Daughter" who cries for more freedom from the Secret Service, was portrayed by the actress. Around $12 million, the film grossed around $12 million. Both How to Deal and Chasing Liberty received generally critical and lukewarm feedback; but Ebert praised Moore's work in his essay "How to Deal" that Moore has "unique natural charisma" and "almost makes the movie worth watching," and "in his analysis of Chasing Liberty, she has "undeniable screen presence and sparks instant affection" and "bestowes instant affection." Moore was described by some commentators as a "actress of limited range," but Chasing Liberty's report named her as the "most painless of former pop princesses." (First Daughter, a romantic comedy starring Katie Holmes, was released later this year.)

Moore co-starred in the religion satirical comedy-drama Saved! late in 2004. Hilary Faye Stockard, a well-known and popular girl at a Christian high school, was a teen. The film received generally glowing feedback, but it did not get a wide audience. Moore's performance was lauded, with one commentator calling her a "demented pleasure" and another calling it her best performance to date. The Beach Boys' 1966 song "God Only Knows" was covered by She and Michael Stipe, who wrote the film.

Moore appeared in the sports family comedy Racing Stripes, where she played Sandy the white horse, and guest-starred in the HBO comedy-drama Entourage. Moore had intended to appear in the films Cursed, Havoc, and The Upside of Anger, which were all eventually released in 2005, but she was also not allowed to participate in any of them.

Moore appeared in two episodes of the NBC medical drama Scrubs' fifth season, "My Half-Acre" and "Her Story II," both from 1996. Tabitha Vixx, a fictional sitcom in Fox animated sitcom The Simpsons, where she appeared in the seventeenth-season finale, "Marge and Homer Turn a Couple Play."

Moore co-starred Hugh Grant, Dennis Quaid, and William Dafoe in Paul Weitz's satirical comedy American Dreamz, which was released in April 2006. Sally Kendoo, a sociopathic contestant on a singing competition competition series modeled after American Idol, was a contestant. Weitz said he had Moore in mind for the role before she was cast, adding that "there's something inherently sweet about Mandy"; "it makes it all the more interesting to see her in a villainess role." Moore has said that she enjoys playing mean-spirited characters but she is worried about being stereotyped as a villain. The film debuted at number nine at the US box office, eventually grossing less than $7 million, and getting mostly mixed feedback. Moore and Grant's "wicked barbed chemistry" in their roles, according to Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly, but Variety's Robert Koehler called Moore's role a "pitch-perfect analysis of a woman for whom a reality television show is true."

Moore played Nita, the narrator of the Disney animated sequel Brother Bear 2, which was later released directly to DVD on August 29, 2006. Moore's "amazing result" was lauded by ComingSoon.net. Moore was originally cast in Emilio Estevez's film Bobby, but Mary Elizabeth Winstead took over the role.

Moore talked about her early albums in 2006, claiming that her debut album So Real was appropriate for her age at the time when it was released, but that her first two albums were "just awful." Moore also said that if she could, she'd give a refund to everyone who bought [her] first two albums." The show's co-host, who had seen Moore's remarks, begged for a refund on her debut album, which she honored during a radio interview in April 2006.

Moore said in early 2006 that she disliked her music career and that performing is what she was "most passionate about." Moore signed with Sire Records after her contract with Epic ended in 2004, but the company was kicked out in May 2006 due to creative inconsistencies. In July, she signed with The Firm Music, EMI's property, and said that she left Sire because she did not want to "follow the rules" but rather have "complete control and freedom" over her music.

Moore, citing her conservative upbringing, expressed dissatisfaction with her appearance on Cosmopolitan's May 2006 front page, where the headline was "orgasms unlimited," referring to an article unrelated to her. Moore co-starred Diane Keaton, Gabriel Macht, and Tom Everett Scott in the romantic comedy Because I Said So. Milly Wilder (Moore) explains in detail the ache of an orgasm to her mother Daphne (Keaton). The film was released on February 2, 2007, and received mixed to critical reviews, but it was a commercial success, grossing over $69 million worldwide at the box office. Moore co-starred in License to Wed, a romantic comedy that was published on July 3, 2007. The film received mainly critical feedback. Rotten Tomatoes earned the film a 7% rating and a critical consensus of "broad and formulaic." Metacritic.com rated it 25 out of 100, citing 21 general bad feedback out of a total of 30 for its ranking.

Variety described the film as "an astonishingly flat romantic comedy, packed with perplexing choices," but Variety called Moore's role "appealing." In its first weekend premiere at #4 in the United States, the film grossed $10,422,258. Live Free or Die Hard, Ratatouille, and Transformers, which all started at the top of the charts, are all behind the box office. The film had grossed $43.8 million in the United States and $69.3 million worldwide. Moore appeared in "How I Met Your Mother" on September 24, 2007, the third-season premiere. In the romantic comedy Dedication later this year, she co-starred Billy Crudup, Tom Wilkinson, and Dianne Wiest. Lucy Reilly, a struggling children's book illustrator who falls in love with Henry Roth (Crudup), was her role. The film premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, and critical reactions were mixed to positive. Rotten Tomatoes, a review group, reported that the film received 41% favorable feedback, based on 46 reviews. Based on 19 reviews, Metacritic reported that the film had an average score of 50 out of 100.

Moore's fourth studio album Wild Hope was released on June 19, 2007, and Moore collaborated with record producer John Alaga and a few musicians on it, including Chantal Kreviazuk, Lori McKenna, Rachael Yamagata, and The Weepies. When recording the album in late 2006, Moore remained alone in a Woodstock, New York house. Moore performed the album's lead single "Extraordinary" at the Brick Awards on April 12, 2007, and the tour debuted in 2007.

Critics gave the album mixed to encouraging feedback. "Wild Hope is the gratifying sound of a singer finally finding her comfort zone," Billboard said. Gone is Moore's early career, but thoughtful reflections on love and life have replaced it with thoughtful reflections on love and life...an album full of subtle, but uninteligible hooks." On the United States, the album premiered. According to Billboard, Billboard 200 at #30 is the first week of its debut, selling just 25,000 copies in the first week. It's Moore's third highest-debuting album, falling short of her fourth studio album Coverage (2004), which debuted at No. 4, which debuted at No. 303. Billboard 200 chart 14 is the most popular, with 59,000 copies. The album also ranked No. 1 on the charts. 9 on the Top Internet albums. The album debuted off the Billboard 200 for five weeks, but it later returned to the top at No. 301. After being sold 5,500 copies, 118 was released. The album has sold over 120,000 copies in the United States and more than 350,000 copies around the world. Moore released the album in Australia on February 23, 2008, and she performed with musician Ben Lee and the West Australian Symphony Orchestra in Western Australia, helping inaugural American Idol winner Kelly Clarkson on her tour.

Moore began working on her fifth studio album in 2008, which was due to be out the following year. Moore revealed on her website that she had been working on with singer-songwriter, record producer, and guitarist Mike Viola in October 2008. It was expected to be a duo album by Moore and Viola, but it was later revealed in January 2009 that it would be Moore's fifth studio album with a joint venture with Viola that was supposed to be announced in April 2009. Around December 2008 in Boston, Massachusetts, recording sessions for the album took place. On March 17, 2009, the album's lead single "I Could Break Your Heart Any Day of the Week" was released as a digital download. On Yahoo! On April 20, 2009, the music video premiered. Music. The single, as well as many of Moore's previous singles, had no success on any charts. Amanda Leigh Moore, Moore's fifth studio album, was released on May 26, 2009. "The music is all a reflection of myself, not someone else's choices," Moore said on the album. Moore appeared on several talk shows, including The Ellen DeGeneres Show and Jay Leno's Tonight Show.

She performed "I Could Break Your Heart Any Day of the Week" on both shows to promote the album. On May 26, 2009, she performed songs from the album at Amoeba Music in Hollywood, along with Viola, on the day the album was released by Storefront Records. The album was not released in some countries until 2010, but it wasn't released in Brazil until 2011, two years after the first appearance. The album has generally favorable reviews. The album was "impeccably recorded," according to Time magazine. "Mandy (on the album) reveals real thoughtful and emotional depth," an article by Paper magazine on the album. "Moore is a much better performer than she's often given credit for," the paper concluded. During the week of its debut, it debuted at number 25 on the Billboard 200, shipments of 16,000 copies in the United States, and at number 4 on the Top Independent Albums chart. The album has sold an estimated 100,000 copies to date. The album was recorded just before Moore's marriage to musician Ryan Adams, and it was her last album in over ten years.

Moore co-starred with Martin Freeman in the romantic comedy Swinging with the Finkels after a break of nearly two years from film roles. The film was shot in the United Kingdom in 2009 and was released in 2011. In the romantic comedy Love, Marriage, Kellan Lutz co-starred Moore with Kellan Lutz. The film was shot in 2010 and then released in 2011. Moore appeared in the ABC medical drama Grey's Anatomy's second season finale in 2010, her first television appearance since 2007. She appeared on the show for two episodes of the seventh season's second season.

Moore co-starred with Zachary Levi in the CGI Disney animated fantasy musical comedy Tangled, also in the year. Critics generally gave the film high marks. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 89% of critics had a favorable review based on 185 reviews, with an average score of 7.5 percent. "While far from Disney's best film, Tangled is a visually stunning, highly entertaining addition to the studio's classic animated canon," the website's consensus read." Metacritic, a research company that gave a weighted average score from 0–100 out of reviews from mainstream film journalists, gave a score of 71 out of 34 reviews. According to a CineScore survey released this weekend, the average grade cinemagoers gave the film an A+ to F rating. For a worldwide total of $590,726,936, it earned $200,936 in North America and $389,900,000 in other countries.

It's the 17th-highest-grossing animated film, the eighth-highest-grossing film of 2010, and the third-highest-grossing 2010 animated film behind Toy Story 3 and Shrek Forever After. It's also the third Disney film to make it to the Top 10 films of 2010. As of 2011, it was the third-highest-grossing film produced worldwide by Walt Disney Animation Studios, behind Frozen (2013) and The Lion King (1994). At the 83rd Academy Awards, Moore and Levi performed the film's theme song, "I See the Sun," where it was nominated for Best Original Song. The song also received a Grammy Award for Best Written For Visual Media and Best Song at the Las Vegas Film Critics Society, as well as Best Song at the Las Vegas Film Critics Society. In October 2011, it was announced that she was going to star in an ABC sitcom called Us and Them, but the pilot was eventually dismissed by the network. In 2012, she co-starred with Carla Gugino and Rufus Sewell in Sebastian Gutierrez's crime drama Hotel Noir, which was released in the United States on October 9, 2012. She appeared as the title character in the Disney Junior animated film Sheriff Callie's Wild West from 2014 to 2015.

Moore revealed in July 2012 that she would be working with her then-husband, singer Ryan Adams, on her forthcoming sixth studio album. "There's a lot of stuff around the house right now, from the music I've been exposed to and being very happy and in a happy, loving marriage, which I believe there's a lot of things to write about." "There's a lot to say and a lot that's happened to me in the last three or so years," she continued. I'm excited about it. "I'm excited to get into the studio and start recording." She also said that the album would be "intense, emotional." Moore would appear as Louise in the ABC sitcom Pulling, based on the British sitcom of the same name. The pilot was written by Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky, but as the pilot came closer to completion, Moore's character was changed in March, and she said she was no longer appropriate for the role. Moore begged for the pilot to leave, but ABC accepted it. Moore said in a CBS News interview in July 2014 that 2014 would be "the year of real progress forward" on her sixth album, which she said was more "dangerous" and "raw" than her previous albums; she also revealed that she would appear on Adams' self-titled fourteenth album, Ryan Adams, which was out on September 5, 2014. Moore appeared in the Fox medical comedy-drama Red Band Society from 2014 to 2015.

Moore and Levi will reprise their roles as Rapunzel and Eugene "Flynn Rider" Fitzherbert in an animated television series based on Tangled in June 2015. Tangled: The Tangled: The Series, which is based on Tangled and Tangled Ever After, premiered on the Disney Channel in 2017. Moore co-starred with Claire Holt in the underwater survival drama 47 Meters Down. On June 18, 2015, filming at Pinewood Studios in the United Kingdom and Dominican Republic began, and ended on August 7, 2015. On June 16, 2017, the film was released.

Moore announced in September 2015 that she was still working on her sixth album. "I've been playing music for the past few years," she said. "I think 2016 will be the re-emergence of my music." In my opinion, this part of my life has been dormant for far too long."

In the NBC family comedy-drama This Is Us, Moore has costarred from mid-20s to late 60s and then 80, where she received a Golden Globe Award nomination for her role. In an interview with People in July 2017, Moore said she wants to return to music. "I want to return to music" and that "I don't have a record label," she said, although I have a lot of music to post. I've decided to publish it next year. She appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live in July 2018. Taylor Goldsmith, her ex-girlfriend, might help with her new music, so she might collaborate with her. Moore co-starred with Amandla Stenberg and Patrick Gibson in the dystopian science-fiction thriller The Darkest Minds in August 2018. She reprised her role as Rapunzel in the Disney CGI animated film Ralph Breaks the Internet with John C. Reilly, Sarah Silverman, Gal Gadot, Taraji P. Henson, Kristen Bell, and Jane Lynch. The film earned over $500 million worldwide and received generally critical feedback from critics who called it a "worthy successor" and lauded the animation, humor, plot, and vocal performances of Reilly and Silverman. At the 76th Golden Globe Awards and the 24th Critics' Choice Awards, the film received a Best Animated Feature nomination.

Moore appeared in the short comedic action film The Big Break in February 2019. In the Fox animated sitcom Family Guy's season 17 episode "No Giggity, No Doubt" she co-starred with J.K. Simmons, Sebastian Stan, Max Greenfield, and Maika Monroe in the drama I'm Not Here, No Doubt. Moore was inducted on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on March 25, 2019. Moore unveiled her first original song in over a decade, "When I Wasn't Watching," with accompanying music video; on September 17, 2019, Moore unveiled "I'd Rather Lose." Ed Skrein, Patrick Wilson, Luke Evans, Aaron Eckhart, Nick Jonas, Dennis Quaid, and Woody Harrelson appeared in Midway, an independent historical drama.

Moore said in a Billboard interview that her sixth studio album, Silver Landings, was announced in January 2020, via Verve Forecast Records. "I had marginal PTSD from being on labels in the past," she said about Verve Forecast in late 2019, "but it doesn't seem that it's run by a group of extremely creative people who aren't really concerned with the numbers game." Moore would have announced a date of March 6 and later posted the single "Save a Little for Yourself" with accompanying music video.

Moore released two singles from her seventh studio album, In Real Life, in early 2022. On March 8, she released the audio for the album's title track, and on the 17th, she appeared in a cameo-laden film starring many of her This Is Us co-stars and Matthew Koma, Hilary Duff, Wilmer Valderrama, Amanda Kloots, Karamo Brown, and others. Moore performed "Little Dreams," her second single off the album, on April 5. The album was released on May 13, 2022, 2022.

Moore announced in 2022 that she would not be acting for the remainder of her life.

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It seems that "Princes Diaries 3" is on the radio. It seems that it is officially happening

www.popsugar.co.uk, November 15, 2022
We learned "The Princess Diaries 3" was in the cards back in January 2019, when Anne Hathaway casually announced "there is a script" and we're all set and waiting. The actor appeared on "Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen" at the time and denied rumors about something we secretly want to know. When asked if "The Princess Diaries 3" was in the works, Hathaway replied, "I want to do it, Julie [Andrews] wants to do it, and Debra Martin Chase, our producer, wants to do it." Fair to say, we had so many questions!Will Chris Pine be there?Is Fat Louie still alive?Will Raven-Symoné return?Can we expect to see another epic slumber party? "We all want it to happen, but we don't want to do it unless it's perfect because we love it just as much as you guys love it." . . At the time, Hathaway said, "we're working on it."

After his antisemitic outburst: 'Words matter,' Mandy Moore slams Kanye West

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 10, 2022
On Monday, Mandy Moore expressed displeasure with Kanye West's antisemitic outburst over the weekend, prompting headlines. Moore, 38, wrote, 'It's time for people to avoid saying that man is a genius.' Or, that mental disorder could be a reason for his antisemitism and anti-blackness.' You may have compassion for someone's illness but you must also call them out. Words matter.' West's 'actions are extremely risky and must be called out,' the Emmy-nominated actress wrote her message in response to Anti-Defamation League's chief of community engagement, Carly Pildis, who said that the West's 'actions are extremely risky and must be called out.'

In The Great or shop our finds, go for feminine florals like Mandy Moore in The Great Orchardy Moore in The Great or shop our finds

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 4, 2022
SHOPPING: Mandy Moore was spotted dining out on the town, and the actress reminded us that fall is the perfect season for florals. Pick up a Pick up The Greatest's The Greatest is a British girl dressed in the Derby costume she's wearing by The Great.
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