Britney Spears showed girls how to grow up – but she was never allowed to

A judge has denied Britney Spears's request to remove her father from his role overseeing her conservatorship. Picture: PA Wire
The saying goes that pop stars are forever frozen in time at the age they became famous. Despite the lasting iconography of the schoolgirl outfit she wore in the video for her debut single, 1998’s … 'Baby One More Time', this has somehow never felt true of Britney Spears, whose first four albums painted a convincing picture of evolving girlhood.
She was naive and lovestruck on her 1999 debut, and gained power and self-awareness on 2000’s 'Oops! … I Did It Again'. Released in 2001,
was the first album that Spears, then 19, co-wrote: it juxtaposed her sexuality ('I’m a Slave 4 U') with her frustration at being treated like a child ('I’m Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman'). Two years later, revelled in eroticism and experimentation, reflected in a more adventurous sound.