Madonna is no stranger to soundtrack work. There’s Who’s That Girl (1987) and the Dick Tracy collection, I’m Breathless (1990), for starters, not to mention her career-reshaping turn on Don’t Cry For Me Argentina, from 1996’s Evita. But the 1999 single Beautiful Stranger is among the “Queen Of Pop”’s best silver-screen contributions. In league with William Orbit, Madonna created a pop-dance anthem, with more than a nod to the Britpop phenomenon, for the Austin Powers sequel, The Spy Who Shagged Me.
Here’s the full story behind Beautiful Stranger and its award-winning promo video…
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Beautiful Stranger was pitched against a raft of A-list competitors
Certainly one of the greatest Madonna songs never to be featured on a studio record, Beautiful Stranger was written with William Orbit following the phenomenal success of 1998’s Ray Of Light album. It was always destined for the soundtrack to Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, which was being released on Madonna’s Maverick record label. Nevertheless, the follow-up to the first film in the Austin Powers series (1997’s International Man Of Mystery) was a fiercely competitive soundtrack to secure a slot on, with a particular focus on what the lead single would be. Despite featuring tracks by R.E.M., Lenny Kravitz and Spice Girl Mel B (billed as Mel G for her cover of Cameo’s Word Up!), Beautiful Stranger became the early front-runner.