Ann-Margret
The peak: Beautiful and sultry, Ann-Margret found success as a singer and actress in the 1960s. She starred with Elvis Presley in Viva Las Vegas.
The crisis: In 1972, Ann-Margret fell from a 22-foot platform while performing live at the Sahara Hotel in Lake Tahoe. She fell into a coma and her face was fractured in so many places that it needed to be completely rebuilt. Family and friends were concerned she might never perform again.
The comeback: Ann-Margaret was back on stage in Las Vegas within 10 weeks of her accident, earning her the nickname Slugger. She went on to get two Academy Award nominations in the following years. (Chris Cone / Chicago Tribune)
Mariah Carey
The peak: Throughout the 1990s, Mariah Carey proved to be one of the top-selling female recording artists of all times. Her first five singles went to No. 1 on the charts and she was one of the worlds most popular recording artists.
The crisis: A very public emotional breakdown in 2001 on MTVs “TRL,” where she handed out popsicles to the audience and started to do a striptease on air. She checked into a hospital soon after the performance.
The comeback: With 2005s The Emancipation of Mimi, Carey showed the world that she may have been crazy, but she still had the golden touch. It was the best-selling album of the year and included the hits We Belong Together and Shake it Off. (Michael Francis McElroy / For The Times)
Britney Spears
The peak: Britney Spears’ first album
Baby One More Time sold more than 10 million copies. She may have seemed like a flash in the pan but she put out four successful albums in five years, including Oops!
I Did it Again and 2003’s In the Zone, which had the Grammy-winning single, Toxic.
The crisis: Since marrying a friend in Vegas in 2004 and then quickly getting a divorce, Spears public image has been in steady decline. But it wasnt until Spears shaved her head in February that her persona went from white-trash paparazzi victim to young woman with serious emotional problems.
The comeback: She was supposed to make it back with a groundbreaking magical performance at the MTV VMAs this year, but that didnt happen. Not even close. If she disappeared from the public eye, spent a year working on an album and returns to the stage in fighting form, she might be able to come back. Maybe. (Kevin Winter AFP / Getty Images)
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Guns N’ Roses
The peak: The biggest and craziest of the late ‘80s rock bands hit a commercial and critical homerun with its 1991 double-album release “Use Your Illusion I and II.” They sold out stadiums around the world and had the ability to make their fans wait -- sometimes for hours -- for the show to start.
The crisis: Nirvana. The Seattle-based grunge band’s album “Nevermind” in 1992 changed the course of hard rock and made lead singer Axl Rose’s outsized persona seem a little silly. In reaction, Rose attempted to change the group’s sound to become more industrial, a move that caused a rift with several band members who soon left.
The comeback: There was a huge buzz in anticipation of the band’s performance at the 2002 MTV VMAs. It seemed the band’s long-in-the-works album “Chinese Democracy” would soon be released. But then Rose and his new bandmates took to the stage and the wind went out of their sails: An out-of-shape Rose struggled to sing after sprinting the length of the stage and the comeback fizzled. (Timothy A. Clary / AFP)
Gloria Estefan
The peak: In 1988, Gloria Estefan, performing with the Miami Sound Machine, had a triple platinum album called Let It Loose with four Top 10 hits, including Rhythm is Gonna Get You and 1-2-3.
The crisis: In 1990, Estefans tour bus was struck by a tractor-trailer, breaking one of Estefans vertebrae. She required extensive surgery and was off the road for a year.
The comeback: The 1991 album Into the Light and the hit single inspired by the ordeal, Coming Out of the Dark. (Lori Shepler / LAT)
Michael Jackson
The peak: He was the biggest pop star of the 1980s, with his 1983 album “Thriller” ranking for several years as the biggest-selling album of all time.
The crisis: General weirdness. Starting with photos of the singer sleeping in a hyperbaric chamber that were published in tabloids in the late ‘80s through his trial for child molestation in 2005 (he was acquitted on all counts), Jackson has suffered from an increasingly bizarre public image and increasingly lower album sales.
The comeback: He’s been launching comeback bids for years now. His concert to celebrate the 30th anniversary of his first solo record was overshadowed by the 9/11 attacks just days later. And his comeback album “Invincible” led to a testy war of words with his label, Sony. He’s currently rumored to be living in the Persian Gulf country of Bahrain and working on another comeback album. (Carlo Allegri / Getty Images)
R. Kelly
The peak: R. Kelly is the genius behind No. 1 hits like I Believe I Can Fly (which won three Grammys) and Ignition Remix. He produced Aaliyahs hit album Age Aint Nothing but a Number, and has worked with Celine Dion, Jay-Z and Usher.
The crisis: Kelly has consistently been plagued by lawsuits from underage women who claim to have had sexual relations with the singer. In 1994, it was revealed that Kelly and Aaliyah had been married briefly when she was just 15.
The comeback: The many allegations that Kelly had sex with minors, which he continues to deny, have not hurt his career in any obvious way. The week before a child pornography trial in 2005, Kelly released TP. 3 Reloaded, which included his popular Trapped in the Closet song cycle. The album sold just fine. (Charles Rex Arbogast / AP)