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'''Paula Julie Abdul'''(born [[June 19]], [[1962]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[Grammy]]-winning, multi-platinum singer, [[choreographer]], [[dancer]] and [[actress]]. In the 1980s, her career rose rapidly, from being a cheerleader for the [[Los Angeles Lakers]] to being a highly sought-after choreographer at the height of the [[music video]] era, then to being a [[pop music]] singer with a string of top hits in the late 1980s and early 1990s. After that she suffered a series of reverses in her professional and personal life, until she found renewed fame and success in the 2000s as a judge on the highly rated television series ''[[American Idol]]''.
'''Paula Julie Abdul'''(born [[June 19]], [[1962]]) is an [[United States|American]] [[Grammy]]-winning, multi-platinum singer, [[choreographer]], [[dancer]], [[Crack_cocaine|crack]]head and [[actress]]. In the 1980s, her career rose rapidly, from being a cheerleader for the [[Los Angeles Lakers]] to being a highly sought-after choreographer at the height of the [[music video]] era, then to being a [[pop music]] singer with a string of top hits in the late 1980s and early 1990s. After that she suffered a series of reverses in her professional and personal life, until she found renewed fame and success in the 2000s as a judge on the highly rated television series ''[[American Idol]]''.


==Biography==
==Biography==

Revision as of 19:23, 25 January 2007

Paula Abdul

Paula Julie Abdul(born June 19, 1962) is an American Grammy-winning, multi-platinum singer, choreographer, dancer, crackhead and actress. In the 1980s, her career rose rapidly, from being a cheerleader for the Los Angeles Lakers to being a highly sought-after choreographer at the height of the music video era, then to being a pop music singer with a string of top hits in the late 1980s and early 1990s. After that she suffered a series of reverses in her professional and personal life, until she found renewed fame and success in the 2000s as a judge on the highly rated television series American Idol.

Biography

Early life

Abdul was born in San Fernando, California to Harry Abdul, who once worked as a livestock trader and owns a sand and gravel business in California, and Lorraine Rykiss, a former concert pianist who once worked as an assistant to film director Billy Wilder. Abdul's father comes from a family of Syria Jews who immigrated to Brazil,[1] while her mother is also Jewish and from Saint Boniface, a French-speaking area of Winnipeg, Canada.

When Abdul was seven, her parents divorced. She and her sister, Wendy, who is seven years older, lived with their mother in the San Fernando Valley. As a small child Abdul's interest in a career as a performer was inspired by Gene Kelly in the classic film Singin' in the Rain as well as such entertainers as Debbie Allen, Gregory Hines, Sammy Davis Jr., Fred Astaire, and Bob Fosse. In an interview in the May 1990 Ebony magazine, she says, when asked about black influence, "Absolutely....As a young kid growing up, I admired the talent of so many [Black artists]. Black kids identified with me because we all danced together, and we shared that love for art. My favorite artists were Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin, the O'Jays—that's what I grew up on. That was my consciousness."

Abdul began dance lessons around the age of eight and showed a natural talent for it. She attended Van Nuys High School where she was on the cheerleading squad, played flute in the band, and was an honors student. At 15, she received a scholarship to a dance camp near Palm Springs, where she learned that her long-legged teachers stayed lithe by binging and purging their food. Abdul, who was extremely self-conscious about her weight, had been taught this by her much taller fellow ballerinas, and she herself began at 16 after dining with fellow cheerleaders.[citation needed]

Abdul enrolled at California State University at Northridge to study broadcasting. In her freshman year, she tried out for the Los Angeles Lakers' famed Laker Girls squad, and was selected from a pool of 700. Within three weeks she was made head choreographer. She quit school six months later.

Dancing and choreography

Abdul’s high-energy, street-funk style delighted fans, including the famed Jackson family, who saw her perform at a game and then hired the 20-year old to choreograph a music video for their 1984 Victory album.

Abdul went on to serve as the choreographer for the 1980s videos of singer Janet Jackson. She also choreographed music videos for Duran Duran, Prince, The Jacksons, Jermaine Jackson, Kool & the Gang, the Pointer Sisters, Steve Winwood, Luther Vandross, INXS, Debbie Gibson, ZZ Top, George Michael and Dolly Parton. She choreographed and appeared in Toto's 1986 music video for "Till The End", Michael Jackson's music video "Liberian Girl", and Janet Jackson's music videos "What Have You Done For Me Lately" and "Nasty".

Abdul also choreographed the stage shows for Suzanne Somers and Toni Basil.

In film, Abdul choreographed the dance sequences in the films Coming to America, The Running Man and American Beauty, as well as Cuba Gooding Jr.'s touchdown celebration in Jerry Maguire, the giant keyboard sequence involving Tom Hanks’ character in Big, and The King's touchdown celebration, as seen in a string of popular Burger King television commercials that aired during the 2005-2006 NFL season.

Abdul won the 1989 Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Choreography for her work on The Tracey Ullman Show and the same award in 1990 for The 17th Annual American Music Awards.

In a 1990 commercial for Diet Coke, Abdul danced, via editing with footage from the classic film Anchors Aweigh, with childhood inspiration Gene Kelly.

In December 2005, Abdul launched a cheerleading/fitness/dance/dance DVD series called Cardio Cheer, which is marketed to children and teenage girls involved with cheerleading and dance.

Singing

In 1987 Abdul used her savings to make a demo of herself singing. Although her voice was relatively untrained, her exceptional dancing proved marketable to the visually oriented, MTV-driven pop music industry.

In 1988, Abdul released her debut album Forever Your Girl. The album took 62 weeks to hit #1 on the Billboard 200 album sales chart, the longest an album has been on the market before hitting #1. It spent 10 weeks at #1. The album eventually became multi-platinum in the spring and summer of 1989 and it spawned five American Top Three singles, four of them #1s: "Straight Up", "Forever Your Girl", "Cold Hearted", "(It's Just) The Way That You Love Me", and "Opposites Attract". A remix album, Shut Up and Dance, was also released and reached #7 on Billboard's album chart. The video for "Opposites Attract" featured an animated cat named MC Skat Kat. As a sign of Paula's enormous popularity, the cartoon cat ended up with his own record deal later that year. Abdul's voice was sampled on one track and she appeared in the video for the first single.

Controversy erupted in Paula's music career when three weeks prior to the release of her sophomore album, Spellbound, backup vocalist Yvette Marine filed a million-dollar lawsuit against Virgin Records, claiming that the company had blended her voice with Paula's lead vocals on songs "Knocked Out", "Opposites Attract", and "I Need You" from Forever Your Girl. Marine claimed that she was inaccurately credited as a backup singer when she was really performing "co-lead" vocals with Abdul. Though not named in the suit, Abdul took the accusation as a personal affront. Virgin Records provided live recordings of Paula's vocals in court, and the jury returned with a verdict in favor of Virgin in less than an hour.

Abdul's follow-up album, 1991's Spellbound, contained another string of hits, and went on to sell 6 million copies. Hits included "Rush, Rush" (which topped the Billboard Hot 100 chart for five consecutive weeks, thanks to its music video and its Rebel Without a Cause motif featuring Keanu Reeves in the James Dean role), "The Promise of a New Day", "Blowing Kisses in the Wind", "Vibeology", and "Will You Marry Me?". The first single, "Rush, Rush", was a ballad, which surprised many, as singers generally release an up-tempo song as a first single. The album Spellbound retained much of the dance-oriented formula heard on her debut album. The track "U" was written for Paula by Prince.

Abdul took a break from recording and resurfaced in 1993 with an exercise video.

In 1995 Abdul released her third album of original material, Head Over Heels. Modest radio hits with the singles "My Love Is for Real", "Crazy Cool", and "Ain't Never Gonna Give You Up" showed that she was still able to create popular music while moving with the times. The first single off the album, "My Love Is for Real", featured a fusion of R&B and traditional Middle Eastern instruments, and was sung together with Yemenite-Israeli singer Ofra Haza. Its accompanying Lawrence of Arabia-inspired music video was played in theaters across the world as a preface to the film Clueless. It was a hit in dance clubs (peaking at #1 on Billboard's Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart) but the single stalled at #28 on Billboard's Hot 100 chart. The second single, "Crazy Cool", was accompanied by a music video wherein Abdul is seen riding a mechanical bull and spraying Champagne over her breasts. Virgin Records, possibly counting on name recognition to move copies, did not put nearly as much muscle behind promoting the album, and Head Over Heels sold considerably less than her previous albums. Her previous success was now a career on the rocks.

In 2000, Abdul’s Greatest Hits CD was released. It featured an array of hit singles from Abdul's previous three albums, as well as other noteworthy tracks. The song "Bend Time Back 'Round" had only been heard previously on the 1993 soundtrack of the hit television series Beverly Hills 90210. The album was not a commercial success.

Abdul co-wrote Kylie Minogue's 2000 hit single "Spinning Around", which was originally slated to appear on her new album in 2000.

Abdul has claimed several times that she is working on releasing another album (rumored to have the working title Paulatix of Love), although its release has been delayed several times. She originally signed with Mercury Records in 1997 and was going to release her album in Spring 1999, but the album was postponed due to the merger between Universal Music Group and Polygram (which owns Mercury Records), causing layoffs of many music acts, including Abdul. The second scheduled release date was the summer of 2000, but that release date was later cancelled as well. In 2005 it was announced she was working with fellow American Idol judge Randy Jackson to produce a new album, but additional information has not been released.

Acting

Abdul appeared as Sherri in the 1978 low-budget musical film Junior High School. She also appeared uncredited in the 1987 film Can't Buy Me Love as a dancer.[2] In the late 1990s, she attempted to revitalize her career as a performer by accepting acting roles, starting with the 1997 television movie Touched by Evil, which she played a woman who discovers her boyfriend was her rapist. The film was rejected by both fans and critics. She later played Amy Fuentes in the 1998 made-for-TV film, The Waiting Game, which was released only in the UK, and received moderate reaction from viewers.[3] She also appeared in several TV shows including The Wayans Brothers and Spin City. In 2007, Abdul signed on to produce and star in Bratz, based on the popular line of dolls.[4]

American Idol

File:RandyJackson2.jpg
Paula Abdul (middle), along with American Idol co-judges Simon Cowell and Randy Jackson.

In 2002, Abdul appeared as one of three judges for the reality television music competition show American Idol. Abdul, along with fellow judges Simon Cowell and Randy Jackson, was to evaluate the talent of a large group of young amateur singers, eliminate most of them in various audition rounds, and then judge the finalists as American television viewers voted on which finalists would continue to each successive round, until all but the winner were eliminated. Abdul won praise as a sympathetic and compassionate judge, while garnering criticism for being too sympathetic with "bad" singers.[citation needed] She seemed especially kind when her critiques were compared against those of fellow judge Simon Cowell, who was often blunt in his appraisals of the contestants' performances. When she realized that Cowell's over-the-top judging style was heartbreaking for many young contestants, Abdul was so horrified, she considered leaving the show. Although their differences often resulted in extremely heated on-air exchanges and confrontations, Cowell says he played a major role in convincing Abdul not to walk off.[5]

Now a bonafide television celebrity, Abdul accepted a second gig as reporter for Entertainment Tonight. She continued to attract attention during subsequent seasons of American Idol; her desire to find something positive in almost every performance, her emotion-laden praise for contestants whose style she really liked, and her unique fingers-bent-outwards handclapping style were all lampooned by Amy Poehler on Saturday Night Live sketches.

In May 2005, ABC's newsmagazine Primetime Live reported claims by Season 2 Idol contestant Corey Clark that he and Abdul had an affair during that season, and that she had coached him on how to succeed in the competition. The fact that Clark came forward at a time when he was marketing a CD and trying to get a book deal was seen as suspicious by some. For the most part, Abdul refused to comment on Clark's allegations. At the height of the debacle, Abdul appeared in a Saturday Night Live skit, making light of the situation. While Fox launched an investigation, Abdul received numerous calls of support from celebrities, including Oprah Winfrey; Barbara Walters even addressed the camera during an episode of ABC's The View to say she was ashamed to be part of an operation that would report Clark's flimsy tabloid claims under the guise of a news story.

In August 2005 the Fox network announced that, after hiring lawyers from two impartial law firms who conducted almost 600 hours of interviews with 43 people (including Abdul and Clark), no evidence was found to substantiate Clark's claims that he had an affair with Abdul or that she helped him during the contest.[citation needed] Abdul did admit to investigators that she had telephone conversations with Clark during the competition, but her account of those talks differed from Clark’s.[citation needed] The network confirmed that she would be returning to the show, as the investigation had found "insufficient evidence that the communications between Mr. Clark and Ms. Abdul in any way aided his performance."(CNN Abdul cleared in 'Idol' probe) The only evidence reported by ABC was voluminous phone records, Clark produced one of her prescription bottles and gave some accurate details about the inside of her house, the salesperson who sold them their cell phones together, and the tape recordings of the phone calls she made to Cory's parent's house. In addition, he claimed that she had purchased his clothes for show (he wore a $700 outfit) and helped him pick the song that he had sung for the show which was Randy Jackson's biggest hit. Season 5 of the show premiered on January 17, 2006, with Abdul reappearing as a judge.

Throughout season 5, she predicted that the early frontrunner, rocker Chris Daughtry, would make it to the finals, but he was eliminated on May 9, after a merely average performance.

On March 28, 2006 FOX announced that Abdul had signed to stay on American Idol as a judge for at least 3 more years.

The X Factor

Abdul helped launch the The X Factor's third season, appearing at the London auditions as a guest judge alongside Simon Cowell, Louis Walsh and Sharon Osbourne. That first episode of the hit UK talent show aired Aug. 19, 2006.

Personal life

Although Abdul is Jewish[6] and of Sephardic and Ashkenazi descent, she bears an Arabic surname and is commonly mistaken as being of mixed-race heritage. Abdul once stated in an interview with Ebony magazine: "I've had a lot of black kids come up to me and say, 'You are black! There's no way, no way [you are not black]', and that's all right with me." African-American supermodel Tyra Banks recently admitted during Abdul's 2006 appearance on The Tyra Banks Show that she too had thought Abdul was black prior to their first meeting.

Abdul has blamed her checkered relationship history in part on the difficulty men have dealing with her career and her busy schedule.

  • Her early relationships included actor John Stamos and talk show host Arsenio Hall.
  • Abdul was married to Emilio Estevez from April 29, 1992 to May 1994. In a June 19, 2005 interview with People Abdul stated that they broke up over the issue of children; she wanted them to have a child together, while Estevez (who already had two children from a prior relationship) did not.
  • Married clothing manufacturer Brad Beckerman in 1996; they divorced in 1998.
  • 2000 she dated Hank Kuehne, a professional golfer 13 years her junior, for about six months.
  • Began dating millionaire Colton Melby, part-owner and then-president of Smith & Wesson Holding Corporation, in early 2003; they broke up in January 2004.
  • Late 2005 she was reported to have ended a relationship with model Dante Spencer, but they continued to be spotted together several times thereafter.
  • Valentine's Day 2006, Abdul appeared on Dr. Phil as part of a primetime special on love and relationships. She was set up on two dates and Phil McGraw gave her advice.
  • Paula Abdul was a special guest on the reality show Rockstar: Supernova on Tuesday, September 12, 2006.
  • It was announced that Paula will star in her own reality show for Bravo. The show will follow Paula in her private and professional life and is set to air at the end of 2007.
  • On March 24, 2005, Abdul pleaded no contest and was fined and sentenced to two years' probation for a hit-and-run incident in Encino, California. Abdul claims she did not notice the brief contact between her Mercedes and another vehicle as she was changing lanes.
  • April 4, 2006, Abdul filed a report at a Hollywood police station claiming she had been a victim of battery at a private party at about 1 AM April 2, according to police Lt. Paul Vernon. "According to Abdul, the man at the party argued with her, grabbed her by the arm and threw her against a wall", Vernon said. "She said she had sustained a concussion and spinal injuries." A few days later she appeared on "The Tonight Show" with Jay Leno making the same claims about the assault.

Rumors of substance abuse

During 2004, public concern for Abdul began growing as a result of some apparently erratic behavior during episodes of American Idol. When rumors of drug or alcohol abuse began to circulate, Abdul went to People magazine to explain that she had been diagnosed with reflex sympathetic dystrophy and was undergoing successful treatment.

The rumors returned with renewed force in January 2007 in the wake of several interviews Abdul participated in to publicize the sixth season of American Idol. Widely-circulated video clips of the interviews showed Abdul swaying in her chair, slurring her words, speaking in non sequiturs, and keeping her eyes closed. [7][8] Abdul's publicist attributed this to technical difficulties during the recording of the interviews.

Discography

Albums

Year Album US UK RIAA Cert. worldwide sales
1988 Forever Your Girl 1 3 8x Platinum 17.2 mil.
1990 Shut Up and Dance (remix album) 7 40 Platinum 2.9 mil.
1991 Spellbound 1 4 3x Platinum 8.5 mil.
1995 Head Over Heels 18 61 Gold 3 mil.
2000 Paula Abdul: Greatest Hits - - - 0.8 mil.

Singles

Year Song US US Dance UK AUS Album
1988 "Knocked Out" 41 14 - - Forever Your Girl
1989 "(It's Just) The Way That You Love Me" 88 18 - - Forever Your Girl
1989 "Straight Up" 1 3 3 27 Forever Your Girl
1989 "Forever Your Girl" 1 28 24 - Forever Your Girl
1989 "Cold Hearted" 1 19 46 - Forever Your Girl
1989 "(It's Just) The Way That You Love Me" (re-issue) 3 - 74 - Forever Your Girl
1989 "Opposites Attract" (duet with The Wild Pair) 1 24 2 1 Forever Your Girl
1990 "Knocked Out" (remix) - - 21 - Shut Up and Dance
1991 "Rush Rush" 1 - 6 2 Spellbound
1991 "Promise of a New Day" 1 - 52 31 Spellbound
1992 "Blowing Kisses in the Wind" 6 - - - Spellbound
1992 "Vibeology" 16 17 19 - Spellbound
1992 "Will You Marry Me?" 19 - 74 - Spellbound
1995 "My Love Is for Real" 28 1 28 7 Head Over Heels
1995 "Crazy Cool" 58 13 - Head Over Heels
1996 "Ain't Never Gonna Give You Up" 112 - - - Head Over Heels
  1. ^ Eichner, Itamar (2006-11-17). "Israeli minister, American Idol". YNetNew.com. Retrieved 2006-11-17. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Paula Abdul in Can't Buy Me Love
  3. ^ Reviews of The Waiting Game at IMDB
  4. ^ Paula Abdul in Bratz
  5. ^ Cowell, S (2003): I don't mean to be rude, but..., page 116-117, Random House. ISBN 0-7679-1741-3
  6. ^ "CNN.com". CNN LARRY KING LIVE. Retrieved October 14. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Videos of Paula Abdul's unusual behavior
  8. ^ A second interview with unusual behavior

External links:

  • Ebony Magazine; May 1990; ("The many talents of Paula Abdul: sassy entertainer gives expanded definition to term 'multiple.'" by Lynn Norment.)
  • People magazine; June 19, 1995

See also