Paula Abdul ready to step out in 'Live to Dance'

NEW YORK (AP) - The past six months have flown by for Paula Abdul as she raced to get her new show, "Live to Dance," on its feet.

The morning before this dance competition's Tuesday premiere (8 p.m. EST on CBS), Abdul is calmly sipping tea at her Manhattan hotel as she confronts a final whirlwind of publicity. Meanwhile, across the country, the first episode of "Live to Dance" is still being tweaked.

"I've been on the phone to L.A. already five times, making sure it's OK," she reports. Back at the start of the series' gestation, "They probably didn't know what to expect when I said, 'No, seriously, I really AM going to be an active executive producer. No, seriously, I am!"'

The two-hour premiere will highlight early auditions. Then, when the show settles into its regular time slot (Wednesday at 8 p.m. EST), more contestants will be chosen to round out the cast of 18 dance acts that will travel to Los Angeles for subsequent, live broadcasts.

The winning act will get a grand prize of $500,000.

But the question persists: What sets "Live to Dance" apart?

"As my parents say, 'You always pick the hardest jobs, Paula! Why a dance show coming behind five OTHER dance shows? How are you going to make it different?' But that's where my juices get flowing. I love rising to the challenge of that, especially since I have so much vocabulary in dance that I want to explore, and I also do things aesthetically that haven't been seen before."

What she means is, she's rooting for a robust fusion of dance styles from contestants.

"It's no longer that you're just hip-hop or just ballet," she says. "You're ballet and hip-hop and contemporary, and you should know how to do a little bit of gymnastics. So it's, 'Bring me something I haven't seen!"'

The contest invites dancers of all backgrounds and ages, either solo or as a group.

"A show that allowed for amateurs of any age - I loved that!" she says.

Abdul will evaluate their performances, with choreographer Travis Payne and singer-dancer Kimberly Wyatt joining her on the panel.

As everybody knows, Abdul has done this before. She reigned for eight seasons on "American Idol" as the nice, if sometimes dizzy-seeming, judge who often clashed with bullyboy Simon Cowell. They were a potent, crowd-pleasing pair. "I choose the word 'kind' over 'nice,"' Abdul says, recalling the bare-knuckle advice she got from dance great Gene Kelly: "Fail to prepare, and prepare to fail." So please don't call her "nice."

"'Nice' is often linked with being a pushover, naive," she says. "I'm kind - and I think that's powerful."

On "Live to Dance," she will serve not as a judge, but, with her two fellow panelists, in the title of "expert." This suggests her new show will strike a more supportive tone.

"I became a famous judge on 'American Idol,' but I'd always be, 'Who am I to judge?"' Abdul says. "I never looked at myself as a judge. I represented hope and keeping your dream alive. (Cowell) represented the intensity of how difficult and hard this business is. You have to have both."

And she expects to redouble her efforts as "a mentor and coach and perpetual cheerleader."

But will a certain Simon-esque counterbalance be missing?

"Not at all," declares Abdul. "Watch the show. I'll let the show speak for itself. People will get to see me in a different element, an element that is very natural for me."

The 48-year-old Abdul notes that in her quarter-century career as a dancer, choreographer, recording artist and TV personality, she has regularly drawn on her Inner Drill Sergeant, and insists on it from others.

"We didn't have people coming in who were quote-unquote embarrassing ones who were delusional and just wanted to get on television," she says, though acknowledging, "a couple snuck through, charming ones that deserved to let their passion be seen."

---

CBS is owned by CBS Corp.

---

Online:

http://www.cbs.com

---

EDITOR'S NOTE - Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org.

Upcoming Events