Jul 16th, 2014
By Lyndsey Parker
Reality Rocks, Yahoo! Music
While some fans may think of Paula Abdul as a "Straight Up" pop starlet or original American Idol/X Factor judge, her true entertainment legacy lies in dance. After her humble start as a Laker Girl, she went on to win multiple Emmys and VMAs for her groundbreaking choreography, and her routines in music videos (for herself as well as other artists), film, and television have become iconic.
Paula also been a guest judge on Dancing With the Stars and So You Think You Can Dance (and a regular judge on SYTYCD Australia); has masterminded her own TV dance competition, Live to Dance; and will be participating in "Celebration of Dance," a gala presented by Nigel Lythgoe's Dizzy Feet Foundation, in Los Angeles on July 19.
In preparation for the Dizzy Feet Gala as well as the fourth annual National Dance Day on July 26, Yahoo Music asked Paula to pick her favorite routines from her amazing three-decade career. Come dance down memory lane, as she dishes about what happened onstage and behind the scenes.
Janet Jackson, "Nasty" (1986)
"I'm very grateful, because this was really the big start to my career. When I was introduced to Janet, I was told by A&M Records that Control was going to be an important album for her, and when I started hearing demos, I was really, really excited to work with her. I felt like I had a chance here to really create something big for her. It was so inspiring. Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis wrote genius music, and Janet had a really important voice in it. You don't hear 'Nasty' and go, 'Oh, this is a dance jam.' It was a very different kind of song, kind of like how 'Straight Up' was for me: This could define an artist completely, and I wanted to create something that would be signature moves but also define her as being in charge.
"This video was nerve-wracking for her, because she had never danced with just all guys. But I picked the best in the business, and everything came into place perfectly. I choreographed 'Nasty' — this is the craziest thing — in a half hour. I shared an apartment with some Laker Girls and there was no floor-length mirror, so I did it in the bathroom. There was no room in this little old apartment, and I choreographed it with a mirror that I could see from my waist up. That's it. And everything worked out."
Janet Jackson, "When I Think of You" (1986)
"There was only one edit in this entire video. Otherwise, it was all one take. It was very, very, very labor-intensive. I worked with Julian Temple, who was the director, and we brought in [legendary choreographer] Michael Kidd. At the time I think Michael was in his late sixties, and it was an honor to be able to work with someone who was around during the MGM classics, who understood what we were trying to do. We brought him in to work with us to really make it seamless, and it was incredible.
"There were so many performers in that video, and just being able to get every scene knocked out and timed perfectly… oh my God, we probably spent an entire day just mapping it out, without a camera at first, and then an entire day working with the steadicam operator. We used an entire soundstage on the Fox lot. There were so many moving parts to it. It was a lot of rehearsal; I think we had four days altogether on the soundstage. I had a ton of extras, character actors, fire hydrants going off at the right timing. It was insane! But it was so rewarding, and every member of that video — from production to every single extra to every dancer — felt like something huge was accomplished. It was big."
Coming to America, Wedding Scene (1988)
"The moving platform was all done by remote control! That was in a dream of mine. A lot of my choreography and ideas came from waking up in the middle of the night and documenting what I just dreamt. Almost all my choreography had to do with things that I would remember from my dreams, or I'd actually wake up and immediately write it down. I used to have a tripod and a camera and I would videotape me half-asleep, just getting the ideas down so I wouldn't forget!
"I remember having the scariest, worst final dress rehearsal. Everything went wrong. I was coming down in a bubble, and the bubble got stuck and my costume still wasn't sewn and the tailor had left needles in it, so I was getting poked. I couldn't get out of the bubble and literally had to jump out of the bubble and have stagehands and dancers catch me. And my heel broke. What else? One of the dancers got stuck on the scaffolding. I had so many elements that were working against me. I was wearing a Bob Mackie gown that weighed about 25 pounds to move in. I just wanted to get it over with.
"But you know, as the saying goes: If you have the worst dress rehearsal, then 99.995 percent of the time, you're going to have a great performance. So everything went perfect in the live TV performance, from soup to nuts. It was like an out-of-body experience."
The 62nd Annual Academy Awards (1990)
* this choreography was nominated for an Emmy
Filed under: Dance
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