Paula Abdul
Paula Julie Abdul was born in 1963 in San Fernando, California.
From the age of nine she took dance lessons and impressed her
teachers with her natural ability to dance and entertain.
Paula appeared on TV at the age of 16 (in the 1978
movie-musical Junior High School). In the early 1980s
Paula auditioned to cheer for the LA Lakers and passed the
audition, going on to cheer for the legendary basketball team,
eventually becoming the squad's choreographer.
She quickly gained a reputation as one of the most talented and
innovative choreographers in Hollywood and worked on Private
School (1983) and Coming To America (1988). She also
choreographed routines for the TV series The Tracy Ullman Show.
Paula was eventually hired by Janet Jackson to choreograph the
video clip for Nasty. Since the clip (and the song) was a
hit, Paula was soon sought after by (amongst others) George
Michael, Debbie Gibson, Duran Duran,
INXS and ZZ Top.
Deciding to take the plunge from choreography and dance into
music, she recorded a demo tape and persuaded Virgin to record an
album. In May 1988 she recorded and released a single called Knocked
Out which peaked at number 41 on the American Hot 100. A
month later, Virgin released Forever Your Girl, Paula's
debut album. Her follow up single The Way That You Love Me
reached only number 88.
Despite the initial poor sales a third single, Straight
Up, was released in February 1989 and went straight to number
one. The title track to the album, Forever Your Girl was
released as a single and that also went to number one. Paula had
her third number one hit in September with the single Cold
Hearted.
The Way That You Love peaked at number three in
December 1989. In February 1990 Paula had her fourth number 1
single with Opposites Attract (featuring MC Skat Kat). To
this day Paula remains one of the few female artists to have
achieved four number one singles from a debut album.
Forever Your Girl (the album) sold over ten million
copies worldwide, going multi-platinum and making Paula Abdul a
household name throughout the world.
Paula's second album Spellbound
was released in 1991, and it appeared that her success would
continue where Forever Your Girl left off.
The first
single from Spellbound, Rush Rush went to number
one in May 1991 and stayed there for five weeks. Her second single
Promise Of A New Day also went to number one in
September.
Her third single, Blowing Kisses In The Wind, peaked
at number six in February 1992, marking a downturn in Paula's
commercial success. However, she continued to make the headline
with her highly publicised marriage to Hollywood Brat
Packer, Emilio Estevez.
In 1992 Abdul confessed to suffering from the eating disorder bulimia
and checked herself into a clinic. She also divorced Estevez in
May 1994, citing irreconcilable differences.
Her reputation was damaged when backing vocalist Yvette Marine
claimed she, and not Paula, had sung the main vocals on several
tracks from the Forever Your Girl album. Paula and Virgin
eventually won the case.
By 1995 Paula had successfully overcome her demons and prepared
to return to the spotlight. In the summer of 1995 she released her
third album Head Over Heels, a departure from her first
two albums, with a mixture of pop, soul and a little hip-hop.
However, a new generation of musicians had overtaken her, and Head
Over Heels peaked at just number 18 on the Billboard
100. The three singles that were released from the album failed to
reach the top twenty.
In October 1996 Paula married Brad Beckerman, heir to a
clothing giant called 'Starter', in a whirlwind romance after they
were set up on a blind date by a mutual friend. Sadly, this was to
prove to be yet another false start in Paula's life and they
divorced just seventeen months later citing irreconcilable
differences.
In January 1997 Paula ventured into TV, making her adult acting
debut with ABC's Sunday Night Movie Touched By Evil, the
true story of a woman recovering from a brutal rape. She went on
to make appearances on Spin City, NBC's Mr. Rock
& Roll: The Alan Freed Story, the cable TV movie
The Waiting Game, NBC's Saturday Night Live, and
ABC's Sabrina The Teenage Witch.
In 1998 she released an aerobics
video called Cardio Dance, a follow up to her Get Up
and Dance video released in 1995. She also established her
own dance education company, Co Dance.
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