Paula Abdul
Paula Abdul was raised in San Fernando
Valley. She began taking dance lessons when she was eight. She was a student at
Van Nuys High School, where she was the senior class president and head
cheerleader. Her high school graduation was in the year 1980. After graduation
she enrolled in college at Cal State Northridge. There she studied radio and
television. After joining the L.A. Lakers cheerleaders, she became head
cheerleader/choreographer after only a few months, eventually dropping out of
college to dance and choreograph full-time. The Jacksons recruited her to
choreograph the 1984 "Torture" the first of many films and videos she
would choreograph. After her debut CD "Forever Your Girl" she began
to sing and became a popular artist and performer. The stint she held as an
American Idol judge (2002) has made her an increasingly popular
performer/dancer. Her father (Harry Abdul) is from a Sephardic Jewish
background from Syria. Her mother, who is also Jewish was born in Canada. Her
parents are from Canada, Brazil, Syria and Brazil. The diverse background has
led to various stories being told in the media regarding her country of origin
or religious beliefs. The daughter of Harry Abdul (once a livestock trader in
Brazil) and Lorainne Abdul (former assistant to film director Billy Wilder),
grew in Hollywood, California. At the age of seven, she sang and danced in
community musical theatre groups while traveling around America. She also took
tap dancing lessons, which earned her the opportunity to attend a tap dancing
school. In the future she attended Cal State-Northridge College in which she
majored in Broadcast radio. She was a candidate for the Los Angeles Lakers NBA
cheerleading team. This resulted in her earning $50 per game her freshman year.
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