âDancing With the Starsâ recap: Bindi Irwin snags seasonâs first 10; Gary Busey goes home
Can we get real for a moment, âDancing With the Starsâ fans? Letâs admit that if this long-running reality contest is good at honing any of its participantsâ skills, itâs this one: shameless self-promotion.
And so we had three competitors â that would be nearly every singer in the group â performing to their own songs on Monday. They can be forgiven (or can they?) because this is the âmost memorable yearâ episode, one of the most popular theme weeks, intended to pull our heartstrings and tell us something intimate about the celebrities.
Maybe it just tells us that theyâre good marketers and relentless builders of their own brands?
However you feel about it, thereâs plenty to see here, with an homage to â90s pop, Paula Deenâs legs (!) and the first 10 of the season. Tamar Braxton may well end up winning this entire thing, but Mondayâs episode shows that she has serious competition from the teenagers. Bindi Irwin, with the aforementioned 10, and Hayes Grier, with a genuine breakthrough performance, had stellar nights.
Gary Busey, on the other hand, did not. He and his âfrom Russia with loveâ partner Anna Trebunskaya went home, with Gary threatening to haunt the place (I think) because his elimination was âfalse.â Oh Gary, we will miss you. Carlos PenaVega and Witney Carson were in jeopardy, so maybe Paula will be sticking around even longer than anyone predicted. Actually, she already has.
New ABC utility player Alfonso Ribeiro subbed for host Tom Bergeron, who hopped a plane to be with his ailing father. Itâs the second case of body swap for these two, since Ribeiro will take over Bergeronâs longtime post on âAmericanâs Funniest Home Videosâ when it returns in all its pratfall glory Oct. 11. And the former âFresh Prince of Bel-Airâ star was a guest judge on âDWTSâ last week. Heâs everywhere!
Update on âTardy for the Partyâ star Kim Zolciak and her partner Tony Dovolani. They wonât be rejoining the show, even after a #BringKimandTonyBack petition gathered some steam last week.
The rules are the rules, say âDWTSâ shot-callers, and Kimâs mini-stroke and subsequent missed performance means she has to bow out of the contest.
Sheâs not the first casualty of the ballroom. The Associated Press recently published the litany of bumps, bruises, sprains, tears and fainting spells that have piled up since the show premiered in 2005. Thatâs a lot of boo boos and not a single do-over.
Hereâs the competitor breakdown from "Most Memorable Year" night, in chronological order:
Alexa PenaVega and Mark Ballas
Foot fault! Foot fault! Already, it was going to be tough to top all those 9s from last week for the universally praised âBreaking Badâ routine. But Alexa had a few missteps near the end of her foxtrot to The Shirellesâ âMama Said,â done in tribute to her single mom and the family that moved to Texas with her in 2000 so she could co-star in âSpy Kids.â She recovered, but the damage was done. Bruno Tonioli liked the cinematic feel of the dance, and Carrie Ann Inaba said she found her theatricality.
Score: a rather harsh 21
Gary Busey and Anna Trebunskaya
Gary couldâve picked 1988 as his year because he survived a near-fatal motorcycle crash, as his family talked about in the pre-taped segment. But more predictably, he chose 1979 as a nod to âThe Buddy Holly Story,â which launched his acting career and earned him an Oscar nomination. Iâm not sure what that dance was supposed to be to Hollyâs classic, âThatâll Be the Day,â but Gary mostly vamped and lip synced in nerd glasses and a fright wig (or was that a dye job?). Bruno was distracted from his footwork, such as it was, by his âunique interpretation of the dance,â and said he needed to ânail the precision.â Carrie Ann didnât see much improvement and started to pick him apart, but she backed down when the audience started hissing. Let the woman speak! Julianne saw some mishaps but liked his persistence.
Score: a paltry 16
Tamar Braxton and Valentin Chmerkovskiy
In 2012, Tamarâs husband nearly died from blood clots in his lungs, and while he was in the hospital recovering, they decided to have a child. So Tamarâs rhumba to her own song, âKing,â was dedicated to her husband, Vince Herbert, and their son. It was technically stunning and emotionally moving. Carrie Ann said the story touched her deeply, âbut your dance touched me even more deeply,â and Bruno thanked them for âa proper rhumbaâ that followed all the ballroom rules. Julianne thought she was âcompletely vulnerableâ and âfreeâ and âopen.â
Score: 27 (perfect 9s across the board)
Hayes Grier and Emma Slater
Since heâs an Internet sensation, itâs tough to think of 15-year-old Hayes as a shy kid. But he was and still is, in some ways, he explained during his pre-show video, even as he and his brother, Nash, have become stars on Vine, the six-second micro-video platform. He has millions of fans now, but he still seems like a humble, grounded kid. He takes direction from his pro perhaps better than anyone in the contest. The result? He absolutely smashed that contemporary routine to Shawn Mendesâ âStitches.â Julianne, with her jaw dropped to the judgesâ table, asked breathlessly, âWhat just happened?â Heâs broken out of his shell, she said, maybe a direct reference to the âTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtleâ dance from last week that didnât go so well. Bruno called him a âsuperstarâ who âdidnât miss a beatâ and Carrie Ann felt the storytelling in the piece. Score: 27 (all 9s)
Alek Skarlatos and Lindsay Arnold
So far, 2015 has been a seminal year for Alek, who helped tackle a suspected terrorist a few months ago on a Paris-bound train. Presidential commendations, hometown parades and dinner with Arnold Schwarzenegger followed for him and his two childhood friends and fellow heroes. But that wasnât the end of the chaos for Alek, a student at Umpqua Community College, the site of a mass shooting last week. He rushed back to Roseburg, Ore., to be with family and friends, but returned to âDWTSâ for a paso doble to âWake Me Upâ by Avicii. He dedicated the performance to the victims and the town. Carrie Ann declared it âstrong and sturdy,â and Julianne said that because dance is an expression, itâs OK to show anger and frustration. In short, it was a bit stoic but solid.
Score: 24
Nick Carter and Sharna Burgess
Can we play some Backstreet music and do some Backstreet moves, Nick Carter has asked practically every single week. Sharnaâs cool with it because she was a wide-eyed teenage fan when the boy band was in its heyday. So, 1992 it is! Thatâs when he was 12 years old and auditioned for the group, escaping a dysfunctional family situation, he said in the rehearsal video. The other guys became his support system, and he dedicated his jazz number to âEverybody (Backstreetâs Back)â to his fellow pop stars. Julianne giggled about how smokinâ hot he was, and Carrie Ann said every girl in America wanted to be Sharna. Bruno called it a âmega sexy, mega hit.â Was there any doubt that he would kill it? Please. I still say heâs been a ringer from day one, but this performance was a really entertaining trip down memory lane.
Score: 27
Carlos PenaVega and Witney Carson
Carlosâ boy band, Big Time Rush, was at the peak of its success in 2012, but when the tour ended, he was lost to depression and drugs, he said during his video package. He went with a friend to church, where he heard âAmazing Graceâ and quickly met his wife, Alexa. âIn one week my life changed forever,â he said. His waltz had a bobble at the end but it was heartfelt. Julianne deemed it âbeautiful,â but noted that heâs in the middle of the pack and heâll have to work on his shoulders and chest to leap up the leader board. Bruno called it âluminousâ and âtotally mesmerizingâ but also harped on his posture. Carrie Ann was a much bigger fan, saying he danced from his soul and that the piece was âmind blowing.â
Score: 25
Paula Deen and Louis van Amstel
Paula ditched her unhappy 27-year marriage in 1989 and took control of her life, starting her first catering business. Her cha cha to âRespectâ by Aretha Franklin â in a short, fabulous dress! â mightâve been one of her best performances, even though she nearly lost her footing at one point. Sheâd rather do her own dance âsteps,â she told co-host Erin Andrews. Choreography is for the birds, yâall! Bruno advised her to âcamp it up even moreâ but thought it was âa step in the right direction.â Carrie Ann wished she could remember the steps because âthe way you move is so hot and sexy,â but then any semblance of a routine sort of drops off a cliff. Julianne gave her some daily affirmations with words like âawesomeâ and âfierce.â
Score: 18 (better than Busey)
Andy Grammer and Allison Holker
Andy lost his beloved mom to breast cancer in 2009, and was âdazed and confusedâ after her death. Still a street busker at the time, he wrote the song âGood to be Aliveâ to try to pull himself out of his grief. He and the four-months-pregnant Allison â congrats, girl! â did a chipper cha cha to that tune, and the judges were rather split on the results. Carrie Ann thought the top and bottom halves of his body didnât exactly work together, but Julianne felt he was the most comfortable sheâd seen him all season.
Score: 23
Bindi Irwin and Derek Hough
Apropos of nothing, Derek Hough now has a baby koala named after him at the Australia Zoo. Thatâs Bindiâs stomping ground back in Queensland. Apropos of everything, she dedicated her performance to her late father, Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin, picking 2006, the year he died, as her watershed time. Father and daughter were inseparable, Bindiâs mom said in the pre-show video, and the love they shared was obvious in a series of touching photos included in the package. The contemporary dance she and Derek did to âEvery Breath You Takeâ by Aaron Krause was pretty darn close to flawless. Julianne dubbed it âbreathtaking,â Bruno said that Steve was dancing with her âevery step of the way,â and Carrie Ann brought up âbeautyâ and âpassionâ and said, âYou make every dance a moment of your life.â
Score: 28 (the first 10 of the season, from Bruno)
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