Los Angeles Times

Steps have been taken

An all-athlete version of ‘Dancing With the Stars’ gets off to a glittery, jittery start.

- HELENE ELLIOTT

Quadruple jumps are not required to win “Dancing With the Stars,” which on Monday launched a four-week mini-season showcasing athletes.

“Thank God,” figure skater Adam Rippon, who never mastered the fourrevolu­tion jumps that capture Olympic titles but won hearts with his artistry and bold personalit­y, said with profound relief.

Skaters had an edge in the show’s first week, and that’s easy to understand. They’re accustomed to performing to music for an audience and to wearing sequins, which appear to be required and purchased by the ton.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was dressed in blindingly shiny gold for a number in which young dancers circled him like a human maypole while he gamely tried to shimmy to Stevie Wonder’s “Signed, Sealed, Delivered I’m Yours.” He and partner Lindsay Arnold didn’t get the highest scores from the judges but won enough fan votes to return next week.

“I’m representi­ng baby boomers,” said AbdulJabba­r, who turned 71 in April. “I had a good time, I had fun, and I learned a few things.” And he didn’t get hurt. “Yeah,” he said, “that’s amazing too.”

Arike Ogunbowale, who

hit game-winning shots for Notre Dame’s women’s basketball team in the NCAA semifinals and final, danced her salsa number wearing a blue sequined dress that resembled a long basketball jersey and — bless her heart — sneakers.

After she and partner Gleb Savchenko had moved on to Week 2, a woman accompanyi­ng her warned reporters not to ask Ogunbowale about basketball. The reason? Such discussion­s would violate NCAA rules. Apparently, the NCAA has nothing more important to worry about than prohibitin­g Ogunbowale from promoting a sport in which she excels, one that needs and deserves attention.

The competitor­s in the show’s first all-athletes competitio­n were diverse in their talents and their dancing ability. It was strange to see them away from the ice, court or field, and the transition was rocky for some.

Former Yankees and Red Sox outfielder Johnny Damon, who joked, “I’ve been embarrasse­d on national TV so many times,” did a semblance of a fox trot with partner Emma Slater and didn’t make the final cut.

Two-time Olympic snowboardi­ng gold medalist Jamie Anderson, who conceded, “I underestim­ated the whole situation,” while rehearsing her Viennese waltz, also didn’t advance.

Washington Redskins cornerback Josh Norman and partner Sharna Burgess tied Rippon and partner Jenna Johnson for the highest score, 24 out of 30.

Pink-sequin-clad Mirai Nagasu of Arcadia, who said during the Pyeongchan­g Olympics she was auditionin­g for “DWTS,” got her wish and did well in her debut with partner Alan Bersten, earning 23 points.

“This is not easy because I’ve never ballroom danced before,” said Nagasu, whose historic triple axel jump in the team competitio­n at Pyeongchan­g helped the U.S. team earn bronze medals. “Figure skating comes more naturally to me because I started when I was 5.”

Nagasu’s score was later equaled by Tonya Harding, whose reputation is undergoing an all-out rehabilita­tion effort following the release in January of the movie “I, Tonya.”

During a filmed segment before she and Sasha Farber danced a fox trot, Harding said figure skating had been “taken” from her, convenient­ly ignoring she earned her punishment by pleading guilty to conspiring to hinder prosecutio­n and admitting she knew about the 1994 assault on rival skater Nancy Kerrigan but refused to tell law enforcemen­t officials afterward. Oh, that. Harding was showered with flowers Monday and won gushing praise from pro dancer Slater.

“She really is a lovely, lovely, lovely lady and she deserves to go all the way,” Slater said. Farber agreed. “She hasn’t performed in front of judges in a long time and she had something taken from her and today was the first time she performed and let all that out, all that negative energy, all that was done before, just blow it away,” he said. “Tonight is a new start, a new day and a new Tonya.”

Voters seemed to remember the old Tonya. She barely advanced.

“All I wanted to do was go out there and prove to myself that I could do this and that I belong here,” said Harding, who was stripped of her 1994 U.S. title and banned for life from U.S. Figure Skating Assn. competitio­ns. “I wanted to show people that I can be elegant and beautiful. They never saw that side of me before.”

Mending her reputation, she said, isn’t her concern.

“I’m here to have fun,” she said. “Sasha has turned me into a lovely lady who can dance a little bit.”

Rippon’s dancing was impressive. A hero to the gay community since he came out three years ago, his superb technique has long made him a favorite of figure skating fans. His artistry wasn’t always rewarded in a sport that favors the brawny quadruple jumps that he can’t do, but he soon might add dance champion to his selfawarde­d title of America’s Sweetheart.

“I think I’m a born showman and something like this is just something I feel in my element,” he said after his sizzling cha-cha with Johnson.

Rippon is still touring with the Stars on Ice troupe but isn’t sure what else his future holds.

“I have a lot going on throughout the whole summer, but beyond that I think I’m just looking for a job,” he said. “There’s so many open doors right now and I’m trying to step through each one and just see what is a good fit.”

For now, sequins and the dance floor fit him just fine.

 ?? Kelsey McNeal ABC ?? ADAM RIPPON is in his element on “Dancing With the Stars.”
Kelsey McNeal ABC ADAM RIPPON is in his element on “Dancing With the Stars.”
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 ?? Kelsey McNeal ABC ?? NOTRE DAME basketball star Arike Ogunbowale and partner Gleb Savchenko advanced to Week 2.
Kelsey McNeal ABC NOTRE DAME basketball star Arike Ogunbowale and partner Gleb Savchenko advanced to Week 2.

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