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Published: September 5, 2008 3:00 a.m.

Ladies dish on life in an ‘Idol' nation

The Top 10 finally sing for their fans, not judges

Richard Rushfield
Los Angeles Times
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Fox

The top 10 contestants from “American Idol” will rock the Coliseum on Wednesday during the “American Idols Live!” Tour.

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If you go
What: “American Idols Live!”

When: 7 p.m. Wednesday

Where: Memorial Coliseum, 4000 Parnell Ave.

Admission: Tickets, at $37.50 to $66.50, are available through Ticketmaster, 424-1811.

For months, as the entertainment world revolved around them, as desperate fans speed-dialed voting lines, as celebrity-driven tabloids and Web sites fought in mortal combat for every scrap of information about them, as television, music and Broadway rebuilt their firmaments in their wake, the contestants of “American Idol” toiled in the show’s protective cocoon-like bubble.

“We were in a white room for three months,” Irish songstress Carly Smithson said.

America’s Top 10 gladiators of competitive singing left that bubble months ago and are now taking their songs directly to the millions of “Idol” fans on the “American Idols Live!” tour, which comes to Memorial Coliseum on Wednesday.

“There’ll be no one to say you sang horrible,” said “Idol” finalist Ramiele Malubay prior to the tour’s launch. Malubay, along with the other women of the Top 10 – Smithson, Brooke White, Syesha Mercado and Kristy Lee Cook – took a break from rehearsals in July to sit down for this interview.

As they looked ahead to the road trip, it was very clear that after months of absorbing Simon Cowell’s acid lashings, the second-guessing of fans and ultimately each Wednesday night’s verdict of the voters, the “Idol” ladies were agog with exhilaration at the prospect of finally singing for singing’s sake. “It’s not about what a judge is going to say. It’s about the music and the fans connecting and having a great time,” gushed singer-songwriter White.

“It’s amazing. Nobody is going to judge us after we sing,” crowed Smithson.

Singing solos

As for what to expect on the tour, jazz singer and the season’s third-place finisher Mercado describes the night as “a mini-concert for each person.”

White elaborated: “We sing three songs each, David Cook five, (David) Archuleta will sing four. I think a lot of people had the impression it was going to be a bunch of group numbers, but it’s not. We actually are going out as individual performers and doing our own set, our own music.”

One thing that’s clear to studious “Idol” watchers is that of all the milestones each season brings (Hollywood week, Top 24, Top 12 and the big stage), making it to the Top 10 and thus ensuring a spot on the tour is the most significant. Not only does the tour bring a major payday (rumored to be more than $100,000 per person), but once the contestants pass that hurdle, they have the assurance of knowing that, come what may each results night, their “Idol” journeys will continue through the summer.

“I remember hearing the news that I made Top 10,” recalled White. “I was psyched; that’s a huge milestone to get through.”

As we broke bread, however, it became clear that a larger meaning of the tour for these young women was the fun of being together. For a competition show that in previous seasons has generated its share of behind-the-scenes drama between the contestants, to all appearances, the Season 7 group has retained a remarkable sense of camaraderie.

“We’re like sisters!” proclaimed Malubay at one point, sharing her excitement about hitting the road with the group.

“Do you really feel like you’re my sister?” Mercado asked.

“Oh, my God. I’ve lived with you since November!” Malubay responded. “You know what it is, our spats are like sibling rivalries. ‘Gimme back my shirt’ kinda stuff.”

Looking back, the five remembered the trauma of their greatest challenge, Mariah Carey week, as what brought them together.

“That week was going to be the hardest week the girls were going to have,” Smithson remembered. “Mariah Carey’s voice is undeniably one of the greatest. How are we supposed to sing her songs and not be critiqued? That was why I picked something that wasn’t well known, and I still got criticized.

“You have a boy coming to sing any of those songs, he’s, in that moment, going to sound like he made it himself. If I slowed down on ‘You’ll Always Be My Baby,’ it would sound exactly the same.”

Support system

Another element that brought them together was a tsunami of fan support for their male counterparts. Mercado described the vibe she often received from the room. “I tried to be as comfortable as possible with the audience because it’s those people who I’m really performing for, and sometimes it was a little hard because those little girls would be staring at me like, ‘Where’s David Archuleta at!’ ”

Another tip-off: the letter gap. In the Internet age, the medium of crush letters may well have been surrendered entirely to teenage girls and their grandmothers, and that shift was felt hard by the women. “My fan mail was like three letters,” remembered Malubay.

White: “The boys would get boxes, stacks.”

“By the Top 3,” said Mercado, “I said, ‘Now people will like me more. I’ll get more fans.’ But no, at the most I got like six letters. That’s at the most, six letters a week.”

The five recounted how the pressure both sustained them and threatened to drag them under. In the two-hour conversation they told stories of the horrors of shotgun song choices (they were given 45 minutes to decide on their second Beatles song), judicial excoriation and struggling to find original arrangements, practice a song and record the studio version while not burning out your voice.

“We help each other out because you can’t really do this yourself,” White said. “A lot of laughing; you give a lot of hugs. And there was a lot of time when you felt you weren’t getting through so well, so you went home and cried – I didn’t even wait until I got home. Monday and Tuesday (performance day) were more scary and Wednesday (results day) maybe you put it off in your mind. And then for that hour before results show it will finally sink in – oh, my gosh.”

“I have to admit,” said Mercado, “I had my moments when I goofed off. But it was really hard for me to really enjoy the entire experience because I was so focused on getting that song just right and doing a good job. It was hard to let go and just enjoy it for what it was.”

Nonetheless, Smithson recalled, now and then the tension had to break. She said, “We’re making this sound like it was such a stressful experience, but in the middle of all this stress, you still had a great time. ... We’d come home and say this is the hardest thing we’ve ever done, and Brooke would just start acting stupid and rolling around on the floor.”

But on performance night, Smithson recalled, “when the red light went on on that camera, I’d be like, ‘Oh crap.’ ”

Hitting the road

Having traveled so far, they have one last lap to go under the “Idol” umbrella. The tour will take them across America, letting them finally perform directly for their fans. And then the real “American Idol” challenge begins: building a lasting career.

But for this group of women, the path will be made, if not easier, at least clearer, because each has formed memorable and hugely likable personas during this season. Seeing the women of the Top 10, each a true star, take such pleasure in one another’s company and recalling their battle as a shared experience shows one how, by becoming part of something bigger, we enlarge ourselves.