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American Idol (season 3)

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Finals venue
  
Kodak Theatre

Latest winner
  
Trent Harmon

4.2/10
IMDb

Host(s)
  
Ryan Seacrest

Song
  
"I Believe"

American Idol (season 3) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbtvbanners12325602p12325

Broadcast from
  
January 19 (2004-01-19) – May 26, 2004 (2004-05-26)

Broadcaster
  
Fox Broadcasting Company

Origin
  
High Point, North Carolina, United States

Judges
  
Paula Abdul, Simon Cowell, Randy Jackson

Presented by
  
Brian Dunkleman, Ryan Seacrest

Cast
  
Carrie Underwood, Kelly Clarkson, Adam Lambert, Clay Aiken, Jennifer Lopez

Profiles

Fantasia barrino audition season 3 american idol best auditions ever


The third season of American Idol premiered on Monday, January 19, 2004 and continued until May 26, 2004. The third season was won by Fantasia Barrino, who defeated Diana DeGarmo by an approximate margin of 2% (1.3 million votes); the vote total (65 million votes) was the highest recorded vote total in the show's history until the May 23, 2007, finale of the sixth season. This season also featured Jennifer Hudson, who would subsequently win the 2006 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress.

Contents

American Idol (season 3) American Idol Heavycom

Season 3 is the first season where both the winner and the runner-up had been in the bottom 2 or 3 prior to the finale, being followed by the eighth and twelfth seasons. It is the first season to have a finale with two female contestants, followed by the twelfth season; while the second, seventh and eighth seasons had a finale with two male contestants. It is also the first season where a Wild Card contestant, Leah LaBelle, is eliminated in the first episode of the finals. It is the first season to have a gender imbalance among the finalists, followed by season 8, each having eight finalists of the dominant gender. Season 3 has eight female finalists, whereas the eighth season had eight male finalists.

Both Fantasia and Diana DeGarmo released a single after the finale. Fantasia's first single, released in June 2004 on the RCA record label, entered the Billboard Hot 100 at number one, making Fantasia the first artist in the history of Billboard to debut at number one with their first single. In addition to Fantasia and DeGarmo, Jasmine Trias, LaToya London, George Huff, Jennifer Hudson, and Camile Velasco have all released albums since the season ended. Leah LaBelle was signed by Epic Records.

American Idol (season 3) American Idol Wikipedia

Regional auditions

Auditions were held in the following cities:

American Idol (season 3) Past Winners Front And Center In 39American Idol39 Series Finale

In this season over 80,000 attended the auditions in 6 cities. Paula Abdul was absent from the Los Angeles audition. A prominent auditioner was William Hung, a University of California, Berkeley student, who became a surprise cult figure following his tuneless rendition of Ricky Martin's "She Bangs" at the San Francisco audition. He was later invited back to perform on a special edition Uncut, Uncensored and Untalented. His appearance on the show landed him a record deal with Koch Records and he released an album soon afterwards. He became one of the most successful contestants to emerge from this year.

American Idol (season 3) American Idol TV Show News Videos Full Episodes and More

During the audition round in Houston, Texas, auditioner Jonathan Rey threw a cup of water at Simon, who moments earlier commented that he was terrible and "there's not a song in the world you could sing." Security quickly escorted Jonathan out, and Houston police questioned him, but released him after Simon decided against pressing assault charges on him. Other prominent auditioners that year were "scooter girl" Nicole Tieri, and Alan Ritchson who sang to Paula Abdul alone.

Hollywood week

American Idol (season 3) American Idol Pictures Videos Breaking News

There were 117 contestants in the first Hollywood round which was held at the Pasadena Civic Center in Pasadena, California. The contestants first came onto the stage in groups but each performed solo and talked briefly about themselves. Simon Cowell was not impressed with their performances. They were also asked to write original lyrics and melody for one of ten song titles given and perform their song the next day. After their performance, they were divided into four groups and one group was eliminated.

In the next round, the remaining 87 contestants performed in groups in three. The girls and boys were separate and they were each given 3 different songs to choose - Girls with The Supremes' You Can't Hurry Love, Vonda Shepard's "Tell Him", Candi Staton's Young Hearts Run Free, the boys with Billy Joel's Tell Her About It, Rick Astley's Never Gonna Give You Up, The Drifters's Up on the Roof. 30 contestants were cut and 57 then advanced to the next stage where they performed solo. The contestants were then divided into 3 group and placed in separate rooms, with one group sent home. 32 contestants remained for the semi-finals.

Hollywood rounds contestant Taryn Southern later appeared on the Project My World series and wrote and performed the 2007 "Hott4Hill" viral video.

Semifinals

The contestants who reached this stage were referred to in the show as the Top 32 finalists. This is the first time that two contestants who previously tried out for American Idol (Matthew Metzger and Lisa Leuschner) made it to the top 3 of their semifinals group. Both contestants were eliminated during Hollywood round in the previous season.

George Huff replaced Donnie Williams in Semifinal Round 4 after Williams was disqualified following a DUI arrest.

Unlike previous seasons, this season the contestants performed in front of a small studio audience, with orchestra accompaniment on backing tape. As with the second season, in these rounds, two from each group were selected by public vote to proceed on to the Top 12, and those who failed at any of the previous stages were given a second chance in the wild-card show.

During the wild card show, four contestants in the wildcard round were eliminated by the judges before they had the chance to sing. They were Lisa Leuschner, Eric Yoder, Tiara Purifoy, and Marque Lynche.

The judges each chose one of their favorites to join the Top 12, and Jon Peter Lewis advanced to the top 12 after receiving 22% of the public vote.

Semi-finalist Marque Lynche died on December 6, 2015.

Finalists

  • Fantasia Barrino (born June 30, 1984, in High Point, North Carolina, aged 19 on the show) auditioned in Atlanta, Georgia. Her audition songs were Lauryn Hill's "Killing Me Softly with His Song" and Tina Turner's "Proud Mary". She has performed from a young age with her family who had released a CD. She performed Aretha Franklin's "Think" in the Hollywood rounds.
  • Diana DeGarmo (born June 16, 1987, in Birmingham, Alabama, age 16 on the show) is from Snellville, Georgia, and auditioned in Honolulu, Hawaii with Aretha Franklin's "Chain of Fools". She was on the show America's Most Talented Kid in 2002 as well as other TV shows. She performed Ike & Tina Turner's "A Fool in Love" in the Hollywood rounds. At 16 years, 7 months and 26 days old, she was the youngest contestant reach into the finals until Thia Megia and Lauren Alaina made to the finals in the tenth season.
  • Jasmine Trias (born November 3, 1986, in Honolulu, Hawaii, 17 on the show) is from Mililani, Hawaii and auditioned in Honolulu. She is the first Filipino-American contestant in American Idol who made it to the final three, followed by Jessica Sanchez in the eleventh season.
  • LaToya London (born December 29, 1978, in San Francisco, California, 25 on the show) is from Oakland, California and auditioned in San Francisco with Aretha Franklin's "Chain of Fools".
  • George Huff (born November 4, 1980, in New Orleans, Louisiana, aged 23 on the show) auditioned in Houston, Texas with Joe Cocker's "You Are So Beautiful". He performed Luther Vandross' "Here and Now" in the Hollywood rounds.
  • John Stevens (born July 28, 1987, in Buffalo, New York, 16 on the show) is from East Amherst, New York and auditioned in New York City with Fred Astaire's "The Way You Look Tonight". He performed Tony Bennett's "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" in Hollywood. He was the youngest male contestant to reach into the finals until Daniel Seavey in the fourteenth season.
  • Jennifer Hudson (born September 12, 1981, in Chicago, Illinois, aged 22 on the show) auditioned in Atlanta with Aretha Franklin's "Share Your Love with Me".
  • Jon Peter Lewis (born November 7, 1979, in Lincoln, Nebraska, aged 24 on the show) is from Rexburg, Idaho and auditioned in Honolulu with Van Morrison's "Crazy Love". He was dubbed the 'pen salesman' by Simon Cowell. He performed The Jackson 5's "I Want You Back".
  • Camile Velasco (born September 1, 1985, in Makati City, Philippines, 18 on the show) is from Haiku, Maui and auditioned in Honolulu with Fugees' "Ready or Not".
  • Amy Adams (born July 25, 1979, in Kansas City, Kansas, aged 24 on the show) is from Bakersfield, California and auditioned in Atlanta, Georgia with Fontella Bass' "Rescue Me". She performed Jennifer Rush's "The Power of Love" in Hollywood.
  • Matthew Rogers (born September 16, 1978, in Rancho Cucamonga, California, 25 on the show) auditioned in Los Angeles with James Ingram's "Just Once".
  • Leah LaBelle (born September 8, 1986, in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, aged 17 on the show) is from Seattle, Washington and auditioned in New York with Whitney Houston's "I Believe in You and Me". She auditioned with her birth name Leah Vladowski. Her family was originally from Bulgaria, who immigrated to the United States. She performed Diana Ross' "Theme from Mahogany (Do You Know Where You're Going To)" at the Hollywood rounds. In 2011, LaBelle signed to Epic Records.
  • Finals

    In this season, guest judges may be introduced in some episodes, and sometimes the mentor joined as judges. During Top 10 was the first time where are there were five judges when the duo Ashford & Simpson joined as judges.

    In the result shows, the bottom two vote-getters may reprise their performances before the elimination was announced, or only the eliminated one may perform after the result is revealed, or they may performed before and after their elimination as in Top 5 when George Huff reprised both his songs from the performance night.

    Top 12 – Soul

  • Group performance: Soul Medley
  • Guest performance: Clay Aiken - "Solitaire"
  • Top 11 – Country

  • Guest performance: Kimberley Locke - "8th World Wonder"
  • Top 10 – Motown

  • Guest judges: Nick Ashford and Valerie Simpson
  • Group performance: "Ain't No Mountain High Enough" (Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell)
  • Top 9 – Elton John

  • Guest Mentor: Elton John
  • Boys: "Daniel"
  • Girls: "Bennie and the Jets"
  • Group: "Saturday Night's Alright for Fighting"
  • Guest performance: Tamyra Gray - "Raindrops Will Fall"
  • Top 8 – Movie Soundtracks

    Guest judge: Quentin Tarantino

  • Guest performance: Christina Christian - "Forever and Never"
  • Top 7 – Barry Manilow

  • Guest Mentor and Judge: Barry Manilow
  • Group performance: "Let Freedom Ring" feat. Barry Manilow
  • Top 6 – Gloria Estefan

    Mentor and guest judge - Gloria Estefan Guest band - Miami Sound Machine

  • Group performance: Gloria Estefan medley
  • Top 4 – Disco

    Guest judge: Donna Summer

  • Group performance: "Bad Girls"/"Hot Stuff"/"Heaven Knows"/"She Works Hard for the Money"
  • Guest performance: Donna Summer - "MacArthur Park"
  • Top 3 – Idols' Choice, Judges' Choice, Clive's Choice

    Guest judge: Clive Davis

  • Guest performance: Tamyra Gray - "Star", "Raindrops Will Fall"
  • Guest performance: Guy Sebastian - "Angels Brought Me Here"
  • Top 2 – Finale

    Guest performance: Paul Anka - "My Way"1

  • Note 1: The song was rewritten by Paul Anka specially for the episode as a recap for the season.
  • After a nationwide vote of more than 65 million votes in total—more than the first two seasons combined--Fantasia Barrino won the "American Idol" title beating out Diana DeGarmo. The third season was also shown in Australia on Network Ten about half a week after episodes were shown in the US. Leah LaBelle is the first contestant to advance to the finals via Wild Card then get eliminated in the first week of the finals.

    As a nod to the "Did Clay see the card?" controversy in the second season, Ryan Seacrest was instructed to memorize the winner's name and the vote margin and was given a blank card to hold while reporting the results. However, in a post-show interview with USA Today, Diana DeGarmo admitted that she had figured out that she had not won when the contestants were going over the schedule for the finale and she saw she would be singing "I Believe" (the winner's single) before the results were announced. Realizing that she would not be scheduled to sing a song she would have to sing again minutes later if she were announced as the winner, she correctly deduced that she had lost and Fantasia had won.

    At the time of the finale many celebrities voiced their support for Fantasia: Frankie Muniz, Sharon Osbourne, Ray Romano, Amy Yasbeck, Nicole Kidman, Lori Loughlin, Patti LaBelle, Andy Richter, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Holly Robinson Peete, Giuliana Rancic, Toni Braxton, Ben Stiller, Redman (TV Guide), Method Man (TV Guide) Richard Schiff, Kate Hudson (On The Tonight Show), Lea Thompson and Mo'Nique.

    Henry Winkler said "You've got incredible judges, Simon speaks the truth, I always agree with him. And Ryan is really good at what he does, but Fantasia," he smiles, "there's something in her that is bigger than anything. We voted for her about 250 times!"

    Kelly Clarkson is quoted in the June 14, 2004 People Magazine as saying she voted for Fantasia: "I just hit redial, redial."

    Prior to the results show, the governors of Georgia and North Carolina—the home states of DeGarmo and Barrino respectively—announced a friendly bet between them over which state's resident would prevail, each wagering a VIP NASCAR ticket package and a shipment of his state's signature fruit. The bet participants were Georgia Governor Sonny Perdue, a Republican, and North Carolina Governor Mike Easley, a Democrat.

    Paul Anka made an appearance in the Season Finale.

    ^Note 1 : During the week of April 14, the week got delayed for White House press conference on Tuesday, April 13, 2004. The performance show was moved to Wednesday, April 14. Jon Peter Lewis was sent home on Thursday, April 15.

    Controversies

    Both Jennifer Hudson and LaToya London, part of final twelve, were eliminated, despite high praises from the judges. After Hudson was eliminated, Elton John, who was a mentor for that season, criticized the vote as 'incredibly racist' in a press conference.

    The elimination of both Hudson and London has been pointed out as a classic demonstration of vote-splitting in the American Idol vote, in which the presence of similar choices reduces the votes for each of the similar choices. Hudson, London and Barrino (who would eventually go on to win the competition) were female, African-American, highly praised singers—all appealing to the same demographic bloc of voters. All three of these previously popular singers ended up in the "bottom three" the night Hudson was eliminated—the three having the lowest individual vote counts.

    Questions were nevertheless raised about the inadequacy of the phone voting system when it was revealed that the state of Hawaii with a population of just 1.2 million managed to log more calls than every other state apart from New York and California. Jasmine Trias' and Camile Velasco's fans from Hawaii, which is on its own time zone, enjoyed a far less crowded calling period and were able to get more of their votes through.

    US Nielsen ratings

    This season the show was ranked second overall in total viewer for the 2003-2004 TV seasons, with its Tuesday episodes taking the top spot, averaging 25.73 million viewers, while the Wednesday episodes ranked third with 24.31 million. It became the top-rated show for the 18-49 demographic for the season, a position it has held for all subsequent years up to and including 2011.

    Note 1: The Top 8 shows were shifted to Wednesday and Thursday due to a presidential address on Tuesday.

    Major releases

  • American Idol Season 3: Greatest Soul Classics
  • "I Believe" (Fantasia Barrino)
  • "Dreams" (Diana DeGarmo)
  • Free Yourself (Fantasia Barrino)
  • Blue Skies (Diana DeGarmo)
  • My Christmas EP! (George Huff)
  • "Come Fly with Me" (John Stevens)
  • Red (John Stevens)
  • "Love Ko 'To" (Jasmine Trias)
  • Jasmine Trias (Jasmine Trias)
  • Love & Life (LaToya London)
  • "Appreciate/Every Part of Me/All By Myself" (LaToya London)
  • Miracles (George Huff)
  • Fantasia (Fantasia Barrino)
  • Stories from Hollywood (Jon Peter Lewis)
  • "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" (Jennifer Hudson)
  • "Spotlight" (Jennifer Hudson)
  • Jennifer Hudson (Jennifer Hudson)
  • "All Dressed in Love" (Jennifer Hudson)
  • Break the Silence (Jon Peter Lewis)
  • George Huff (George Huff)
  • Back to Me (Fantasia Barrino)
  • TBA (Leah LaBelle)
  • "Side Effects of You" (Fantasia Barrino)
  • "The Definition Of... (Fantasia Barrino)
  • Minor or independent releases

    (This list does not include pre-Idol releases)

  • Love, Lipstick and Poetry (Kiira Bivens)
  • Love, Lana (Lana Phillips)
  • Sing Me Home (Lisa Leuschner)
  • Reality (Lisa Leuschner)
  • Str8up Band (Dina Lopez)
  • I'll Be Seeing You (John Preator)
  • This Is Next Time (Alan Ritchson)
  • Sun Shiney Day (Lisa Wilson)
  • "If I Go Away" / "Man Like Me" (single) (Jon Peter Lewis)
  • Just Like Magic (Donnie Williams)
  • References

    American Idol (season 3) Wikipedia