American Idols LIVE! Tour 2003
Tour by American Idol | |
Clockwise from top right – Kimberly Caldwell, Julia DeMato, Kimberley Locke, Rickey Smith, Charles Grigsby, Carmen Rusmusen, Trenyce Center – Ruben Studdard, Clay Aiken | |
Start date | July 8, 2003 |
---|---|
End date | August 31, 2003 |
No. of shows | 41 |
Box office | US$15.6 million |
American Idol concert chronology |
American Idols Live! Tour 2003 was a summer concert tour featuring 9 of the top 12 contestants of the second season of American Idol, which aired in 2003. Josh Gracin was unable to participate in the tour as he was recalled to his unit in the U.S. Marines, and Corey Clark was barred from participating due to his failure to reveal his Misdemeanor arrest.[1] Corey Clark was replaced by Charles Grigsby for the tour, but the show producers opted not to replace Josh Gracin with twelfth-placed finisher Vanessa Olivarez.
Following the success of the first concert tour of 2002, the tour was expanded to 41 dates.[2][3] The tour was sponsored by Kellogg's Pop-Tarts.[4]
Performers
9 of Top 12 | |
---|---|
Ruben Studdard (winner) | Clay Aiken (2nd place) |
Kimberley Locke (3rd place) | Trenyce (5th place) | |
Carmen Rasmusen (6th place) | Kimberly Caldwell (7th place) |
Rickey Smith (8th place) | Julia DeMato (10th place) |
Charles Grigsby (11th place) |
Show overview
The show had the similar structure as that of the previous season, with the first half being entirely solos performed by contestants in elimination order, and the second half consisting of performances in groups and some solos. There was however more varied ensemble singing with a number of duets and a few trios introduced.
Setlist
- Charles Grigsby – "Do I Do" (Stevie Wonder)
- Julia DeMato – "Beautiful" (Christina Aguilera)
- Rickey Smith – "The Way You Make Me Feel" (Michael Jackson)
- Kimberly Caldwell – "Stuck" (Stacie Orrico)
- Carmen Rasmusen – "Up!" (Shania Twain)
- Trenyce – "Proud Mary" (Tina Turner)
- Kimberley Locke – "Band of Gold" (Freda Payne)
- Clay Aiken – "This is the Night" (Clay Aiken)
- Ruben Studdard – "Superstar" (The Carpenters), "Never Too Much" (Luther Vandross)
Intermission
- Guys – "The Lady Is a Tramp" (Frank Sinatra)
- Girls – "Bootylicious" (Destiny's Child)
- Studdard and Aiken – "The Girl is Mine" (Michael Jackson/Paul McCartney)
- Locke – "Inseparable" (Natalie Cole)
- Group – Bee Gees medley – "Jive Talkin'" (Grigsby), "Stayin' Alive" (Smith), "How Deep Is Your Love" (Grigsby, Smith, Aiken), "To Love Somebody" (Aiken), "Emotion" (DeMato, Caldwell, Rasmussen, Trenyce), "If I Can't Have You" (Locke), "Nights on Broadway" (Studdard), "Night Fever" (Group), "You Should Be Dancing" (Group)
- Studdard – "Can I Get Your Attention" (Ruben Studdard) or "No Ruben" (Ruben Studdard)
- Grigsby and Smith – "Let's Go Crazy" (Prince)
- Rasmusen (with Grigsby and Smith) – "Let's Hear It for the Boy" (Deniece Williams)
- Aiken – "Can You Feel the Love Tonight" (Elton John)
- Locke – "Over the Rainbow" (Judy Garland)
- Caldwell (with Rasmusen and DeMato) – "Feel Good Time" (Pink)
- Smith and DeMato – "If I Never Met You"
- Trenyce – "I Have Nothing" (Whitney Houston)
- Girls – "I'm Every Woman" (Chaka Khan)
- Studdard and Locke – "The Best Things in Life Are Free" (Luther Vandross and Janet Jackson)
- Group – "(I've Had) The Time of My Life" (Bill Medley and Jennifer Warnes)
- Aiken – "Invisible" (D-Side)
- Studdard – "Flying Without Wings" (Westlife)
- Studdard, Aiken and Locke – "Imagine" (John Lennon)
- Group – "God Bless the USA" (Lee Greenwood)
Additional notes
- Ruben Studdard performed either "Can I Get Your Attention" or "No Ruben" at different shows.
Tour dates
Date | City | Country | Venue | Attendance (percentage) |
---|---|---|---|---|
July 8, 2003 | Saint Paul | United States | Xcel Energy Center | 79.4% |
July 9, 2003 | Chicago | United Center | 87.1% | |
July 11, 2003 | Columbus | Nationwide Arena | 82.2% | |
July 12, 2003 | Indianapolis | Conseco Fieldhouse | 59.1% | |
July 13, 2003 | Cincinnati | U.S. Bank Arena | 66.34% | |
July 15, 2003 | Pittsburgh | Mellon Arena | 77.6% | |
July 16, 2003 | Wilkes-Barre | First Union Arena | 87.7% | |
July 18, 2003 | Hartford | Hartford Civic Center | 100% | |
July 19, 2003 | Buffalo | HSBC Arena | 73.9% | |
July 20, 2003 | Detroit | Joe Louis Arena | 100% | |
July 22, 2003 | Toronto | Canada | Air Canada Centre | 100% |
July 23, 2003 | Cleveland | United States | CSU Convocation Center | 100% |
July 25, 2003 | Worcester | Worcester's Centrum Centre | 100% | |
July 26, 2003 | 100% | |||
July 27, 2003 | Philadelphia | First Union Center | 100% | |
July 28, 2003 | Washington, D.C. | MCI Center | 100% | |
July 30, 2003 | East Rutherford | Continental Airlines Arena | 100% | |
July 31, 2003 | Uniondale | Nassau Coliseum | 100% | |
August 1, 2003 | 100% | |||
August 2, 2003 | Providence | Dunkin' Donuts Center | 100% | |
August 4, 2003 | Albany | Pepsi Arena | 100% | |
August 5, 2003 | Richmond | Richmond Coliseum | 84.1% | |
August 6, 2003 | Raleigh | RBC Center | 100% | |
August 8, 2003 | Charlotte | Charlotte Coliseum | 100% | |
August 9, 2003 | Atlanta | Philips Arena | 100% | |
August 10, 2003 | Orlando | TD Waterhouse Centre | 90.5% | |
August 12, 2003 | Sunrise | Office Depot Center | 80.5% | |
August 13, 2003 | Tampa | St. Pete Times Forum | 98.4% | |
August 15, 2003 | Birmingham | BJCC Arena | 100% | |
August 16, 2003 | Memphis | Pyramid Arena | 60.7% | |
August 17, 2003 | St. Louis | Savvis Center | 67.3% | |
August 19, 2003 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | 55.5% | |
August 20, 2003 | Houston | Compaq Center | 52.2% | |
August 21, 2003 | Oklahoma City | Ford Center | 47.7% | |
August 23, 2003 | Salt Lake City | Delta Center | 63.7% | |
August 24, 2003 | Boise | Pavilion at BSU | 41.5% | |
August 26, 2003 | Seattle | KeyArena | 87.9% | |
August 27, 2003 | Portland | Rose Garden Arena | 62.2% | |
August 28, 2003 | Sacramento | ARCO Arena | 78.6% | |
August 30, 2003 | San Jose | HP Pavilion at San Jose | 100% | |
August 31, 2003 | Anaheim | Arrowhead Pond | 100% |
Response
This tour was an even greater success than the first one with sell-out shows in many cities.[5] In total 411,005 tickets were sold, yielding a gross total of $15,977,802 as reported by Billboard, nearly doubling that of Season 1 tour.[6]
Tour summary
- Number of shows – 41 (19 sold out)
- Total gross – $15,977,802
- Total attendance – 411,005
- Average attendance – 10,025 (85%)
- Average ticket price – $38.87
- Highest gross – Detroit, Michigan – $545,543
- Lowest gross – Boise, Idaho – $121,455
- Highest attendance – Charlotte, North Carolina – 14,645 (100%)
- Lowest attendance – Boise, Idaho – 2,905 (41.5%)
References
- ↑ 'American Idol' finalist Josh Gracin recalled to Marine duty, leaves live tour [http://www.shawneecourt.org/doe/search.jsp?caseNumber=02CR+02955&location=internet
- ↑ Tour itinerary shapes up for 'American Idol' finalists
- ↑ On the 'American Idol' tour
- ↑ Pop-Tarts Offer American Idol Fans Exclusive Opportunity
- ↑ 'American Idol 2' live tour outselling 'Idol 1' tour
- ↑ 'American Idol' by the numbers
Preceded by Season 1 (2002) |
American Idols LIVE! Tour Season 2 (2003) |
Succeeded by Season 3 (2004) |