Paula Abdul accused “American Idol” and “So You Think You Can Dance” executive producer Nigel Lythgoe of sexual assault in a lawsuit filed Friday.
The Grammy-winning singer said one assault happened in the early 2000s and a second around 2015 while she was a judge on the television competition shows, according to a suit filed in the Los Angeles County Superior Court under the Sexual Abuse and Cover Up Accountability Act, which allows sexual assault suits to be filed even if the statute of limitations has passed.
Abdul, 61, alleged that during one of the initial seasons of “American Idol,” where she served as a judge from 2002 to 2009, Lythgoe “shoved” her against the wall of an elevator, “grabbed her genitals and breasts, and began shoving his tongue down her throat.”
Abdul tried to push him away and ran out of the elevator when the doors opened, it stated.
Following the alleged assault, a tearful Abdul told one of her representatives but “ultimately decided not to take action for fear that Lythgoe would have her fired from ‘American Idol,'” according to the suit.
It also alleged that Abdul was “discriminated against in terms of compensation and benefits compared to one of the show’s male judges and the host” and was bullied, harassed and taunted during her time on the show.
Lythgoe said Saturday that the allegations, which he called an “appalling smear,” are false and “deeply offensive to me and to everything I stand for.”
“To say that I am shocked and saddened by the allegations made against me by Paula Abdul is a wild understatement,” Lythgoe said. “For more than two decades, Paula and I have interacted as dear — and entirely platonic — friends and colleagues.”
The lawsuit also named 19 Entertainment Inc., FremantleMedia North America Inc., American Idol Productions Inc. and Dance Nation Productions as defendants. NBC News reached out to Fremantle for comment on Saturday.
The second alleged assault occurred after Abdul signed a contract in January…
Read the full article here