When Network Ten paid $15 million for the first season of Australian Idol[citation needed] they anticipated it to be a critical and financial success, like it had been in other countries such as the UK and the USA. When the show aired for the first time in August 2003 it was very successful, attracting a diverse ranges of viewers.[citation needed] The audition process went through several major cities in Australia including Sydney, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide and Darwin. Towards the end of its run, Australian Idol became the most popular TV show in the country with more ratings than major events such as the AFL Grand Final.[citation needed] The Grand Final at the Sydney Opera House attracted more than 3 million viewers.[citation needed]
The winner of the competition was Guy Sebastian. He beat Shannon Noll who finished in 2nd place, Cosima De Vito who came in 3rd place, Paulini Curuenavuli who came in 4th place & Rob Mills who finished in 5th place. After Idol, it was these five, the Final 5, who were the most successful out of the Top 12.
Other Idol contestants from Season 1 to release music were Rebekah LaVauney, Peter Ryan and Courtney Act.
In the third semi final, just before the live verdict, one of the contestants, Anthony Sumbati, was disqualified for taking part in a radio interview without the consent of the producers. He later performed in the Grand Final as one of the performances outside the Sydney Opera House.
In the wildcard show, a contestant named Daniel Wakefield was originally meant to be in the top 12, but due to his contract, he wasn't able to be in the top 12. Instead of having one contestant chosen by the judges and the other chosen by Australia, three contestants were chosen, two by Australia and one by the judges.
Finals
Finalists
* as of the start of the season
Live show details
Heat 1 (10 August 2003)
Notes
Daniel Wakefield and Peter Ryan advanced to the top 12 of the competition. The other 6 contestants were eliminated.
Eli Diache returned for a second chance at the top 12 in the Wildcard Round.
Heat 2 (17 August 2003)
Notes
Mathew Chadwick and Kelly Cavuoto advanced to the top 12 of the competition. The other 6 contestants were eliminated.
Cosima DeVito, Rebecca Tapia and Axle Whithead returned for a second chance at the top 12 in the Wildcard Round.
Heat 3 (24 August 2003)
Notes
Guy Sebastian and Shannon Noll advanced to the top 12 of the competition. The other 6 contestants were eliminated.
Rebekah LaVauney and Yolande Jackson returned for a second chance at the top 12 in the Wildcard Round.
Heat 4 (31 August 2003)
Notes
Cle Wootton and Lauren Buckley advanced to the top 12 of the competition. The other 6 contestants were eliminated.
Levi Kereama returned for a second chance at the top 12 in the Wildcard Round.
Heat 5 (7 September 2003)
Notes
Paulini Curuenavuli and Rob Mills advanced to the top 12 of the competition. The other 6 contestants were eliminated.
Stu Campbell and Courtney Act returned for a second chance at the top 12 in the Wildcard Round.
Wildcard round (14 September 2003)
Notes
The judges selected Cosima De Vito to move on into the top 12 of the competition, before the hosts revealed the top 3 vote getters. Rebekah LaVauney and Levi Kereama received the most votes, and completed the top 12.
Live Show 1 (21 September 2003)
Theme: The 70s
Live Show 2 (28 September 2003)
Theme: Australian #1s
Live Show 3 (5 October 2003)
Theme: Australian Made
Live Show 4 (12 October 2003)
Theme: The 80s
Up, Close and Personal Special (14 October 2003)
Live Show 5 (19 October 2003)
Theme: R&B & Soul
Live Show 6 (26 October 2003)
Theme: Big Band
Live Show 7: Semi-final (2 November 2003)
Theme: The 60s
Live final (16 November 2003)
The Top 12 Contestants
Guy Sebastian
Guy Sebastian was the winner of the first series of Australian Idol.
After recovering Cosima signed with an independent label and became the first independent artist to debut at #1 on the charts. Her debut single was the cover of Cold Chisel's "When the War Is Over". Cosima later released several singles and a gold selling self-titled album.
Paulini Curuenavuli
Paulini Curuenavuli (born 15 October 1982), was eliminated on 27 October 2003, placed fourth.
A record contract followed and he got into his band Lethbridge with his three brothers. On 4 October 2008, Levi died after falling from the balcony of the Brisbane hotel where he had been staying.
Rebekah LaVauney
Rebekah LaVauney (born 7 October 1977), was eliminated on 6 October 2003, placed seventh.
She released a single cover of Renée Geyer's "Heading in the Right Direction" (which she had previously performed on the show) which was featured on her only commercial release, an EP titled 'Chapter 1' (2005). The EP also featured a collaboration with Joel Turner and the Modern-Day Poets, "Behind Bars", which was also included on their self-titled album.
Kelly Cavuoto
Kelly Cavuoto (born 3 June 1981), was eliminated on 6 October 2003, placed eighth. Prior to Australian Idol, she had many years singing experience with rock bands throughout South Australia, before auditioning in 2004. Dubbed "The Rock Chick" by judge Ian "Dicko" Dickson, she covered a selection of harder edged rock songs throughout the series, at odds with most other contestants who chose to cover pop songs.
In January 2004, Cavuoto appeared as a co-host for Channel Ten's Video Hits music program.
Lauren Buckley
Lauren Buckley (born 29 March 1986), was eliminated on 29 September 2003, placed ninth. At only seventeen at the time, she was the youngest finalist of the first season. Also memorable was her elimination from the show, in which she broke down and cried while singing her farewell song. She completed the song with the assistance of her fellow Idol contestants.
Cle Wootton (born Cleonie Morgan-Wootton on 15 November 1981), was eliminated on 29 September 2004, placed tenth. Of English and Jamaican descent, she was an early favourite with the judges, however failed to maintain an interest from fans. She has also appeared in the children's drama program Ship to Shore in 1993 playing the character Babe and appeared on the reality television program Popstars in 2002.
In 2004, she appeared in a musical production called Gabba Gabba Hey, a rock musical featuring the music of the Ramones.[1] In 2005, she appeared on an episode of the children's television series Streetsmartz.[2] She performed in Hair in 2007; and Hairspray in 2010, in the role of DJ Motormouth Maybelle in Melbourne's theatre musical version of .[3] In 2017, she was performing as Mrs Phelps in the Australian edition of Matilda the Musical.[4]
Peter Ryan
Peter Ryan, from New South Wales, was eliminated on 22 September 2004, placed eleventh.
As of 2007, he was under the management of Richard Macionis, and performing in Queensland's Dracula's Cabaret Restaurant along with Macionis. Prior to Australian Idol he had played Fred as part of the Scooby Doo section of Warner Brothers Movie World in his home state of Queensland.
Finals elimination chart
Elimination chart
Commercial Releases
Since winning Australian Idol, Guy Sebastian has released ten top 10 albums, with eight reaching the top 5, including three #1's. Sebastian has also released 23 top 20 singles, with 14 reaching the top 10, including six #1's.[5] He has the most #1 singles for an Australian male vocalist in Australian music history, and he is third overall for all Australian acts.[6] He has a total of 69 platinum and seven gold certifications in Australia, the highest accreditations for any Australian Idol contestant.[7] Sebastian's debut album Just As I Am reached #1 and 6× platinum, eventually selling 480,000 copies.[8][9]Just As I Am remains the highest selling album ever released by an Australian Idol contestant.[10]Guy Sebastian's winner's single "Angels Brought Me Here" debuted at #1 and reached 5× platinum.[5][11] The song was the highest selling single in Australia in 2003, and won the 2004 Highest Selling Single ARIA Award.[12][13] In 2010 ARIA announced it was the highest selling song of the previous decade.[10] Sebastian's second and third albums were platinum sellers.[14][15]Beautiful Life peaked at #2, with Closer to the Sun reaching #4[5] His fourth album The Memphis Album peaked at #3 and went on to sell 2× platinum.[16] Sebastian's 5th album Like It Like That achieved platinum certification.[17][18] His next two albums, Twenty Ten and Armageddon, gained double platinum certification.[19][20]Armageddon was his second album to achieve #1.[18] Sebastian's eighth album Madness has been certified gold.[20] "Like it Like That", the 4× platinum title track from his fifth album, reached #1 and was the highest selling Australian artist song of 2009.[21][22]
"Who's That Girl" the only single released from Twenty Ten also reached #1 and was certified 5× platinum.[21] It was nominated for the 2011 ARIA Best Pop Release and Song of the Year, and won the Highest Selling Single ARIA.[23][24] "Don't Worry Be Happy", Armageddon's lead single, reached #5 and gained 5× platinum certification.[25][5][26] The third single, "Battle Scars" featuring Lupe Fiasco, became his sixth #1 single in Australia, and has been certified 12× platinum.[5][25] Sebastian's most recent album, T.R.U.T.H., became his third to reach #1, and has been certified gold. During his career Sebastian has received 34 ARIA Award nominations, winning seven of them including Best Pop Release and Best Live Act.[27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34]
Sebastian also had success outside of Australia with his first single reaching #1 in Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines and Indonesia and New Zealand in 2004. His first album reached #3 in New Zealand.[35][36][37] "Angels Brought Me Here" gained platinum and Just As I Am double platinum accreditation in New Zealand.[38] Sebastian has achieved five further top ten singles in New Zealand since then, including another #1 with "Who's That Girl", and now has a total of six platinum and three gold certifications there.[39][40] Sebastian is currently the only Australian Idol contestant to chart in the US. "Battle Scars" reached #71 on the Billboard Hot 100, #23 on the Billboard Digital Songs Chart and #1 on the Billboard R&B/Hip-hop Digital Song Chart.[41][42] It spent 20 weeks in the Hot 100 and was certified platinum in the US for sales of one million.[43][44] "Battle Scars" also reached #2 in Norway.[45] In 2015 Sebastian was selected to represent Australia in the Eurovision Song Contest. He finished 5th, and his song "Tonight Again" charted in the top 50 in a number of European countries, including No.6 in Iceland and 16 in Austria.[46][47][48]
Shannon Noll released his first single "What About Me?" in February 2004. It debuted at #1 and remained at the top for four weeks.[49] It was certified 4× Platinum[50] and was the highest selling single in Australia in 2004.[51] His debut album That's What I'm Talking About was also a chart topper gaining 5× Platinum accreditation selling 350,000 copies.[52] Both the single and album were nominated as highest seller at the 2004 ARIA Awards. His second album Lift also reached #1 on the ARIA charts and remained in the top 50 for 53 weeks.[53] It was accredited 3× platinum with 210,000 copies sold.[54] Lift received a nomination for best pop release at the 2006 ARIA Awards and the lead single "Shine" was nominated for highest selling single.[55] "Don't Give Up" a duet with Natalie Bassingthwaighte was also nominated for highest selling single at the 2007 ARIA Awards.[56] His third album, Turn It Up, was released in 2007 peaking at #3 and reaching platinum accreditation.[57][58] His fourth album No Turning Back: The Story So Far, released in 2008 peaked at #7, and his fifth album "A Million Suns" released in 2011 reached #8. Neither of these albums reached certification. Noll has released ten top 10 singles including three #1's.[59] He is the only artist in Australian music history to achieve ten consecutive top 10 singles.[60] He has released seven more singles since achieving this, with two reaching the ARIA Top 50, the highest one peaking at #26.[59] He has gained 17 platinum and three gold accreditations during his career.[7] Noll has had some success outside Australia with his debut single What About Me reaching #2 in Ireland and #10 in New Zealand. His debut album also peaked at #31 on the New Zealand charts.[61]
Cosima De Vito released "When the War Is Over" as her debut single in mid-2004 through her own independent label, CDV Records. It was a #1 hit and sold over 70,000 copies resulting in platinum status. Her debut self-titled album Cosima peaked at #2 on the charts and reached gold certification. Her second single "Now That You Can't Have Me" peaked at #42 on the charts. Her second album This Is Now that was released in September 2007 didn't chart in the ARIA Charts.
Paulini Curuenavuli released a debut single titled "Angel Eyes" which reached #1 and platinum certification. It stayed at the top spot for four weeks. Her debut album One Determined Heart also reached #1 and received platinum status. Her Christmas EP "Amazing Grace: Songs for Christmas" peaked at #72. Her second album Superwoman reached #70. The album gave her two top 50 singles. In 2006 Paulini joined an all girl pop group called the "Young Divas" with other former Idol contestants including Kate DeAraugo, Emily Williams, Ricki-Lee Coulter and later Jessica Mauboy. They achieved success with a double platinum album and platinum and gold singles.
Courtney Act has become a successful drag queen performer based in Los Angeles. In December 2013, Logo announced that Courtney Act was among 14 drag queens who would be competing on the sixth season of RuPaul's Drag Race. She later went on to become a finalist in the competition, alongside fellow contestants Adore Delano and Bianca Del Rio, but in the season finale lost the title to Bianca Del Rio. In July 2014, Courtney Act became the first drag performer in history to sing live with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. Act appeared as a guest performer with Cheyenne Jackson in "Hello, Gorgeous! Cheyenne Jackson Goes to the Movies". The two sang a duet of "Elephant Love Song" from the 2001 Baz Luhrmann film Moulin Rouge. In September 2014, Courtney Act, along with Willam Belli and Alaska Thunderfuck 5000, were the first drag queens to become ad girls for American Apparel. They worked for the campaign Support Artists, Support Ethical Manufacturing of the fashion brand, featuring three limited exclusive T-shirts that honors each drag queen's talents and allure. Courtney also has a Wig Company called Wigs By Vanity that she set up in 2003 for drag queens with a business partner and fellow drag queen, Vanity Faire. In December 2015, Courtney was featured on two singles from the Christmas Queens LP, "From Head To Mistletoe", and "Christmas Sweater" with fellow American Apparel ad girls Willam and Alaska. As of 2016, Act has been a foreign correspondent for the Australian news website, Junkee. Act covered the presidential election of 2016 for the site, attending rallies of both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Following Trump's election, Act also participated in and reported on the 2017 Women's March.
Rob Mills experienced a very short lived career at Sony BMG with one gold selling single "Ms. Vanity" and an album titled Up All Night which peaked at #21. He was later dropped from the label. He appeared in the Australian 2008 production of Wicked, and has also worked in television.
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