Abby Lee & Briana Banks in einer perverse Familie

Abby Lee & Briana Banks in einer perverse Familie




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Abby Lee & Briana Banks in einer perverse Familie

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is the latest accepted revision , reviewed on 15 June 2022 .
American dance instructor, choreographer (born 1965)
Abigale Lee Miller (born September 21, 1965) is an American dance instructor, choreographer, and reality television personality. She is the founder of the Abby Lee Dance Company, which appeared on the reality television series Dance Moms for eight seasons.

On June 27, 2016, Miller pleaded guilty to felony bankruptcy fraud . She was sentenced to one year and a day in federal prison, and was released on March 27, 2018. In April 2018, she developed lymphoma , a form of cancer that made her unable to walk.

Miller was born on September 21, 1965, [2] in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania , the child of a dance teacher [3] and a dance studio owner, her parents were George Lamar Miller (1927 - 2000), and Maryen Lorrain Miller (1927 - 2014). [4] [ better source needed ]

Miller grew up around dance in Penn Hills, Pennsylvania , a Pittsburgh suburb, studying under her mother's direction at the Maryen Lorrain Dance Studio. [4] [5] In 1980, at age 14, Miller was given the responsibility for choreographing and coaching for one of her mother's dance competition teams. Miller eventually took over the studio in 1995 and renamed it Reign Dance Productions. [5]

Miller became certified by Dance Masters of America [5] and became a member of Dance Masters of Pennsylvania Chapter #10 in 1986, [6] but her membership was terminated in February 2012, with DMA saying Miller's reality-TV show Dance Moms was "a total misrepresentation of our dance educators and their students and is detrimental to the dance profession." [7]

In 2011, Miller began to appear in the Lifetime reality television show Dance Moms where she taught dancing for many years. [8] [ failed verification ] Miller appeared on the show for seven seasons through October 2017. [9] Dance Moms follows the practice sessions and performance competitions of young students of the Abby Lee Dance Company.

Three spin-offs of Dance Moms are Abby's Ultimate Dance Competition , [10] [11] which ran for two seasons and 22 episodes; [12] Dance Moms: Miami ; and Dance Moms: Abby's Studio Rescue. The latter ran for only 7 episodes. [13] Miller has also been a guest judge on Dancing with the Stars . [14] [15] In 2014, Miller published a book, Everything I Learned about Life, I Learned in Dance Class . [10]

In 2015, Miller opened a new studio set up in Los Angeles called ALDC LA. [16] In March 2017, Miller announced she had quit the series. [17] [18] In July 2018, Miller announced her return for season 8 of Dance Moms . [19] Dance Moms : Resurrection premiered June 4, 2019 on Lifetime. [20]

In 2016, Miller appeared on The Eric Andre Show ' s season 4 premiere. [21]

Miller announced on Instagram on May 4, 2020, that she will be leaving Dance Moms and Lifetime after nine years. [22]

On December 3, 2010, Miller filed for bankruptcy after owing more than $400,000 in back taxes to the IRS. [23] Soon afterward, she was hired for Dance Moms , with filming beginning on April 6, 2011. Episodes began airing in July 2011, and Miller's financial situation improved.

Miller began to encounter numerous legal problems in 2014. One of the dancers on Dance Moms sued Miller, charging assault. The suit further claims the show's producers encourage a violent and combative atmosphere on the show as a way to attract viewers. [24] A $5 million lawsuit was filed against Collins Avenue Entertainment for staging disagreements that ended in a fight between Kelly Hyland and Miller. [25] Paige Hyland also filed an emotional distress lawsuit against Miller. [26] The claims were dropped on the emotional distress lawsuit. [27]

On October 13, 2015, Miller was indicted by the DOJ for fraud for creating a secret bank account between 2012–2013 used to hide income from masterclasses , TV deals, and merchandise sales, in addition to failing to file required monthly reports of income with the bankruptcy court for 13 months. She was indicted for bankruptcy fraud, concealment of bankruptcy assets and false bankruptcy declarations in hiding some $755,000. [28] [29] If found guilty, she could have faced a fine of $250,000 for each of the 20 counts she was indicted on (collectively $5,000,000) and five years in prison . [30] She pleaded not guilty in November 2015. [31] By February 2016, the case was delayed a fifth time. [32] Shortly after her indictment, she was charged with customs fraud relating to undeclared cash from Dance Moms Australia master class tour. Miller reached a deal with the IRS criminal investigators to enter a guilty plea to reduced charges on June 27, 2016. [33]

Sentencing was set for January 20, 2017. [34] [35] Her sentencing date was postponed multiple times, finally scheduled for May 8, 2017.

On May 9, 2017, after a two-day hearing, Miller was sentenced to one year and a day in federal prison, followed by two years of supervised release. [36] [37] [38] [39] [40] [41] Miller also paid a $40,000 fine, a $120,000 judgment and gave a DNA sample relating to her felony charge. [42]

On July 12, 2017, Miller reported to the Victorville Federal Correctional Institution in Victorville, California , to begin serving her prison sentence. [43] [44]

On March 27, 2018, Miller was transferred to a Long Beach, California halfway house to complete her sentence. [45] After receiving time off for good behavior, she was released on May 25. [46]

Miller has never been married and has no children. [47] In April 2018, she was diagnosed with Burkitt lymphoma , a type of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma cancer, after spinal surgery. In September of that year, Miller's lymphoma went into remission and she began physical therapy to relearn how to walk. She uses a wheelchair. [48]

Dance instructor, television personality, choreographer


“I say, 'You should have seen me 20 years ago, when I was really mean.'” “When I tell a child something the first time, I'm nice. The 15th time, I start to get aggravated. By the 30th time, they're doing 100 pushups and I'm screaming at them, and of course that's what they put on TV.”
Abby Lee Miller became known for her tirades and tough training as the star of Lifetime's reality show 'Dance Moms.' In 2017, she was sentenced to a year and a day in prison for bankruptcy fraud, among other charges.
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Abby Lee Miller inherited a love of dance from her mom, started her own company at 14, and by 1980 she had her own studio. In 2011, she became a star in her own right with the Lifetime show Dance Moms, which followed Miller, her students and their diva parents. In 2016, Miller's legal troubles caught up with her. She pleaded guilty to bankruptcy fraud among other charges, and in 2017 she was sentenced to a year and a day in prison. 
Being exposed to dance her whole life, it's no surprise that Miller wanted to follow in her mother's footsteps. Miller's mom, Maryen Lorrain, a 50-year member of the Dance Masters of America, ran several dance studios before settling down with George L. Miller in the Pittsburgh suburbs. They had their daughter on September 21, 1965. 
As a young girl, Miller studied dance at her mom's studio in Penn Hills, Pennsylvania. While she enjoyed other activities, including Girl Scouts, ski club, clarinet lessons and charm school, Miller's primary passion was dance, especially competitions. Not a fan of performing herself, she opted for teaching early on. She founded the Abby Lee Dance Company while still a teenager. In 1980 she opened her own dance studio.
Over the years, Miller's students have gone on to dance in such Broadway productions as Footloose , Wicked and The Lion King, as well as in Radio City's Christmas Spectacular . In a twist of fate, Miller went from the sidelines to center stage herself when Lifetime offered her a reality-television show, Dance Moms .
Debuting on July 13, 2011, Dance Moms followed a group of young wannabe dancers at Miller's dance studio and their stage moms. It became a pop-culture sensation, its third-season premiere drawing 2.8 million viewers in January 2013. Season 8 of the hit show began airing on June 4, 2019.
The Lifetime show was such a success that the network gave Miller another series, Abby's Ultimate Dance Competition, which debuted October 9, 2012. The program featured 12 dancers competing for $100,000 and a scholarship to the Joffrey Ballet School in New York. Miller was a judge, along with Robin Antin, founder of the Pussycat Dolls, and dancer/celebrity choreographer Richard Jackson. The show aired for two seasons.
A follow-up series, Abby's Studio Rescue , showcased the no-nonsense dance coach helping other studio owners with their struggling businesses. The show failed to generate much of an audience and disappeared after seven episodes aired in 2014.
Another spinoff, Abby's Virtual Dance-Off , was set in motion in 2020 with dancers submitting videotaped performances for Miller to render her judgment remotely. However, the show was canceled by Lifetime in June after the parents of two African American contestants from Dance Moms revealed Miller's history of bigoted behavior.
Miller refuses to see herself as a villain, even though that reputation was one of the reasons behind the popularity of Dance Moms . She told In Touch magazine in a 2013 interview that while her methods may seem harsh, there's a rationale behind them. "When I tell a child something the first time, I'm nice. The 15th time, I start to get aggravated. By the 30th time, they're doing 100 push-ups and I'm screaming at them, and of course that's what they put on TV," she said. 
Amidst increasing legal trouble, Miller left the show in March 2016 and was replaced by dancer Cheryl Burke of Dancing with the Stars fame. 
In October 2015, Miller was indicted for 20 counts of bankruptcy fraud. She was accused of concealing income made between 2012 and 2013, totaling more than $750,000. In June 2016, Miller pleaded guilty to bankruptcy fraud and charges she failed to report more than $120,000 in cash brought into the U.S. from Australia. In May 2017, she was sentenced to a year and a day in prison and was ordered to pay a $40,000 fine and spend two years on probation following her release.
Miller began serving her sentence at California's Victorville Federal Correctional Institution in July 2017, and the following March she was transferred to a halfway house in Long Beach. Along the way, she passed classes in personal finance and real estate, and dropped 100 pounds. She earned her release from the halfway house on May 25, 2018.
In April 2018, Miller underwent emergency surgery after experiencing "excruciating" neck pain and weakness in her arm. Although she was initially believed to be suffering from a spinal infection, Miller instead received a diagnosis of Burkitt lymphoma, a rare and aggressive form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma that left her temporarily paralyzed from the neck down.
The surgeon who treated the reality star noted that she had made "some recovery" as they awaited her pathology and oncology results. "We're getting an oncologist involved and we have to figure out what the next steps are as far as chemotherapy or radiation or more spine surgery," he said.
Miller underwent 10 rounds of chemotherapy before declaring herself cancer-free in May 2019, though she continued to undergo physical therapy in an attempt to regain the ability to walk.
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Böse Teenhuren ziehen vor Publikum blank
Kaukasier fickt Sexfrau Frau, und Ehemann zieht es aus
Fetter Schwanz im Loch der dunkelhaarigen Schlampe

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