David Arquette & Kym Johnson are gone. Arquette and Johnson are tied for the best cha cha cha of the season with 24 points. However, they are also the worst score for the jive with 18 points; Ricki Lake and Derek Hough are the highest scoring team with 23.
By average, Arquette and Johnson have a 22.3 average which is is above Nancy Grace and Tristan MacManus with 21.1. Grace and MacManus were actually the lowest scoring team of the week with 44. Arquette and Johnson had 47 points.
Week 1: Viennese waltz
Score: 18 (6, 6, 6)
“Somebody to Love” by Queen
Week 2: Jive
Score: 18 (6, 6, 6)
“Runaway Baby” by Bruno Mars
Week 3: Rumba (Memorable Year Week)
Score: 24 (8,8,8)
“O-o-h Child” by Five Stairsteps
Week 4: Paso doble (Movie Week)
Score: 23 (8,7,8)
“The Raiders March” from “Raiders of the Lost Ark”
Week 5: Tango
Score: 25 (8,9,8)
“Tainted Love” by Soft Cell
Week 6: Quickstep (Broadway week)
Score: 23 (8,7,8)
“We Go Together” by John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John from “Grease”
Tonight on “Dancing with the Stars,” it was Broadway week and Carson Kressley was sorely missed. We’re glad they brought Kressley back as a “creative director.”
Again, J.R. Martinez and his partner Karina Smirnoff were on top, but they were joined by Ricki Lake and her partner Derek Hough.
Both teams performed the quickstep and received two tens–both from Carrie Ann Inaba and Bruno Tonioli. Head judge Len Goodman didn’t think these teams were perfection.
The real surprise of the night was who finished in third place: Nancy Grace and her partner Tristan MacManus. Nancy received her first nine. Not bad for the oldest competitor this season.
Chaz Bono and his partner Lacey Schwimmer returned to the bottom with a 19 for their tango performed to “The Phantom of the Opera.” Still, it is likely that Bono will survive tomorrow night’s elimination.
Probably the couple really in danger is soccer player Hope Solo and her partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy who were just one point ahead of Bono and Schwimmer with a 20 for their rumba to “Season of Love” from the musical “Rent.”