Gomez Looking to Create a Rave Environment for Her First World Tour

Selena Gomez is planning to have concertgoers ravin’ to go…

The 21-year-old half-Mexican American actress, who could earn the first No. 1 album of her career on the Billboard 200 charts this week, wants fans to be utterly exhausted by the time she sings her final not on her  Stars Dance World Tour.

Selena Gomez

“The tour is going to be really fun,” Gomez told MTV News. “I also want them to be exhausted when they leave my shows, because I want it to be like a giant rave.”

Gomez, who is nominated for Best Pop Video at the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards, has been busy promoting her new album, Stars Dance. In between, she has been hard at work, making the vision of her first world tour come to life.

“I never had it be so much like a production for me. I wanted it to feel like a show, so it was always fluid with music, so we’re having a really fun time experimenting with different beats and sounds and remixing some of my old songs, so I think they are going to be really excited,” shared Gomez. “I think they are going to have a great time, and I think they are going to be surprised too. I’ve been dancing so much, so I’m stoked it will be good.”

When the former Disney Channel star isn’t dancing up a storm, you’ll most likely find her backstage indulging on pickles and ramen, which she revealed are her must-haves while on tour, or checking out her opening act, former The X Factor contestants Emblem3.

“They are great,” Gomez said of Emblem3. “Their music is fun, and I want my shows to be fun, and they are all really fun too, so that helps. We are just going to have fun together.”

The Stars Dance World Tour kicks off August 14 in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Lovato’s One-Hour Documentary Airing Tuesday

Demi Lovato is opening up about her trials and tribulations in a one-hour MTV documentary and follow-up live appearance on the cable network.

The 19-year-old part-Mexican American actress/singer’s special Demi Lovato: Stay Strong, which follows the Unbroken singer through her recovery as she hits the road again after canceling her tour with the Jonas Brothers in 2010 and seeking treatment for “emotional and physical issues.” Viewers will also watch her spend Thanksgiving 2011 with her family and revisit the Dallas treatment center.

Demi Lovato

Following the special, Lovato will make a live appearance in the network’s New York City Time Square studio to share her thoughts on the one-hour documentary.

Hosted by MTV News correspondent Suchin Pak, Lovato will do a live Q&A, share some deleted scenes from the documentary, and give viewers a first look at her appearance on MTV’s candid camera prank series, Punk’d.

The network encourages fans to take part in the conversation on Twitter using the hashtag #staystrong and by submitting questions to the @MTVNews and @MTV Twitter accounts with the hashtag #AskDemi.

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Demi Lovato: Stay Strong will premiere this Tuesday, March 6 at 10 pm ET on MTV, with Lovato’s live appearance at 11:00pm.

In addition, Lovato is set to perform on NBC‘s Today on Tuesday.

Leguizamo Opens Up About His 27-Year Career…

He’s conquered the entertainment world and captured the hearts of millions through his work in television and films, as well as Broadway. And, now John Leguizamo is speaking out his longtime career.

As part of MTV’s Pioneers Speaker Series, the 47-year-old Colombian actor/comedian spoke with MTV News about his successful 27-year career, including his efforts to push boundaries, speak his mind and never take no for an answer.

John Leguizamo

 

Leguizamo opened up about one of his most popular roles as Chi-Chi in the cult classic To Wong Fu, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar. It’s a gender-bending role that he committed to 100-percent.

“I just went all out. I wanted awards and sh–, so I wasn’t playing,” he joked about his motivations for taking on the character. “I was going to take no prisoners. I was on a vegetarian no-protein [diet], so all my muscles would disappear. I stopped training; I would just run like crazy.”

But he also did his research to perfect his role as a, to quote the film, “little Latin boy in drag.”

“We went to all the drag queen clubs, like Escuelita, which used to exist here [in New York City], with all the Latin drag queens, and we had a godmother drag queen who would put us through the paces every day,” recalled Leguizamo of his dramatic transformation with co-stars Patrick Swayze and Wesley Snipes. “We worked every day for hours and hours every
day until we could get it perfectly drag queen-like.”

In addition, Leguizamo opened up about being Latino in Hollywood and how it affected his decisions.

“You’ve got to be thoughtful about your career. When you’re a minority — and I don’t really even like that word anymore because we’re not as minority as we used to be — you have to think
about what you’re saying and what you’re leaving behind. When I was a little kid, we didn’t see [ourselves] on TV or anywhere. It was weird because you didn’t feel like you were a part of the American fiber,” he recalled. “Latin people, we have a 45 to 50 percent dropout rate in this country, and I understand that. It’s a tragedy and shouldn’t be happening, but you understand it. You don’t feel connected in that positive way that your people and you are going to make it, and ‘this is your chance and this is your opportunity,’ no, you feel like you’re not really a part of it.”

That’s why Leguizamo decided to just go for it when it came to pursuing his dreams… And, he recommends you do the same.

“You have to crash into the party even if you’re not invited,” he said, indicating that those who have dreams of “making it” have to carve out their own career paths. “I was going to be that
guy, I didn’t care I wasn’t invited.’I’m coming into the party, I’m going to be somebody and you can’t stop me.'”