Abby Lee Miller

Television personality

Birthday September 21, 1966

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

Height 1.73 m

#1787 Most Popular

1965

Abigale "Abby Lee" Miller (born September 21, 1965) is an American dance instructor, choreographer, television personality, and author who founded the Abby Lee Dance Company, which appeared on the reality television show Dance Moms from 2011 until 2019.

Abby Lee Miller was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1965, to Maryen Lorrain Miller (née McKay; 1927–2014), a dance teacher and studio owner, and George L. "Salty" Miller (1927–2000).

Miller grew up around dance in Penn Hills, Pennsylvania, a Pittsburgh suburb, studying under her mother's direction at the Maryen Lorrain Dance Studio.

1980

In 1980, Miller formed the Abby Lee Dance Company, a dance team at her mother's studio.

1986

Miller became certified by Dance Masters of America and became a member of Dance Masters of Pennsylvania Chapter #10 in 1986, 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.".

1995

Miller eventually took over the studio in 1995 and renamed it Reign Dance Productions.

2010

On December 4, 2010, Miller filed for bankruptcy after owing more than $400,000 in back taxes to the IRS.

2011

In 2011, Miller began appearing in the Lifetime reality television show Dance Moms.

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.

2014

In 2014, Miller published a book, Everything I Learned about Life, I Learned in Dance Class.

Miller began to encounter numerous legal problems in 2014.

One of the dancers on Dance Moms sued Miller, charging assault.

2015

Miller opened a Los Angeles location in 2015.

In 2015, Miller opened a new studio set up in Los Angeles called ALDC LA.

2016

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

2017

It was closed and sold in 2017 in light of Miller's prison sentence.

Miller has since relocated her LA studio to a much smaller space, including one dance room and a merchandise shop.

In December 2022, it was announced that Miller's Pittsburgh studio had been permanently closed.

It was subsequently sold and repurposed into a bus lot and daycare.

In March 2017, Miller announced she had quit the series.

2018

In July 2018, Miller announced her return for season 8 of Dance Moms.

2019

Miller appeared on the show for eight seasons through September 2019.

Dance Moms follows the training and careers of children in dance and show business under the tutelage of Abby Lee Miller as well as the relationships between Miller, the dancers, and their often bickering mothers.

Three spin-offs of Dance Moms are Abby's Ultimate Dance Competition, which ran for two seasons and 22 episodes; Dance Moms: Miami; and Dance Moms: Abby's Studio Rescue. The latter ran for only 7 episodes.

Miller has also been a guest judge on Dancing with the Stars.

Dance Moms: Resurrection premiered June 4, 2019, on Lifetime.

2020

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

There are rumors of the show's return on a new network, facilitated by Miller in an interview with Pop Crave.

On June 2, 2020, Miller posted a black square to Instagram on Blackout Tuesday in response to the murders of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, and Breonna Taylor.

This caused Adriana Smith, the mother of Dance Moms season 7 dancer Kamryn, to share on Instagram that she and her daughter left the show because of their experience with Miller.

"A statement from her that sticks in my mind to this day during my time on DMS8 is 'I know you grew up in the HOOD with only a box of 8 crayons, but I grew up in the Country Club with a box of 64—don't be stupid.'" Smith wrote on Instagram.

On June 3, 2020, another Dance Moms mother, Camille Bridges, accused Miller of treating her daughter Camryn differently because of her race and that the environment was "extremely hostile".

She told E! News via e-mail that Miller "tried to spin Camryn as being the poor one and there on scholarship. She would say the most terrible things on camera. It was a traumatic experience that I wish on no one."

Miller has since deleted her Black Lives Matter post and on June 4, 2020, she issued an apology to "Kamryn, Adriana, and anyone else I've hurt", saying, "I realize that racism can come not just from hate, but also from ignorance. No matter the cause, it is harmful, and it is my fault. While I cannot change the past or remove the harm I have done, I promise to educate myself, learn, grow, and do better. While I hope to one day earn your forgiveness, I recognize that words alone are not enough. I understand it takes time and genuine change."

Reposting Miller's apology, Smith said that she did not accept it because she did not think it was sincere.

"I also fully support and standby Nia Frazier [Sioux], Camryn and Nicaya [Wiley] as well as any others who have been victims of racism at the hands of Abby Lee Miller or in the industry," Smith wrote.

It was announced that on June 5, 2020, Lifetime decided to sever ties with Miller as a result of the allegations of the racist remarks she made.

The network canceled the Abby's Virtual Dance-Off competition reality series, which was announced in April and was slated to debut in summer 2020.

Miller also won't be returning to Dance Moms if the series is renewed for a ninth season.