DETROIT -- Iggy Pop was starting to feel like the Susan Lucci of rock 'n' roll.
Just as the veteran soap actress believed she might never win a Daytime Emmy, the godfather of punk was certain his groundbreaking band The Stooges wouldn't ever earn a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Well, as it turns out, Lucci got her gold statue on the 19th try. And Iggy and the boys finally are getting their shot to search and destroy at Monday's induction ceremony, on their eighth attempt.
"At least I won't be nominated anymore," Pop said, laughing.
He believed The Stooges never would get into the Rock Hall "right up until the day before somebody called me."
"I kept telling the guys over and over: 'We're not gonna get in, guys.' Yeah. I was absolutely sure of that," Pop said in an interview.
It's hard to say exactly what turned the tide in voter sentiment, but Pop points to three possibilities: the band's long streak of Rock Hall futility, the January 2009 death of founding member Ron Asheton and ... Madonna.
The Stooges honored their fellow Michigan native by performing rocking versions of two of her hits -- Burning Up and Ray of Light -- on the night of the 2008 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
Pop says the gig helped provide some much-needed exposure for a band that wasn't really heard from for 30 years -- the result of numerous band breakups and lineup changes that current members blame on drugs and fights over money.
"I thought, 'Well, some of the people there will see that we don't have horns. We're not gonna breathe fire on the tables or anything,"' he said. "I knew the thing would be televised, and 15 to 20 percent of the viewers wouldn't be able to differentiate. If they see you on TV, they'll think you've been inducted anyway."
Whatever the reason, the guys will be on stage at New York's Waldorf Astoria Hotel, but this time they'll be performing their own tunes.
They selected I Wanna Be Your Dog and Search and Destroy, two songs Stooges guitarist James Williamson says are "the most representative" of the band's work.
The latter was on the 1973 album Raw Power, which rates No. 125 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time. The magazine called it a "proto-punk-rock classic" that featured a certain "hellbent ferocity."
Fans love and critics appreciate Search and Destroy for its searing guitar riff and signature Iggy Pop lyrics. It kicks off with the singer's guttural snarl: "I'm a street-walkin' cheetah with a heart full of napalm."
Back on lead vocals is the inimitable Pop, who Williamson says simply is "one of the best there ever was."
"The thing that Iggy did that was all his own was to confront the audience -- not just act out on stage like a Mick Jagger does or something like that -- but Iggy got in your face," the guitarist said. "He got out in the audience and was right there with you. And nobody else had ever done that before. He was fearless about that."
Pop went on to a successful solo career, the Ashetons joined other bands and Williamson spent the past 30 years in the business world.
But Ron Asheton's death and the Rock Hall induction have brought them back together, more than 40 years since they exploded out of Ann Arbor, Mich., with a unique, primal sound that paved the way for the punk, grunge and garage rock movements that sprang up in their wake.