Kinga Phillipps reigns as unofficial Shark Queen for this year’s Shark Week Discovery with not one, not two but three shark specials beginning tonight on Discovery.

It’s a natural spot for Phillipps, 48. “I have to say, I have a great relationship with sharks and have enjoyed all my time spent in the water getting near them,” she said in a video interview. “Obviously, I am still here. So that bodes well for this relationship.”

As for her “very unique, very different” Shark Week trio of films, nothing seems more comical, crazy or bizarrely real than the premiere, “Dancing with Sharks.” It’s a competition show that, as the saying goes, needs to be seen to be believed.

Five divers compete to put together an amazing underwater routine with their toothy partners — from hammerheads to tigers and nurse sharks. Each shark has its own signature dance moves.

“Part of the fun is that people really don’t know what to make of it. They wonder, ‘Are the sharks dancing? Who’s dancing?’ And in reality, everybody’s dancing.

“It’s so much fun, is incredibly shark positive, and really speaks to how amazing these animals are. Also, our contestants are some of the best shark handlers in the world.”

Thursday’s “Caught! Sharks Strike Back” is an assemblage of clips of shark encounters captured on camera. They range from the fun of seeing a shark slap a fisherman in the face to a Great White’s intense 10-minute stalking of a kayaker.

“That one,” Phillipps predicted, “will be very interesting to people who love to dissect shark encounters.

“We have shark experts speaking to videos that are presented to us about shark encounters. What’s really interesting is you can dissect them, look at what led to an encounter and what could have been done for a different outcome. People interested in shark behavior will really like that one.”

Saturday’s “Attack of the Devil Shark” considers a rogue tiger shark attack that killed a swimmer in St. Martin and a few weeks later, struck again. Locals wondered whether it was their legendary “Devil Shark.”

“That’s a more serious, rather dramatic show. One attack was fatal and in the other one, a girl lost her leg. They did a forensic analysis on the victims — and it was the same tiger shark. So part of what we were doing in the show is we are taking biopsies of the tiger sharks that we encountered to see if we could identify that specific shark.

“Part of what’s interesting to us as conservationists, researchers and scientists was trying to determine if this population of sharks is impacted somehow by the environment and where they live.”

“Dancing with Sharks” premieres tonight at 8 p.m. on Discovery