Republican debate prep: How to handle The Donald

* Aug. 6 event is first of the 2016 campaign

* Host Fox News promises equal, fair treatment

By Steve Holland and Andy Sullivan

WASHINGTON, July 24 (Reuters) - In one corner: Donald Trump, the mud-slinging mogul with a complicated hairdo and a flair for the dramatic. In the other: Nine other U.S. Republican presidential hopefuls who wish Trump wasn't standing among them.

That's the unfolding scenario for the Republicans' first televised debate in Cleveland on Aug. 6.

Several campaign officials said privately they were counting on Fox News, the host for the debate, to make sure Trump does not dominate the event entirely by answering questions posed to other candidates or interrupting their answers.

"All candidates will be treated equally and fairly," said Michael Clemente, the executive vice president of news for Fox News.

The debate carries an extra air of unpredictability since it will be the first time the 10 Republican candidates who are polling the highest in the 16-candidate field are in the same room together.

Given Trump's trash-talking ways and eye for the spotlight, his rivals from Jeb Bush to Scott Walker to Ben Carson are strategizing on how best to get their points across and not let the debate degenerate into a carnival-barking sideshow.

With six months to go until Iowa holds the first Republican Party nominating contest on the road to the November 2016 election, several campaigns said they would focus on making a favorable impression on voters, rather than tangling with Trump.

"Treat him like any other candidate," said Ron Kaufman, who was a senior adviser to 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney and who now supports Bush.

That may prove challenging, given Trump's headline-grabbing antics in the more than five weeks since he declared his candidacy. The debate could go off the rails if Trump revels in his poll numbers and tries to torment his competitors.

Trump has launched a series of personal attacks on rivals for the Republican nomination. He mocked former Texas governor Rick Perry, saying he wore new glasses so that people would think he was smart, described Senator Lindsey Graham as an "idiot" who wouldn't be able to get a job in the private sector, and said former Florida governor Jeb Bush was "terrible." He even read out Graham's cell phone number at a campaign rally.

Despite - or because of - his unprecedented actions, Trump remains effectively tied with Bush for the lead with 16 percent of the vote, according to a Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll updated on Thursday.

'YOU PLAY YOUR OWN GAME'

"Trump or no Trump, we are approaching this sort of like a sporting event: You play your own game," said Doug Watts, spokesman for candidate Ben Carson, who is currently hovering around fifth place in many polls.