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Strictly Come Dancing
Strictly Come Dancing
from Wikipedia

Strictly Come Dancing
GenreDance talent show
Created by
Developed byKaren Smith
Presented by
Judges
Narrated byAlan Dedicoat
Theme music composer
  • Dan McGrath[5]
  • Josh Phillips[6]
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series23
No. of episodes490
Production
Executive producers
  • Karen Smith (2004–2006)
  • Sam Donnelly (2007–2009)
  • Moira Ross (2010–2011)
  • Glenn Coomber (2012)
  • Andrea Hamilton (2012)
  • Louise Rainbow (2013–2018)
  • Sarah James (2019–present)
Production locations
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time15–150 minutes
Production companyBBC Studios
Original release
NetworkBBC One
Release15 May 2004 (2004-05-15) –
present
Related

Strictly Come Dancing (commonly referred to as Strictly) is a British dance contest show in which celebrities partner with professional dancers to compete in mainly ballroom and Latin dance. Each couple is scored by a panel of judges. The title of the show is an amalgamation of Strictly Ballroom, a 1992 film and the long-running series Come Dancing. The format has been exported to 60 other countries under the title Dancing with the Stars, licensed by BBC Worldwide, and led to a modern dance-themed spin-off Strictly Dance Fever. The Guinness World Records named Strictly as the world's most successful reality television format in 2010.[8] The series is currently presented by Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman, who have announced that they will be leaving after the 2025 series. Bruce Forsyth co-presented the series with Daly until 2013, returning for special episodes until November 2015.

The series has been broadcast live on BBC One since 15 May 2004, airing on Saturday evenings. From series 2 onwards, the show has been broadcast in the run up to Christmas. Results shows were originally broadcast live on Saturdays, and are currently pre-recorded and aired on Sunday evenings. With its high viewing figures, Strictly Come Dancing has become a significant programme for dancing on British television.[9] Eighteen stand-alone Christmas specials and nineteen charity specials have also been produced.

Development

[edit]

Producer Richard Hopkins, who had produced the first British series of Big Brother, unsuccessfully pitched the idea of a modern Come Dancing to the BBC under the title of Pro-Celebrity Dancing in 2003.[10] Later, entertainment executive Fenia Vardanis also suggested reviving Come Dancing, so Jane Lush, the then head of BBC Entertainment, put Hopkins and Vardanis together to develop the show.[10]

Hopkins then called in Karen Smith, who had previously produced Comic Relief Does Fame Academy for BBC One and The Games for Channel 4, to help lead the development of the show and launch the series. Smith was the show-running Executive Producer of the first three series, and of sister show It Takes Two.[11] She then became Creative Director of BBC Entertainment whilst still overseeing series 4 and 5.[12][13]

Hopkins later took the format to America himself when the BBC dismissed the idea of selling it abroad, as they felt it was too British, establishing the format internationally as Dancing with the Stars.[14]

The title is an amalgamation of the titles of the 1992 Australian film Strictly Ballroom and Come Dancing.

Format

[edit]

The show is broadcast live on BBC One on Saturday evenings, with a results show originally following later on Saturday, also broadcast live. For series five, six and eight onwards, the results show is pre-recorded on Saturday and broadcast on Sunday evenings. The final results continued to be shown live on Saturdays, and were combined with the main show from series 14.

From series 1 to 11, Sir Bruce Forsyth and Tess Daly presented the pro-celebrity ballroom dancing competition. From series 8 to 11, Forsyth only presented the main show and was replaced for the results show by Claudia Winkleman, at which point Daly assumed Forsyth's role as main presenter and Winkleman assumed Daly's role as co-presenter. Winkleman joined Daly as full-time co-presenter for series 12 following Forsyth's departure after the 2013 series. Forsyth continued to present special editions of the show until 2015.[15] Through telephone voting, viewers vote for who they would like to be in the next round, the results of the poll being combined with the ranking of the judges. For example, with ten contestants left, the judges' favourite would receive ten points, second favourite nine points, and so on, and similarly with the viewers' rankings. The bottom ranked couple gets one point.[16] In the event of tied scoring from the judges by two or more contestants, the couple immediately below them gets one point below them, until the bottom ranked couple on the leaderboard who ends up getting at least 2 points instead of one.[17] The profits from the telephone lines were donated to Sport Relief in series 1, and to Children in Need from series 2 until series 8.

The judging panel initially consisted of Bruno Tonioli, Arlene Phillips, Len Goodman and Craig Revel Horwood. Alesha Dixon replaced Phillips from series 7 to 9, after which she left the programme to judge Britain's Got Talent which led to retired ballerina Dame Darcey Bussell to replace her.[18] Goodman left the show after the 2016 series and was replaced by Shirley Ballas who was promoted as Head Judge following a selection process which attracted many candidates. Bussell remained as judge until 2018 and was replaced by Motsi Mabuse in 2019. Up until 2020, Tonioli commuted weekly between Hollywood and London to judge both the American and British versions of the show simultaneously. However, due the outbreak of COVID-19 in 2020, he could not appear on both the British and American shows. No replacement was named for the 2020 series; but pro dancer Anton Du Beke took his place from the 2021 series, and has now replaced Tonioli full-time on the panel. The current judging panel consists of Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Shirley Ballas and Anton Du Beke, making Horwood the only judge to remain with the programme since its inception. Each judge gives the performance a mark out of ten, giving an overall total out of forty. The voice-over announcer is Alan Dedicoat.

The singers on the show are Tommy Blaize, Hayley Sanderson, Lance Ellington, Andrea Grant and formerly British dance music vocalist Tara McDonald. The music director is David Arch. Tommy Blaize has been part of Strictly since its beginning. David Arch joined in the fourth series and Hayley Sanderson in the fifth. The original musical director from series 1 to 3 was Laurie Holloway. In the seventeenth series, the singers were joined by Mitchel Emms.[19]

The show was broadcast from a specially constructed set at BBC Television Centre (primarily in the largest studio, TC1[20]) until its closure in 2013, with the show moving to Elstree Studios' George Lucas Stage 2 from 2013 onwards. However, in the first two series, shows were also filmed at the Tower Ballroom in Blackpool, where the original Come Dancing series was filmed in the 1970s.[21][22]

In the second series, two shows were filmed at the Tower Ballroom, show five and the Grand Final, which was broadcast live on 11 December 2004.[23][24] In 2005, the BBC announced that they would not be returning to the venue for the third series because of "logistical problems".[25] In October 2008, Craig Revel Horwood called for the series to return to the Tower Ballroom, saying, "The atmosphere was electric. It's huge and has so much history. The Tower Ballroom puts a lot of pressure on the professionals and the celebrities to perform to the best of their potential. What a wonderful place to go live to 12 million people. We have got to get the BBC to bring Strictly Come Dancing back to Blackpool." Eventually, for series 7, the show did return to the Tower Ballroom, where Blackpool-born Craig Kelly was eliminated. The episode was aired live on 7 November 2009.[26] Strictly Come Dancing returned to Blackpool for the 2010[27] and 2011 series.[28] After series 10, when Strictly Come Dancing did not go to Blackpool, they announced that they would return for series 11.[29]

Cast

[edit]

Presenters and judges

[edit]
Colour key
  Host
  It Takes Two host
  Judge
  Guest judge
  Contestant
  Professional dancer
  Guest host
Cast member Series
1
2004
2
2004
3
2005
4
2006
5
2007
6
2008
7
2009
8
2010
9
2011
10
2012
11
2013
12
2014
13
2015
14
2016
15
2017
16
2018
17
2019
18
2020
19
2021
20
2022
21
2023
22
2024
23
2025
Bruce Forsyth
Tess Daly
Natasha Kaplinsky[a]
Claudia Winkleman[b]
Ronnie Corbett[c]
Zoe Ball[d]
Rylan Clark
Janette Manrara
Fleur East
Craig Revel Horwood
Arlene Phillips
Len Goodman
Bruno Tonioli
Alesha Dixon
Darcey Bussell
Jennifer Grey
Donny Osmond
Shirley Ballas
Alfonso Ribeiro
Motsi Mabuse
Anton Du Beke[e]
Cynthia Erivo[f]
Notes
  1. ^ Presented the first five episodes of the second series as maternity cover for Daly.
  2. ^ In the eighth series Winkleman presented the results show and It Takes Two, and presented the results show only between series 9 and series 11. She presented one episode of the main show in series 7 and three episodes in series 11, both in Forsyth's absence.
  3. ^ Co-presented one episode of the seventh series with Daly and Winkleman.
  4. ^ In the twelfth series, Ball co-presented three weeks of the main show with Tess Daly while Claudia Winkleman was absent.
  5. ^ Du Beke also served as a guest judge during weeks 4 and 5 of the eighteenth series.
  6. ^ Erivo served as a guest mentor during week 3 of the twenty-third series, sitting alongside the judging panel but not scoring.

Professional dancers

[edit]

Each season, celebrities are paired with professional dance partners who instruct them in the various dance styles, design their choreography, and perform with them each week in the competition.

Professional dancer Series
1
2004
2
2004
3
2005
4
2006
5
2007
6
2008
7
2009
8
2010
9
2011
10
2012
11
2013
12
2014
13
2015
14
2016
15
2017
16
2018
17
2019
18
2020
19
2021
20
2022
21
2023
22
2024
23
2025
Brendan Cole
Anton Du Beke
Hanna Karttunen
Kylie Jones
Paul Killick
John Byrnes
Camilla Dallerup
Erin Boag
Nicole Cutler
Hazel Newberry
Ian Waite
Lilia Kopylova
Darren Bennett
Matthew Cutler
Hanna Haarala
Andrew Cuerden
Karen Hardy
Izabela Hannah
Flavia Cacace
Ola Jordan
Vincent Simone
James Jordan
Hayley Holt
Kristina Rihanoff
Brian Fortuna
Aliona Vilani
Katya Virshilas
Natalie Lowe
Robin Windsor
Jared Murillo
Artem Chigvintsev
Pasha Kovalev
Karen Hauer
Iveta Lukošiūtė
Kevin Clifton
Janette Manrara
Anya Garnis
Aljaž Škorjanec
Joanne Clifton
Trent Whiddon
Tristan MacManus
Oti Mabuse
Gleb Savchenko
Giovanni Pernice
Oksana Platero
Gorka Márquez
Katya Jones
AJ Pritchard
Amy Dowden
Nadiya Bychkova
Dianne Buswell
Graziano Di Prima
Neil Jones
Johannes Radebe
Luba Mushtuk
Nikita Kuzmin
Nancy Xu
Kai Widdrington
Carlos Gu
Jowita Przystał
Vito Coppola
Lauren Oakley
Michelle Tsiakkas
Julian Caillon
Alexis Warr

Many of the dancers from the show have formed both professional and personal partnerships. Darren Bennett and Lilia Kopylova are married,[30] as are James and Ola Jordan.[31] Aljaž Škorjanec and Janette Manrara, who became engaged after joining the show in 2013, were married in 2017.[32] Matthew and Nicole Cutler are divorced, but remain professional partners;[33][34] Karen Hauer and Kevin Clifton were engaged when Clifton entered the show in 2013 and were married prior to the 2015 series, before divorcing in 2018, while Neil and Katya Jones entered the show as a married couple before separating in 2019. Anton Du Beke and Erin Boag have danced as a professional couple since 1997,[35] while Vincent Simone and Flavia Cacace are former Argentine tango world champions as a duo and have done multiple tours together.[36] Brendan Cole and Camilla Dallerup danced together for many years, including a stint on the original series of Come Dancing;[37][38] following their split in 2004, Cole and Katya Virshilas formed a professional partnership before splitting in November 2009.[39][40][41] Other current and former professional partnerships featured on the show include Dallerup and Ian Waite, Paul Killick and Hanna Karttunen,[42] Andrew Cuerden and Hanna Haarala, Brian Fortuna and Kristina Rihanoff, Rihanoff and Robin Windsor,[43] Pasha Kovalev and Anya Garnis,[44][45] siblings Kevin and Joanne Clifton,[46] AJ Pritchard and Chloe Hewitt, and Gorka Márquez and Karen Hauer.[47][48]

Presentation

[edit]

Dances

[edit]

On average, dances last for approximately 90 seconds.[49] Musical accompaniment is provided by an in-house band, led by Dave Arch.

Themed Weeks

[edit]

The show includes themed weeks during the competition. Since Series 20, Movie Week falls on the third week, Halloween Week falls on the sixth week, Blackpool Week falls on the ninth week, and Musicals Week falls on the eleventh week and during the Quarterfinals. Series 22 introduced Icons Week, which originally fell on the seventh week and then on the fifth week in Series 23.

Results show

[edit]

From series 1 to 4, the results show was shown live on Saturday night one hour after the performances.

As of series 5, the results show is recorded on the Saturday night directly after the live show and incorporates the result of the viewers' votes, which are completed by 21:30. This was confirmed by the official BBC website in 2008:

The Sunday show is recorded on Saturday night but no element involving the results of the vote will start recording until after lines are closed and votes counted and verified.[50]

Throughout the Sunday results show, the presenters refer to "Saturday night" in reference to the main show due to the timing of the Sunday programme, and the outfits of Tess Daly, Claudia Winkleman and the judges are changed to present an illusion of a second live broadcast while the couples wore the same performance outfits.

For series 7, the Sunday results show was cancelled and returned to Saturday nights as a result of a revamp of the show.[51] It then reverted to Sundays from series 8.

Dance-off

[edit]

A new system called the Dance-off, which takes place in the results show, was introduced in series 5. It continued until series 7, but did not return in series 8. It was then reinstated in series 10 and has remained a feature of the show ever since.

The Dance-off consists of the two couples who received the lowest totals that week from the combined judges' scores and public vote. The aim of the dance-off is for the couples to convince the judges that they deserve to go through to the following week's competition. Before they attempt their dance a second time, the couples sometimes get advice from the judges. The judges then decide which couple remains in the competition based on the dance-off performances. If three of the judges agree that one of the couples should be saved, that couple is through to the following week's competition and the Head Judge's vote is not counted. If one couple has two votes and the other couple has one vote, then the deciding vote is cast by the head judge, originally Len Goodman and currently Shirley Ballas. Afterwards, the eliminated couple perform one final dance, sometimes known as "waltzing out of the ballroom". The Monday after their elimination, they appear on It Takes Two to discuss their time on the programme.

On two occasions, the dance-off was cancelled; firstly, in series 14, in which one of the celebrity contestants, Anastacia, sustained an injury and was unable to compete in the Dance-off as a result.[52] Under the rules of the show, the couple with the lowest combined total was eliminated. The second occasion in which the Dance-off was cancelled was in Series 20, again due to an injury sustained by Tony Adams. Tess Daly announced on the results show that Adams had decided to withdraw from the competition as a result of being unable to compete in the Dance-off.

It Takes Two

[edit]

During the run of Strictly Come Dancing, Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two is broadcast each weeknight on BBC Two. The series was previously hosted by Claudia Winkleman but, due to her pregnancy in 2011, she had to leave the series, and was replaced by Zoe Ball, who hosted the show from series 9 to 18.[53] Rylan Clark joined as co-host in series 17. In May 2021, it was announced that Ball would leave the show after 10 years, and on 10 June 2021, her replacement was announced to be former professional Janette Manrara.[54]

The show features reviews of the performances during the previous Saturday's show and interviews with, and training footage of, the couples preparing for the next show. The judges and other celebrities also provide their opinions on how the couples are progressing. It Takes Two replaced Strictly Come Dancing on Three, hosted by Justin Lee Collins, which ran on BBC Three during the first series. Prior to 2010, BBC Two Scotland aired the programme on four nights only, running its own Gaelic-language programming on Thursdays instead.

Series overview

[edit]
SeriesContestantsEpisodesOriginally releasedWinners
First releasedLast released
18915 May 2004 (2004-05-15)3 July 2004 (2004-07-03)Natasha Kaplinsky & Brendan Cole
2101623 October 2004 (2004-10-23)11 December 2004 (2004-12-11)Jill Halfpenny & Darren Bennett
3122015 October 2005 (2005-10-15)17 December 2005 (2005-12-17)Darren Gough & Lilia Kopylova
414247 October 2006 (2006-10-07)23 December 2006 (2006-12-23)Mark Ramprakash & Karen Hardy
514246 October 2007 (2007-10-06)22 December 2007 (2007-12-22)Alesha Dixon & Matthew Cutler
6162820 September 2008 (2008-09-20)20 December 2008 (2008-12-20)Tom Chambers & Camilla Dallerup
7161918 September 2009 (2009-09-18)19 December 2009 (2009-12-19)Chris Hollins & Ola Jordan
814261 October 2010 (2010-10-01)18 December 2010 (2010-12-18)Kara Tointon & Artem Chigvintsev
9142530 September 2011 (2011-09-30)17 December 2011 (2011-12-17)Harry Judd & Aliona Vilani
1014255 October 2012 (2012-10-05)22 December 2012 (2012-12-22)Louis Smith & Flavia Cacace
11152727 September 2013 (2013-09-27)21 December 2013 (2013-12-21)Abbey Clancy & Aljaž Škorjanec
12152726 September 2014 (2014-09-26)20 December 2014 (2014-12-20)Caroline Flack & Pasha Kovalev
13152725 September 2015 (2015-09-25)19 December 2015 (2015-12-19)Jay McGuiness & Aliona Vilani
14152623 September 2016 (2016-09-23)17 December 2016 (2016-12-17)Ore Oduba & Joanne Clifton
15152523 September 2017 (2017-09-23)16 December 2017 (2017-12-16)Joe McFadden & Katya Jones
16152522 September 2018 (2018-09-22)15 December 2018 (2018-12-15)Stacey Dooley & Kevin Clifton
17152521 September 2019 (2019-09-21)14 December 2019 (2019-12-14)Kelvin Fletcher & Oti Mabuse
18121724 October 2020 (2020-10-24)19 December 2020 (2020-12-19)Bill Bailey & Oti Mabuse
19152525 September 2021 (2021-09-25)18 December 2021 (2021-12-18)Rose Ayling-Ellis & Giovanni Pernice
20152524 September 2022 (2022-09-24)17 December 2022 (2022-12-17)Hamza Yassin & Jowita Przystał
21152523 September 2023 (2023-09-23)16 December 2023 (2023-12-16)Ellie Leach & Vito Coppola
22152521 September 2024 (2024-09-21)14 December 2024 (2024-12-14)Chris McCausland & Dianne Buswell
23152527 September 2025 (2025-09-27)20 December 2025 (2025-12-20)TBA

Series 1 (2004)

[edit]

In May 2004, Strictly Come Dancing began its first series. This was the only series to air in the spring; all subsequent series aired in the autumn.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Jason Wood Comedian Kylie Jones Eliminated 1st
David Dickinson Bargain Hunt presenter & antiques expert Camilla Dallerup Eliminated 2nd
Verona Joseph Holby City actress Paul Killick Eliminated 3rd
Claire Sweeney Actress, singer & television presenter John Byrnes Eliminated 4th
Martin Offiah England rugby player Erin Boag Eliminated 5th
Lesley Garrett Classical singer Anton Du Beke Eliminated 6th
Christopher Parker EastEnders actor Hanna Karttunen Runners-up
Natasha Kaplinsky Journalist & television presenter Brendan Cole Winners

Series 2 (2004)

[edit]

The second series began in October 2004. A new spin-off show, Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two, presented by Claudia Winkleman, premiered and has continued to air alongside each subsequent series on BBC Two.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Quentin Willson Motoring journalist & television presenter Hazel Newberry Eliminated 1st
Carol Vorderman Countdown presenter Paul Killick Eliminated 2nd
Esther Rantzen Journalist & television presenter Anton Du Beke Eliminated 3rd
Diarmuid Gavin Garden designer & television presenter Nicole Cutler Eliminated 4th
Sarah Manners Casualty actress Brendan Cole Eliminated 5th
Roger Black Olympic sprinter & sports presenter Camilla Dallerup Eliminated 6th
Aled Jones Singer & television presenter Lilia Kopylova Eliminated 7th
Julian Clary Stand-up comedian Erin Boag Third place
Denise Lewis Olympic heptathlete Ian Waite Runners-up
Jill Halfpenny EastEnders actress Darren Bennett Winners

Series 3 (2005)

[edit]

The third series began in October 2005.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Siobhan Hayes My Family actress Matthew Cutler Eliminated 1st
Jaye Jacobs Holby City actress Andrew Cuerden Eliminated 2nd
Gloria Hunniford Television & radio presenter Darren Bennett Eliminated 3rd
Fiona Phillips GMTV presenter Brendan Cole Eliminated 4th
Dennis Taylor Snooker player Izabela Hannah Eliminated 5th
Will Thorp Casualty actor Hanna Haarala Eliminated 6th
Bill Turnbull BBC Breakfast presenter & journalist Karen Hardy Eliminated 7th
Patsy Palmer EastEnders actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 8th
James Martin Chef & television presenter Camilla Dallerup Eliminated 9th
Zoe Ball Television & radio presenter Ian Waite Third place
Colin Jackson Olympic hurdler Erin Boag Runners-up
Darren Gough England cricketer Lilia Kopylova Winners

Series 4 (2006)

[edit]

The fourth series began in October 2006.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Nicholas Owen ITV News presenter & journalist Nicole Cutler Eliminated 1st
Mica Paris Singer & television presenter Ian Waite Eliminated 2nd
Jimmy Tarbuck Comedian Flavia Cacace Withdrew
DJ Spoony DJ & BBC Radio 1 presenter Ola Jordan Eliminated 3rd
Georgina Bouzova Casualty actress James Jordan Eliminated 4th
Jan Ravens Actress & impressionist Anton Du Beke Eliminated 5th
Ray Fearon Stage & screen actor Camilla Dallerup Eliminated 6th
Peter Schmeichel Manchester United goalkeeper Erin Boag Eliminated 7th
Claire King Emmerdale actress Brendan Cole Eliminated 8th
Carol Smillie Television presenter Matthew Cutler Eliminated 9th
Louisa Lytton EastEnders actress Vincent Simone Eliminated 10th
Emma Bunton Spice Girls singer Darren Bennett Eliminated 11th
Matt Dawson England rugby player Lilia Kopylova Runners-up
Mark Ramprakash England cricketer Karen Hardy Winners

Series 5 (2007)

[edit]

The fifth series began in September 2007. The first programme was a preview of the new series before the competition began. In a change to the previous format, the results show was recorded on Saturday and broadcast on Sunday, rather than shown live later on Saturday. Additionally, the two couples at the bottom of the table after the public vote were subject to a dance-off, where they performed their routine again for the judges, who decided which couple would leave the competition.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Brian Capron Coronation Street actor Karen Hardy Eliminated 1st
Stephanie Beacham Stage & screen actress Vincent Simone Eliminated 2nd
Willie Thorne Snooker player Erin Boag Eliminated 3rd
Gabby Logan BBC Sport presenter James Jordan Eliminated 4th
Dominic Littlewood Journalist & television presenter Lilia Kopylova Eliminated 5th
Penny Lancaster-Stewart Model & photographer Ian Waite Eliminated 6th
Kate Garraway GMTV presenter Anton Du Beke Eliminated 7th
John Barnes England footballer Nicole Cutler Eliminated 8th
Kelly Brook Model & actress Brendan Cole Withdrew
Kenny Logan Scotland rugby player Ola Jordan Eliminated 9th
Letitia Dean EastEnders actress Darren Bennett Eliminated 10th
Gethin Jones Blue Peter presenter Camilla Dallerup Eliminated 11th
Matt Di Angelo EastEnders actor Flavia Cacace Runners-up
Alesha Dixon Mis-Teeq singer Matthew Cutler Winners

Series 6 (2008)

[edit]

A sixth series was confirmed after the dancers' pay dispute ended in June 2008.[55] The sixth series began in September with a behind-the-scenes look at the new series, while the first live show aired on 20 September.[56]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Phil Daniels EastEnders actor Flavia Cacace Eliminated 1st
Gillian Taylforth EastEnders actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 2nd
Gary Rhodes Chef & television presenter Karen Hardy Eliminated 3rd
Jessie Wallace EastEnders actress Darren Bennett Eliminated 4th
Don Warrington Film & television actor Lilia Kopylova Eliminated 5th
Mark Foster Olympic swimmer Hayley Holt Eliminated 6th
Andrew Castle GMTV presenter & tennis player Ola Jordan Eliminated 7th
Heather Small M People singer Brian Fortuna Eliminated 8th
Cherie Lunghi Stage & screen actress James Jordan Eliminated 9th
John Sergeant Chief political correspondent Kristina Rihanoff Withdrew
Jodie Kidd Fashion model Ian Waite Eliminated 10th
Christine Bleakley The One Show presenter Matthew Cutler Eliminated 11th
Austin Healey England rugby player Erin Boag Eliminated 12th
Lisa Snowdon Model & television presenter Brendan Cole Third place
Rachel Stevens S Club 7 singer Vincent Simone Runners-up
Tom Chambers Holby City actor Camilla Dallerup Winners

Series 7 (2009)

[edit]

The seventh series began in September 2009. Alesha Dixon joined the judging panel, replacing Arlene Phillips, who moved to The One Show.[57]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Martina Hingis Professional tennis player Matthew Cutler Eliminated 1st
Richard Dunwoody Jockey Lilia Kopylova Eliminated 2nd
Rav Wilding Crimewatch presenter Aliona Vilani Eliminated 3rd
Lynda Bellingham Actress & Loose Women panellist Darren Bennett Eliminated 4th
Joe Calzaghe Professional boxer Kristina Rihanoff Eliminated 5th
Jo Wood Model & entrepreneur Brendan Cole Eliminated 6th
Zöe Lucker Footballers' Wives actress James Jordan Eliminated 7th
Craig Kelly Coronation Street actor Flavia Cacace Eliminated 8th
Phil Tufnell England cricketer Katya Virshilas Eliminated 9th
Jade Johnson Olympic long jumper Ian Waite Withdrew
Ricky Groves EastEnders actor Erin Boag Eliminated 10th
Natalie Cassidy EastEnders actress Vincent Simone Eliminated 11th
Laila Rouass Footballers' Wives actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 12th
Ali Bastian The Bill & Hollyoaks actress Brian Fortuna Eliminated 13th
Ricky Whittle Hollyoaks actor Natalie Lowe Runners-up
Chris Hollins BBC Breakfast sports presenter Ola Jordan Winners

Series 8 (2010)

[edit]

The eighth series began in September 2010.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Goldie Musician & DJ Kristina Rihanoff Eliminated 1st
Paul Daniels Magician Ola Jordan Eliminated 2nd
Peter Shilton England goalkeeper Erin Boag Eliminated 3rd
Tina O'Brien Coronation Street actress Jared Murillo Eliminated 4th
Jimi Mistry Film & television actor Flavia Cacace Eliminated 5th
Michelle Williams Destiny's Child singer Brendan Cole Eliminated 6th
Felicity Kendal Stage & screen actress Vincent Simone Eliminated 7th
Patsy Kensit Film & television actress Robin Windsor Eliminated 8th
Ann Widdecombe Conservative Party politician Anton Du Beke Eliminated 9th
Gavin Henson Wales rugby player Katya Virshilas Eliminated 10th
Scott Maslen EastEnders & The Bill actor Natalie Lowe Eliminated 11th
Pamela Stephenson Comedian & psychologist James Jordan Third place
Matt Baker Television presenter Aliona Vilani Runners-up
Kara Tointon EastEnders actress Artem Chigvintsev Winners

Series 9 (2011)

[edit]

The ninth season began in September 2011. The couples were paired up for the first time on the launch show. This was the last series to feature Alesha Dixon as a judge; she left the show to become a judge on Britain's Got Talent.

Zoe Ball replaced Claudia Winkleman as host of Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two due to Winkleman having just given birth.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Edwina Currie Conservative Party politician Vincent Simone Eliminated 1st
Dan Lobb Daybreak presenter & tennis player Katya Virshilas Eliminated 2nd
Rory Bremner Comedian & impressionist Erin Boag Eliminated 3rd
Nancy Dell'Olio Lawyer & media personality Anton Du Beke Eliminated 4th
Lulu Singer-songwriter Brendan Cole Eliminated 5th
Audley Harrison Heavyweight boxer Natalie Lowe Eliminated 6th
Russell Grant Astrologer & entertainer Flavia Cacace Eliminated 7th
Anita Dobson EastEnders actress Robin Windsor Eliminated 8th
Robbie Savage Premier League footballer Ola Jordan Eliminated 9th
Alex Jones The One Show presenter James Jordan Eliminated 10th & 11th
Holly Valance Actress, singer & model Artem Chigvintsev
Jason Donovan Actor & singer Kristina Rihanoff Third place
Chelsee Healey Waterloo Road actress Pasha Kovalev Runners-up
Harry Judd McFly drummer Aliona Vilani Winners

Series 10 (2012)

[edit]

The tenth series began in September 2012. Darcey Bussell joined the judging panel, replacing Alesha Dixon.[58]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Johnny Ball Television presenter Iveta Lukošiūtė Eliminated 1st
Jerry Hall Supermodel & actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 2nd
Sid Owen EastEnders actor Ola Jordan Eliminated 3rd
Colin Salmon Film & television actor Kristina Rihanoff Eliminated 4th
Fern Britton Television presenter Artem Chigvintsev Eliminated 5th
Richard Arnold Daybreak presenter Erin Boag Eliminated 6th
Victoria Pendleton Olympic track cyclist Brendan Cole Eliminated 7th
Michael Vaughan England cricketer Natalie Lowe Eliminated 8th
Nicky Byrne Westlife singer Karen Hauer Eliminated 9th
Lisa Riley Emmerdale actress Robin Windsor Eliminated 10th
Dani Harmer Children's television actress Vincent Simone Eliminated 11th
Denise van Outen Actress, singer & presenter James Jordan Runners-up
Kimberley Walsh Girls Aloud singer Pasha Kovalev
Louis Smith Olympic artistic gymnast Flavia Cacace Winners

Series 11 (2013)

[edit]

The eleventh series began in September 2013.[59]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Tony Jacklin Professional golfer Aliona Vilani Eliminated 1st
Vanessa Feltz Television & radio presenter James Jordan Eliminated 2nd
Julien Macdonald Fashion designer Janette Manrara Eliminated 3rd
Deborah Meaden Dragons' Den investor & businesswoman Robin Windsor Eliminated 4th
Rachel Riley Countdown presenter Pasha Kovalev Eliminated 5th
Dave Myers Chef & The Hairy Bikers presenter Karen Hauer Eliminated 6th
Fiona Fullerton Film & television actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 7th
Ben Cohen England rugby player Kristina Rihanoff Eliminated 8th
Mark Benton Stage & screen actor Iveta Lukošiūtė Eliminated 9th
Ashley Taylor Dawson Hollyoaks actor & singer Ola Jordan Eliminated 10th
Patrick Robinson Casualty actor Anya Garnis Eliminated 11th
Sophie Ellis-Bextor Singer-songwriter Brendan Cole Eliminated 12th
Natalie Gumede Coronation Street actress Artem Chigvintsev Runners-up
Susanna Reid BBC Breakfast presenter Kevin Clifton
Abbey Clancy Model & television presenter Aljaž Škorjanec Winners

Series 12 (2014)

[edit]

The series started on 7 September 2014 with a launch show,[60] followed by the live shows starting on 26 and 27 September.[61] This series was the first not to be presented by Sir Bruce Forsyth after announcing his departure from the live shows on 4 April (he made his final regular appearance in this series' launch show). However, Forsyth would continue to present special editions of the show, such as Children in Need and Christmas specials.[62] It was announced on 9 May that Claudia Winkleman would join the main show as co-presenter and that her duties would mirror the existing result show format, with Tess Daly assuming Forsyth's role as main presenter and Winkleman taking Daly's role as co-presenter.[63]

It was announced on 1 June 2014 that professional dancers Artem Chigvintsev, James Jordan and Anya Garnis would not be returning for the new series, although Garnis would remain on the show's choreography team. It was also announced that Tristan MacManus and Joanne Clifton would be joining the show's professional line-up.[64] It was then announced in August that Robin Windsor had withdrawn from the competition due to a back injury. Windsor was replaced by new professional Trent Whiddon.[65] In week three, entertainer Donny Osmond joined the four regular judges, making the maximum score that week 50 points.[66] Due to Winkleman's absence in weeks 6, 7 and 8, It Takes Two presenter Zoe Ball co-presented with Daly.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Gregg Wallace MasterChef judge Aliona Vilani Eliminated 1st
Jennifer Gibney Mrs. Brown's Boys actress Tristan MacManus Eliminated 2nd
Tim Wonnacott Bargain Hunt presenter & antiques expert Natalie Lowe Eliminated 3rd
Thom Evans Scotland rugby player & model Iveta Lukošiūtė Eliminated 4th
Scott Mills BBC Radio 1 presenter Joanne Clifton Eliminated 5th
Alison Hammond Television presenter Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 6th
Judy Murray Tennis coach & British Fed Cup captain Anton Du Beke Eliminated 7th
Steve Backshall Naturalist, author & television presenter Ola Jordan Eliminated 8th
Sunetra Sarker Casualty actress Brendan Cole Eliminated 9th
Pixie Lott Singer-songwriter Trent Whiddon Eliminated 10th
Jake Wood EastEnders actor Janette Manrara Eliminated 11th
Mark Wright The Only Way Is Essex star Karen Hauer Eliminated 12th
Frankie Bridge The Saturdays singer Kevin Clifton Runners-up
Simon Webbe Blue singer & actor Kristina Rihanoff
Caroline Flack Television presenter Pasha Kovalev Winners

Series 13 (2015)

[edit]

Strictly Come Dancing returned for its thirteenth series with a launch show on 5 September 2015, followed by the live shows starting on 25 and 26 September.

On 23 April 2015, the list of professionals participating in the thirteenth series was revealed. Professionals from the last series who did not return included Trent Whiddon, Iveta Lukošiūtė and Joanne Clifton. Clifton would remain involved in group dances and would feature on Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two as a dance expert. Robin Windsor, absent from the previous series because of injury, also did not return for this series. Three new professional dancers were introduced: Russian dancer Gleb Savchenko (from the American, Australian and Russian versions of Dancing with the Stars), South African dancer Oti Mabuse (from Germany's Let's Dance) and Italian dancer Giovanni Pernice.[67]

On 3 October 2015, the judges performed The Strictly, a signature dance made up of some iconic moves from the show's history for fans to do at home when they hear the theme tune; subsequently, a tutorial for the dance was made available on the show's website and iPlayer hosted by Natalie Lowe and Tristan MacManus.[68]

Series 13 was the last to feature Tristan MacManus, Kristina Rihanoff, Ola Jordan, Gleb Savchenko and Aliona Vilani as professional dancers. Jordan later announced that she had quit the show, claiming that the results were "fixed". Vilani announced three days after winning that she was leaving the show; however, she participated in the 2016 live tour. Savchenko announced that he was leaving the show on 28 June 2016.[69]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Iwan Thomas Olympic sprinter & sports pundit Ola Jordan Eliminated 1st
Anthony Ogogo Olympic boxer Oti Mabuse Eliminated 2nd
Daniel O'Donnell Singer-songwriter Kristina Rihanoff Eliminated 3rd
Ainsley Harriott Chef & Ready Steady Cook presenter Natalie Lowe Eliminated 4th
Kirsty Gallacher Television presenter Brendan Cole Eliminated 5th
Carol Kirkwood BBC Breakfast weather presenter Pasha Kovalev Eliminated 6th
Jeremy Vine BBC Radio 2 presenter & journalist Karen Clifton Eliminated 7th
Jamelia Singer & Loose Women panellist Tristan MacManus Eliminated 8th
Peter Andre Singer & television personality Janette Manrara Eliminated 9th
Helen George Call the Midwife actress Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 10th
Anita Rani Television presenter Gleb Savchenko Eliminated 11th
Katie Derham BBC Proms & BBC Radio 3 presenter Anton Du Beke Eliminated 12th
Georgia May Foote Coronation Street actress Giovanni Pernice Runners-up
Kellie Bright EastEnders actress Kevin Clifton
Jay McGuiness The Wanted singer Aliona Vilani Winners

Series 14 (2016)

[edit]

Strictly Come Dancing returned for its fourteenth series with a launch show on 3 September 2016 on BBC One. This was Len Goodman's final series as head judge.

On 28 June 2016, the list of professionals who were returning for the fourteenth series was revealed. Professionals from the last series who would not return included the previous series' champion and two-time professional winner of the show Aliona Vilani, former professional winner Ola Jordan and two-time professional finalist Kristina Rihanoff, as well as Gleb Savchenko and Tristan MacManus. Joanne Clifton returned after a one-series hiatus. The leaving professionals were replaced by Katya Jones, Burn the Floor dancer Gorka Márquez and former Dancing with the Stars US troupe member Oksana Platero.[70] On 26 July 2016, three more new professional dancers (AJ Pritchard, Chloe Hewitt and Neil Jones, husband of new dancer Katya) were announced.[71] Hewitt and Neil Jones did not partner a celebrity as the professionals outnumbered the celebrities, although they were still in group dances and appeared on It Takes Two.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Melvin Odoom Television & radio presenter Janette Manrara Eliminated 1st
Tameka Empson EastEnders actress Gorka Márquez Eliminated 2nd
Will Young Singer-songwriter & actor Karen Clifton Withdrew
Naga Munchetty BBC Breakfast newsreader & journalist Pasha Kovalev Eliminated 3rd
Lesley Joseph Stage & screen actress Anton Du Beke Eliminated 4th
Anastacia Singer-songwriter Brendan Cole Eliminated 5th
Laura Whitmore Television presenter Giovanni Pernice Eliminated 6th
Daisy Lowe Fashion model Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 7th
Greg Rutherford Olympic long jumper Natalie Lowe Eliminated 8th
Ed Balls Labour Party politician Katya Jones Eliminated 9th
Judge Rinder Criminal law barrister & television judge Oksana Platero Eliminated 10th
Claudia Fragapane Olympic artistic gymnast AJ Pritchard Eliminated 11th
Danny Mac Hollyoaks actor Oti Mabuse Runners-up
Louise Redknapp Eternal singer & television presenter Kevin Clifton
Ore Oduba BBC Sport presenter Joanne Clifton Winners

Series 15 (2017)

[edit]

On 4 May 2017, it was announced that series 7 finalist Natalie Lowe would be departing the show. Five days later, on 9 May, Shirley Ballas announced that she would be replacing Len Goodman as head judge.[72] On 21 June 2017, Oksana Platero and the previous series' professional champion, Joanne Clifton, announced that they would also be leaving. The new professionals replacing them were Australian Open champion Dianne Buswell, Welsh dancer Amy Dowden, and Ukrainian two-time world champion Nadiya Bychkova. On 7 August, Nick Grimshaw announced that Mollie King was the first celebrity known to be taking part in the series. This was the first series to be broadcast since Sir Bruce Forsyth's death in August that year.[73]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Chizzy Akudolu Holby City actress & comedian Pasha Kovalev Eliminated 1st
Rev. Richard Coles Broadcaster, musician & Church of England priest Dianne Buswell Eliminated 2nd
Charlotte Hawkins Good Morning Britain presenter & journalist Brendan Cole Eliminated 3rd
Brian Conley Comedian, singer & actor Amy Dowden Eliminated 4th
Simon Rimmer Chef & Sunday Brunch presenter Karen Clifton Eliminated 5th
Aston Merrygold JLS singer Janette Manrara Eliminated 6th
Ruth Langsford Television presenter Anton Du Beke Eliminated 7th
Jonnie Peacock Paralympic sprinter Oti Mabuse Eliminated 8th
Susan Calman Stand-up comedian & television presenter Kevin Clifton Eliminated 9th
Davood Ghadami EastEnders actor Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 10th
Mollie King The Saturdays singer AJ Pritchard Eliminated 11th
Alexandra Burke Singer-songwriter Gorka Márquez Runners-up
Debbie McGee Radio presenter & magician's assistant Giovanni Pernice
Gemma Atkinson Actress & model Aljaž Škorjanec
Joe McFadden Holby City actor Katya Jones Winners

Series 16 (2018)

[edit]

On 30 January 2018, it was announced that Brendan Cole would be leaving the show.[74] On 30 May 2018, the full lineup of professional dancers was announced. Chloe Hewitt left the series and three new professional dancers ( Graziano Di Prima, Johannes Radebe and Luba Mushtuk) were announced to be joining the show. This meant that there were 18 professional dancers, the most in the show's history.[75]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Susannah Constantine Television presenter & fashion journalist Anton Du Beke Eliminated 1st
Lee Ryan Blue singer & EastEnders actor Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 2nd
Katie Piper Philanthropist & television presenter Gorka Márquez Eliminated 3rd
Vick Hope Capital FM presenter Graziano Di Prima Eliminated 4th
Seann Walsh Stand-up comedian Katya Jones Eliminated 5th
Dr. Ranj Singh This Morning presenter & author Janette Manrara Eliminated 6th
Danny John-Jules Stage & screen actor Amy Dowden Eliminated 7th
Kate Silverton BBC News presenter & journalist Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 8th
Graeme Swann England cricketer Oti Mabuse Eliminated 9th
Charles Venn Casualty actor Karen Clifton Eliminated 10th
Lauren Steadman Paralympic swimmer & paratriathlete AJ Pritchard Eliminated 11th
Ashley Roberts The Pussycat Dolls singer Pasha Kovalev Runners-up
Faye Tozer Steps singer Giovanni Pernice
Joe Sugg YouTube personality Dianne Buswell
Stacey Dooley Investigative journalist Kevin Clifton Winners

Series 17 (2019)

[edit]

On 13 February 2019, professional dancer Pasha Kovalev announced that he was leaving the show after competing on it for eight years.[76] On 10 April 2019, it was announced that judge Darcey Bussell had left the show after seven years.[77] On 22 July 2019, Motsi Mabuse was announced as the replacement for Bussell. On 30 July 2019, it was announced that Nancy Xu would be joining the cast of professional dancers.[78] On 5 September 2019, it was announced that Jamie Laing had withdrawn from the show due to a foot injury. He was later replaced by Kelvin Fletcher. In late October, Will Bayley left the competition due to a sustained leg injury.[79]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
James Cracknell Olympic rower Luba Mushtuk Eliminated 1st
Anneka Rice Television & radio presenter Kevin Clifton Eliminated 2nd
Dev Griffin BBC Radio 1 presenter Dianne Buswell Eliminated 3rd
David James England goalkeeper Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 4th
Catherine Tyldesley Coronation Street actress Johannes Radebe Eliminated 5th
Will Bayley Paralympic table tennis player Janette Manrara Withdrew
Emma Weymouth Fashion model & socialite Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 6th
Mike Bushell BBC Breakfast sports presenter Katya Jones Eliminated 7th
Michelle Visage RuPaul's Drag Race judge & singer Giovanni Pernice Eliminated 8th
Saffron Barker YouTube personality AJ Pritchard Eliminated 9th
Alex Scott England footballer Neil Jones Eliminated 10th
Chris Ramsey Stand-up comedian Karen Hauer Eliminated 11th
Emma Barton EastEnders actress Anton Du Beke Runners-up
Karim Zeroual CBBC presenter & actor Amy Dowden
Kelvin Fletcher Emmerdale actor & racing driver Oti Mabuse Winners

Series 18 (2020)

[edit]

On 6 March 2020, Kevin Clifton announced that he was leaving the show after seven years.[80] On 26 March 2020, AJ Pritchard also announced that he was leaving the show after four years.[81] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was confirmed that the series would be slightly shorter than planned.[82][83][84] Before the series began, the professional dancers and some of the crew isolated and tested for COVID-19 to then become a household. Strictly took over a hotel near the studios and the pro dancers learnt and filmed all the group routines for the series at once.[85] This allowed for the show to still include the professional group dances each week. On 21 August 2020, it was announced that Bruno Tonioli would not be on the judging panel but would appear virtually while he filmed Dancing with the Stars in the US. It was the first series since 2012 to begin in October.[86] On 12 November 2020, Nicola Adams and Katya Jones were forced to withdraw from the competition after Jones tested positive for COVID-19.[87] On 19 December 2020, Bill Bailey and Oti Mabuse were announced as the winners of the series, making Mabuse the second professional dancer to win the show twice and the first to win it consecutively, following her 2019 victory. This series featured the first all-female and same-sex partnership of Nicola Adams and Katya Jones.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Jacqui Smith Labour Party politician Anton Du Beke Eliminated 1st
Jason Bell NFL player & pundit Luba Mushtuk Eliminated 2nd
Nicola Adams Olympic boxer Katya Jones Withdrew
Max George The Wanted singer Dianne Buswell Eliminated 3rd
Caroline Quentin Actress & television presenter Johannes Radebe Eliminated 4th
Clara Amfo BBC Radio 1 presenter Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 5th
JJ Chalmers Television presenter & Invictus Games medallist Amy Dowden Eliminated 6th
Ranvir Singh Good Morning Britain presenter & journalist Giovanni Pernice Eliminated 7th
HRVY Singer & television presenter Janette Manrara Runners-up
Jamie Laing Made in Chelsea star Karen Hauer
Maisie Smith EastEnders actress Gorka Márquez
Bill Bailey Comedian, musician & actor Oti Mabuse Winners

Series 19 (2021)

[edit]

On 10 June 2021, it was announced that Janette Manrara would leave the show as a professional dancer and replace Zoe Ball as a new It Takes Two presenter. On 24 June, Anton Du Beke was announced as having joined the judging panel for this series instead of returning as a professional dancer, replacing Bruno Tonioli, who missed a second year due to continuing travel restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to the remaining fourteen professional dancers from series 18, all of whom returned for this series, four new professional dancers joined the show: Cameron Lombard, Jowita Przystał, Kai Widdrington and Nikita Kuzmin.[88]

This series marked the first time that two contestants withdrew from the competition. On 13 October 2021, Robert Webb withdrew from the competition for health reasons.[89] On 17 December 2021, AJ Odudu was forced to withdraw from the final after tearing a ligament in her right ankle.[90]

The series saw the first couple with a deaf contestant, actress Rose Ayling-Ellis and the first all-male partnership of John Whaite and Johannes Radebe.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Nina Wadia Stage & screen actress Neil Jones Eliminated 1st
Katie McGlynn Coronation Street actress Gorka Márquez Eliminated 2nd
Robert Webb Comedian & actor Dianne Buswell Withdrew
Greg Wise Film & television actor Karen Hauer Eliminated 3rd
Ugo Monye England rugby player & pundit Oti Mabuse Eliminated 4th
Judi Love Comedian & Loose Women panellist Graziano Di Prima Eliminated 5th
Adam Peaty Olympic swimmer Katya Jones Eliminated 6th
Sara Davies Dragons' Den investor & businesswoman Aljaž Škorjanec Eliminated 7th
Tom Fletcher McFly singer Amy Dowden Eliminated 8th
Tilly Ramsay Chef & television presenter Nikita Kuzmin Eliminated 9th
Dan Walker BBC Breakfast presenter & journalist Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 10th
Rhys Stephenson CBBC presenter Nancy Xu Eliminated 11th
AJ Odudu Television presenter Kai Widdrington Withdrew
John Whaite Baker & television presenter Johannes Radebe Runners-up
Rose Ayling-Ellis EastEnders actress Giovanni Pernice Winners

Series 20 (2022)

[edit]

The twentieth series began in September 2022.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Kaye Adams Loose Women panellist & journalist Kai Widdrington Eliminated 1st
Richie Anderson Television & radio presenter Giovanni Pernice Eliminated 2nd
Matt Goss Singer-songwriter Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 3rd
Jayde Adams Comedian & actress Karen Hauer Eliminated 4th
James Bye EastEnders actor Amy Dowden Eliminated 5th
Ellie Simmonds Paralympic swimmer Nikita Kuzmin Eliminated 6th
Tony Adams England footballer & manager Katya Jones Withdrew
Tyler West Kiss FM presenter Dianne Buswell Eliminated 7th
Ellie Taylor Comedian, actress & television presenter Johannes Radebe Eliminated 8th
Kym Marsh Actress, singer & Morning Live presenter Graziano Di Prima Eliminated 9th
Will Mellor Stage & screen actor Nancy Xu Eliminated 10th
Fleur East Singer-songwriter & radio presenter Vito Coppola Runners-up
Helen Skelton Television presenter Gorka Márquez
Molly Rainford Nova Jones actress & singer Carlos Gu
Hamza Yassin Wildlife presenter & cameraman Jowita Przystał Winners

Series 21 (2023)

[edit]

The twenty-first series began in September 2023.

In April 2023, Rylan Clark announced that he was leaving as co-host of It Takes Two. Fleur East, who was one of the finalists in series 20, was later announced as his replacement.[91]

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Result
Les Dennis Comedian, actor & television presenter Nancy Xu Eliminated 1st
Nikita Kanda BBC Asian Network presenter Gorka Márquez Eliminated 2nd
Jody Cundy Paralympic cyclist & swimmer Jowita Przystał Eliminated 3rd
Eddie Kadi Comedian & BBC Radio 1Xtra presenter Karen Hauer Eliminated 4th
Amanda Abbington Stage & screen actress Giovanni Pernice Withdrew
Zara McDermott Media personality & television presenter Graziano Di Prima Eliminated 5th
Adam Thomas Waterloo Road & Emmerdale actor Luba Mushtuk Eliminated 6th
Krishnan Guru-Murthy Channel 4 News presenter & journalist Lauren Oakley Eliminated 7th
Angela Rippon Television presenter, journalist & newsreader Kai Widdrington Eliminated 8th
Angela Scanlon Television presenter Carlos Gu Eliminated 9th
Nigel Harman Stage & screen actor Katya Jones Withdrew
Annabel Croft Professional tennis player & pundit Johannes Radebe Eliminated 10th
Bobby Brazier EastEnders actor & model Dianne Buswell Runners-up
Layton Williams Bad Education actor & West End performer Nikita Kuzmin
Ellie Leach Coronation Street actress Vito Coppola Winners

Series 22 (2024)

[edit]

The twenty-second series began in September 2024.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Status
Tom Dean Olympic swimmer Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 1st
Toyah Willcox Singer, actress & television presenter Neil Jones Eliminated 2nd
Nick Knowles Television presenter Luba Mushtuk Eliminated 3rd
Paul Merson England footballer & pundit Karen Hauer Eliminated 4th
Dr. Punam Krishan Morning Live doctor & author Gorka Márquez Eliminated 5th
Sam Quek Olympic field hockey player & television presenter Nikita Kuzmin Eliminated 6th
Shayne Ward Singer & actor Nancy Xu Eliminated 7th
Wynne Evans Opera singer & BBC Radio Wales presenter Katya Jones Eliminated 8th
Jamie Borthwick EastEnders actor Michelle Tsiakkas Eliminated 9th
Montell Douglas Olympic sprinter, bobsledder & Gladiators star Johannes Radebe Eliminated 10th
Pete Wicks Television personality Jowita Przystał Eliminated 11th
Tasha Ghouri Love Island finalist & model Aljaž Škorjanec Runners-up
JB Gill JLS singer & television presenter Amy Dowden (weeks 1–6)
Lauren Oakley (weeks 7–13)
Sarah Hadland Stage & screen actress Vito Coppola
Chris McCausland Stand-up comedian & actor Dianne Buswell Winners

Series 23 (2025)

[edit]

The twenty-third series began in September 2025.

Celebrity Notability Professional partner Status
Thomas Skinner The Apprentice contestant & businessman Amy Dowden Eliminated 1st
Ross King Television presenter & actor Jowita Przystał Eliminated 2nd
Chris Robshaw Former England rugby player Nadiya Bychkova Eliminated 3rd
Stefan Dennis Neighbours actor & singer Dianne Buswell Withdrew
Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink Former Netherlands footballer & manager Lauren Oakley Eliminated 4th
Ellie Goldstein Model & Malory Towers actress Vito Coppola Eliminated 5th
Harry Aikines-Aryeetey Former Olympic sprinter & Gladiators star Karen Hauer Eliminated 6th
Vicky Pattison Television personality Kai Widdrington Eliminated 7th
La Voix Drag queen & RuPaul's Drag Race UK finalist Aljaž Škorjanec Withdrew
Alex Kingston Stage & screen actress Johannes Radebe Participating
Amber Davies Love Island winner & stage actress Nikita Kuzmin Participating
Balvinder Sopal EastEnders actress Julian Caillon Participating
George Clarke Social media personality & podcaster Alexis Warr Participating
Karen Carney Former England footballer & pundit Carlos Gu Participating
Lewis Cope Former Emmerdale actor Katya Jones Participating

Specials

[edit]

Since the inception of Strictly Come Dancing in 2004, several special editions of the show have been transmitted by the BBC each year. These have included seasonal specials, charity specials, and variations of the Strictly Come Dancing format.

Strictly Come Dancing Live!

[edit]

Strictly Come Dancing Live! is a nationwide arena tour staged every year since 2008.[92]

Controversies

[edit]

2008 voting system

[edit]

On 13 December 2008, Strictly Come Dancing became the subject of press attention and viewer complaints about an error in the voting system during the semi-final of series six. In the show, three couples remained in the competition. After all three had performed and the judges had given their scores, two of the couples were in joint-first position on the leaderboard, with Tom Chambers and Camilla Dallerup in last place. This meant that, no matter how many public votes were cast in their favour, it was mathematically impossible for Chambers and Dallerup to avoid the dance-off. This oversight was initially unnoticed by producers until after the public vote became live and viewers were invited to call in and save their favourites at a cost of 15p per vote. Once the mistake was finally realised and the public vote was closed, it was announced that all three couples would be put through to the final, all the votes already cast would count towards the final result of the competition, and viewers could apply for a refund if they wished.[93]

The BBC received 1800 complaints about the incident,[94] while media regulator Ofcom received 297.[93] Jon Beazley, the BBC's Head of Entertainment Production, was interviewed on Strictly's spin-off show Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two on 15 December. He apologised for the oversight, referring to it as an "unprecedented situation". On the same day, the BBC posted a statement on its website, which clarified that an independent adjudicator had been consulted to reach a solution that would offer "fairness to the viewers who voted and the contestants themselves".[95] The BBC also stated that, following the mistake, "the voting and judging mechanisms used in all BBC voting programmes [had] been thoroughly examined".[93]

After conducting an investigation, Ofcom concluded that "the mistake had resulted from an oversight, rather than any shortcomings in the technical arrangements for voting or in the handling of votes received", and that they were "satisfied that appropriate steps were taken by the BBC and the disadvantage to viewers minimised". Ofcom also opined that "the BBC had been open and transparent with viewers about the mistake it made and the solution adopted".[93]

Dismissal of Arlene Phillips

[edit]

In June 2009, tabloid newspaper The Sun reported that the then 66-year-old judge Arlene Phillips, who had judged the show since its inception in 2004, was to be replaced by series five winner Alesha Dixon, then aged 30.[96] This was later confirmed by the BBC in July of that year.[97] Subsequently, the BBC was accused of ageism and sexism by several sources,[97][98] an accusation the corporation has faced before over the removal of several older female presenters, including Moira Stuart,[99] Juliet Morris,[100] Miriam O'Reilly,[100][99] Michaela Strachan,[100] Charlotte Smith[100] and Anna Ford.[101] The BBC denied the allegations that the decision to remove Phillips was due to her age.[97]

Furthermore, Dixon herself was criticised after the debut episode of the seventh series, the first to feature her as a judge. A total of 272 complaints were received by the BBC (bringing the total number about Dixon joining the programme to over 4,000) along with over 5,000 comments on Strictly Come Dancing's internet message board.[102] Dixon was compared unfavourably to Phillips, with claims that the former was "unsuitable", "unqualified" and lacked "knowledge, experience and talent".[102] However, Dixon was praised and defended from her critics by the BBC,[102] by fellow judge Craig Revel Horwood[102] and by Phillips herself.[103]

Anton Du Beke's racist comment

[edit]

In 2009, Du Beke said that his dance partner Laila Rouass "looked like a paki" after she had arrived at rehearsal with a spray tan. Du Beke apologized publicly,[104][105] and reiterated his remarks on It Takes Two, Strictly Come Dancing's companion show, stating that "I feel embarrassed. I feel stupid as well. It was a stupid thing to do, stupid thing to say ... I am mortified about it completely and, you know, Laila has been quite remarkably wonderful."[106] Rouass accepted his apology,[106] and stated in a 2011 interview: "The story had been blown out of proportion ... Anton didn’t mean to be offensive. I wouldn’t have danced with him if he was racist."[107] In 2016, she backed him to be a Strictly judge: "I think Anton would be a fabulous judge. He's so funny, I can’t tell you. I was so lucky to be paired with that man."[108]

Same-sex couples

[edit]

In 2015, in an interview with the Daily Mirror, Egghead C. J. de Mooi said that he was rejected by the show because he had wanted to dance with a same-sex partner.[109] The BBC denied that de Mooi had ever been under consideration for the show,[110] and also declared that "Strictly is a family show and we have chosen the traditional format of mixed-sex couples".[109] The press has reported on the issue on numerous occasions when gay celebrities have appeared on the show, including Will Young,[111] Susan Calman,[112] Robert Rinder,[113] Richard Coles[114] and Ranj Singh.[115] Strictly Come Dancing judges Shirley Ballas[115] and Craig Revel Horwood[116] have both expressed their support for introducing same-sex couples.

Same-sex partnerships have been featured on several international versions of the show, including Italy (2018), Australia (2019) and Denmark (2019).[117][118][119] On 3 November 2019, Johannes Radebe and fellow professional Graziano Di Prima performed together to Emeli Sandé's "Shine" on the Sunday results episode, the show's first individual same-sex dance.[120] On 2 September 2020, it was announced that boxer Nicola Adams would feature in the show's first same-sex couple for its eighteenth series.[121] She was partnered with professional dancer Katya Jones. In 2021, it was announced that John Whaite would feature in the first all-male same-sex couple with Johannes Radebe for the nineteenth series, with the two of them eventually finishing as the runners-up.[122] The American version of the show would also have a same-sex couple that same year, with JoJo Siwa and Jenna Johnson. Series 20 also included same-sex partnerships with Richie Anderson and Giovanni Pernice in an all-male partnership and Jayde Adams and Karen Hauer in an all-female partnership.[123] In Series 21, Layton Williams and Nikita Kuzmin competed as an all-male partnership, eventually finishing as one of the two runners-up couples.[124]

Misconduct of dancers and celebrities

[edit]

Giovanni Pernice

[edit]

In January 2024, The Sun reported that Amanda Abbington requested footage of her time training with Giovanni Pernice and was seeking legal advice over his training methods.[125] In March 2024, The Sun said that Abbington, Laura Whitmore and Ranvir Singh had met to discuss their negative experiences with Pernice on the show. Legal firm Carter Ruck told BBC News there were "numerous serious complaints" about his behaviour while filming Strictly Come Dancing.[126] On 16 May, it was reported by The Sun that Pernice had quit the show. Pernice denied all accusations of wrongdoing. His departure was confirmed by the BBC on 10 June.[127]

Graziano Di Prima

[edit]

In July 2024, the BBC's probe into misconduct brought further claims made by production staff, who observed Graziano Di Prima's behaviour towards dance partner Zara McDermott during the 2023 series. A source speaking to The Sun claimed that footage showing Di Prima's alleged treatment of McDermott "reduced those who have seen it to tears".[128] In a statement Di Prima said that he "deeply regretted his actions that led to his departure from [the show]".[129] The BBC has announced that Di Prima has left the show, and in the future a member of the production team would be present at all times during rehearsals.[130]

A third professional dancer has been identified as a "person of interest".[131]

Wynne Evans

[edit]

In 2024, Wynne Evans became embroiled in controversy after allegedly making a sexualized remark about dancer Janette Manrara during a Strictly live tour photocall, which was reported by the press and led to public backlash and accusations of misogyny. Evans denied the remark was sexual or directed at Manrara, explaining it was an inside joke nickname for fellow contestant Jamie Borthwick, but nonetheless issued an apology and agreed to resign from his BBC radio show and the tour to focus on his wellbeing. The scandal was compounded by a separate incident involving a TikTok "body language experiment" with dance partner Katya Jones, which was misinterpreted and also prompted an apology. Throughout, Evans maintained that his actions were misunderstood and expressed regret over the effect on his reputation.[132][133]

Ratings

[edit]

An example of Strictly Come Dancing's popularity is that, after episodes, electricity use in the United Kingdom rises significantly as viewers who have waited for the show to end begin boiling water for tea, a phenomenon known as TV pick-up. National Grid personnel watch the show to know when closing credits begin so they can prepare for the surge.[134]

All ratings are from BARB. Series averages exclude Christmas special and launch show.

Series Series premiere Series finale Average
UK viewers
(in millions)[135]
1 15 May 2004 3 July 2004 6.45
2 23 October 2004 11 December 2004 8.61
3 15 October 2005 17 December 2005 8.37
4 7 October 2006 23 December 2006 8.55
5 6 October 2007 22 December 2007 9.05
6 20 September 2008 20 December 2008 9.64
7 18 September 2009 19 December 2009 9.22
8 1 October 2010 18 December 2010 11.07
9 30 September 2011 17 December 2011 10.98
10 5 October 2012 22 December 2012 10.80
11 27 September 2013 21 December 2013 10.71
12 26 September 2014 20 December 2014 10.25
13 25 September 2015 19 December 2015 10.63
14 23 September 2016 17 December 2016 10.96
15 23 September 2017 16 December 2017 11.14
16 22 September 2018 15 December 2018 10.59
17 21 September 2019 14 December 2019 10.42
18 24 October 2020 19 December 2020 10.77
19 25 September 2021 18 December 2021 9.72
20 24 September 2022 17 December 2022 9.09
21 23 September 2023 16 December 2023 8.55
22 21 September 2024 14 December 2024 8.21

Awards

[edit]

The show has won a Rose d'Or award for "Best Variety Show", competition from reality shows from twelve other different countries.[136] It has also won two awards for "Best Reality Show" at the TRIC Awards and two at the TV Quick Awards for "Best Talent Show". It has also received four BAFTA Award nominations.[137]

The show won the award of "Most Popular Talent Show" at the National Television Awards in 2008, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024.[138]

In the Guinness World Records 2010 edition, the format of Strictly Come Dancing was named the most successful television show with the format being sold to more than 38 countries worldwide.

Year Award Category Nominee Result Ref.
2004
National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Programme Strictly Come Dancing Nominated
2005
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Karen Smith, Richard Hopkins, Izzie Pick Nominated
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Costume Design Su Judd Nominated [139]
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Strictly Come Dancing Won [140]
National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Programme Nominated [141]
TRIC Awards Entertainment Programme Won [142]
Rose d'Or Variety Won
2006
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Karen Smith, Richard Hopkins, Sam Donnelly Nominated [143]
National Television Awards Most Popular Entertainment Programme Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [144]
TRIC Awards Entertainment Programme Nominated [145]
2007
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Sound: Fiction/Entertainment Gary Clarke Nominated [146]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Sound – Entertainment & Non-Drama Productions BBC Studios Sound Team Nominated [147]
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [148]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [149]
2008
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Martin Scott, Sam Donnelly, Clodagh O'Donoghue Nominated [150]
Audience Award Strictly Come Dancing Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Nominated [151]
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Won [152]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [153]
2009
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Nominated [154]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [155]
2010
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Nominated [156]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [157]
2011
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [158]
Best Entertainment Craft Team Su Judd, Patrick Doherty, Mark Kenyon, Lisa Armstrong Nominated
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Lighting For Multicamera Mark Kenyon (for "Halloween Special") Nominated [159]
Make Up Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Productions Lisa Armstrong (for "Halloween Special") Nominated
Sound – Entertainment & Non Drama Tony Revell, Andy Tapley, Howard Hopkins (for "Halloween Special") Nominated
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [160]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [161]
2012
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Productions Vicky Gill Nominated [162]
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [163]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [164]
2013
British Academy Television Awards Radio Times Audience Award Nominated [165]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [166]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Vicky Gill Nominated [167]
National Television Awards Most Popular Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [168]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [169]
2014
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Nominated [170]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [171]
Special Awards Strictly Come Dancing Won
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Vicky Gill Nominated [172]
Multicamera Work Nikki Parsons and Camera Team Nominated
Make Up Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Lisa Armstrong Won
Production Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Patrick Doherty Nominated
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [173]
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Comedy/Entertainment Won [174]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [175]
2015
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Louise Rainbow, Nikki Parsons, Vanessa Clark, Jason Gilkison Nominated [176]
Radio Times Audience Award Strictly Come Dancing Nominated
Best Entertainment Performance Claudia Winkleman Nominated
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Make Up and Hair Design Lisa Armstrong, Neale Pirie Nominated [177]
Best Costume Design Vicky Gill Nominated
Best Entertainment Craft Team Lisa Armstrong, Patrick Doherty, Vicky Gill, Tony Revell Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Performance Claudia Winkleman Won [178]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Productions Vicky Gill Won [179]
Make Up Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Productions Lisa Armstrong, Neale Pirie Nominated
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [180]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [181]
2016
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Louise Rainbow, Vinnie Shergill, Sarah James, Nikki Parsons Won [182]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Entertainment Craft Team Jason Gilkison, Mark Kenyon, Tony Revell, Dave Newton Nominated [183]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Multicamera Work Camera Team, Nikki Parsons Nominated [184]
Production Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Patrick Doherty Nominated
Sound – Entertainment & Non Drama Tony Revell Nominated
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [186]
2017
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Won [187]
Best Entertainment Performance Claudia Winkleman Nominated
Virgin TV's Must-See Moment "Ed Balls' Gangnam Style" Nominated
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [188]
Best Entertainment Craft Team David Newton, Mark Kenyon, Jason Gilkison, Vicky Gill Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Strictly Come Dancing Nominated [189]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment and Non Drama Vicky Gill & The Costume Team Nominated [190]
Multicamera Work Camera Team, Nikki Parsons Nominated
National Television Awards TV Judge Len Goodman Nominated
Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Entertainment Nominated
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [191]
2018
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [192]
Best Entertainment Craft Team Jason Gilkison, Mark Kenyon, Patrick Doherty, David Newton Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Entertainment Performance Claudia Winkleman Nominated [193]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Director – Multicamera Nikki Parsons Won [194]
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [195]
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Entertainment Nominated
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Nominated [196]
2019
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Louise Rainbow, Sarah James, Robin Lee-Perrella, Jason Gilkison Nominated [197]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Entertainment Craft Team Lisa Armstrong, Jason Gilkinson, Mark Kenyon Nominated
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Costume Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Vicky Gill Nominated [198]
Make Up Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Lisa Armstrong Won
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards Best Entertainment Nominated
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [199]
2020
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Won [200]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Entertainment Craft Team David Bishop, Patrick Doherty, Vicky Gill and Andy Tapley Won [201]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Production Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Catherine Land, Patrick Doherty Nominated [202]
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Won [203]
2021
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Nominated [204]
Best Entertainment Performance Claudia Winkleman Nominated
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated
Best Entertainment Craft Team David Bishop, Darren Lovell, David Newton, Richard Sillitto, Andy Tapley, Catherine Land Nominated
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Nominated [205]
Rose d'Or Studio Entertainment Won [206]
2022
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Nominated [207]
Virgin TV's Must-See Moment "Rose and Giovanni silent dance to 'Symphony'" Won
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated [208]
Best Entertainment Craft Team David Bishop, Patrick Doherty, Catherine Land, David Newton, Richard Sillitto and Tom Young Nominated
Royal Television Society Programme Awards Judges' Award Strictly Come Dancing Won [209]
Royal Television Society Craft & Design Awards Make Up Design – Entertainment & Non Drama Lisa Armstrong, Lisa Davey Won [210]
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [185]
Talent Show Judge Anton Du Beke Won
TRIC Awards Reality Programme Strictly Come Dancing Won [211]
2023
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Nominated [212]
British Academy Television Craft Awards Best Director: Multi-Camera Nikki Parsons Nominated
Best Entertainment Craft Team Catherine Land, David Bishop, Patrick Doherty, Richard Silitto, David Newton, Joe Phillips Won
National Television Awards Talent Show Strictly Come Dancing Won [213]
TRIC Awards Entertainment Programme Nominated [214]
2024
British Academy Television Awards Best Entertainment Programme Won [215]
National Television Awards Talent Show Won [216]
Expert Anton Du Beke Nominated
TRIC Awards Entertainment Programme Strictly Come Dancing Won [217]
2025
TV Choice Awards Talent Show Won [218]
National Television Awards Won [219]

Strictly Come Dancing: The Game

[edit]

In 2016, BBC Worldwide commissioned a match-3 mobile app game published by Donut Publishing and developed by Exient Entertainment. The game uses a mix of hand animation and motion-captured data for all the dances in the game, using pro dancers from the show (Chloe Hewitt and Neil Jones). The mo-cap process was featured on It Takes Two in the build-up to the release of the app. The game features over 150 dresses and 9 dances: Quickstep, Jive, Tango, Salsa, Charleston, Viennese Waltz, Rumba, Cha Cha Cha, and Paso Doble. It was released on the App Store and Google Play in early 2016, and is regularly updated with new dance features alongside new seasons of the show.[220]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

is a British television dance competition series produced by the , in which celebrity contestants are paired with professional and Latin dancers to perform live routines each week, with elimination determined by a of judges' scores and votes. The programme emphasises technical proficiency in styles such as , , , cha-cha, and salsa, culminating in a final where the winning couple receives the Glitterball Trophy. It premiered on 15 May 2004 with eight celebrity participants and has since expanded to typically 15 couples per series.
The show is hosted by and , who manage the live broadcasts on Saturday evenings, while a panel of judges—including head judge , , , and —provides critiques and scores ranging from 1 to 10 per dancer. Weekly results shows feature dance-offs for the lowest-scoring couples, where judges decide survival based on comparative performances. The format, adapted from the American , has spawned companion programmes like It Takes Two for behind-the-scenes analysis and live arena tours. Strictly Come Dancing has achieved substantial viewership, with finals regularly exceeding 8 million viewers, such as the 2024 finale that averaged 8.6 million, though launch episodes have seen declines to around 6-7 million in recent years amid broader television trends and production issues. It has received accolades including the TRIC Award for Reality Programme and for talent shows, reflecting its status as a family-oriented entertainment staple. In recent series, the programme has encountered controversies involving allegations of verbal , physical aggression, and a reported toxic rehearsal environment, prompting investigations, the departure of professional dancers and , and the implementation of chaperones and welfare protocols. Separate probes into alleged on-set drug use have also been launched, though outcomes remain pending or unresolved in public reporting. These incidents, often amplified by media coverage from outlets with institutional incentives to highlight institutional lapses, have correlated with viewership dips but have not halted the show's continuation.

History and Development

Conception and Launch

Strictly Come Dancing originated as a revival of the BBC's longstanding dancing programme , which had aired from 1949 to 1998, but reimagined with celebrities partnering professional dancers in a competitive elimination format to appeal to broader audiences. The concept was developed by BBC entertainment executives Fenia Vardanis and Richard Hopkins, who sought to modernize the format amid concerns that traditional shows had lost relevance; Karen Smith from further refined it, insisting on authentic elements like a live , sprung dance floor, and a special week at Blackpool's Tower to gain buy-in from skeptical professionals wary of diluting the genre's standards. Initially titled Pro Celebrity Come Dancing, the show secured veteran entertainer as host before finalizing its structure. The programme's name blended the heritage of with the 1992 Australian film to evoke glamour and irony around rigid dance rules, aiming to inject showbiz flair into a potentially niche revival. Produced by the with input from Hopkins, who had experience with reality formats like Big Brother, it addressed early challenges such as professionals' distrust of celebrity involvement and logistical issues, including adapting the iconic glitterball trophy for venues. The format emphasized weekly rehearsals, live performances of standard and Latin dances, judging by experts, and viewer-voted eliminations, positioning it as family-oriented Saturday night entertainment. It launched on on 15 May 2004, co-presented by Forsyth and , with the first series featuring eight celebrity-professional pairs and concluding on 3 July 2004 after a month of weekly shows. Judges included as head judge alongside , , and , focusing on technical critique. Despite initial risks and post-launch viewer complaints about its modern twists, the debut averaged strong ratings, peaking at around 10 million viewers, leading to a second series commission within four months and establishing its trajectory as a ratings powerhouse.

Early Success and Format Evolution

The inaugural series of Strictly Come Dancing aired from 15 May to 3 July 2004, featuring eight celebrity-professional pairs competing in and Latin dances, with journalist and professional dancer emerging as winners after defeating runners-up Christopher Parker and Hanna Karttunen in the final. The program quickly gained traction, drawing 7.8 million viewers—a 43% audience share—for the main show during the final week, signaling strong initial public interest in its blend of celebrity participation, live performances, and judging by experts including as host. Subsequent early series built on this momentum, with viewership rising week-over-week; for example, during series 2 in October 2004, audiences grew from 6.1 million to nearly 7 million, and the show occasionally outperformed competitors like The X Factor, attracting 8.4 million viewers in one November episode. This early popularity, evidenced by consistent Saturday night ratings in the 7-8 million range through 2004-2006, established Strictly as a BBC staple and contributed to its recognition as a leading reality format, later exported internationally. Format-wise, the early structure emphasized weekly live performances of core dances such as the , cha-cha-cha, , , , jive, , paso doble, and , scored by a panel out of 40 points and combined with viewer telephone votes for elimination decisions. As success prompted expansion, the number of couples increased beyond the initial eight to accommodate growing interest, while competition duration extended from the concise seven-week series 1 to longer seasons with more performance rounds by series 3 in 2005. These adaptations maintained the core public-judge hybrid elimination process but allowed for broader celebrity lineups and refined pacing, without major overhauls until later years.

Key Production Changes

In the early series of Strictly Come Dancing, production emphasized a controlled structure for dances, with contestants alternating between and Latin styles in initial weeks to ensure variety and progression. This approach shifted before series 10, allowing couples greater flexibility to select any dance type earlier in the competition, reflecting adaptations to viewer feedback and competitive dynamics. Results show production underwent a notable adjustment starting from series 5, moving from live broadcasts on Saturday nights to pre-recorded episodes filmed on Saturdays and aired on Sundays, incorporating a dance-off elimination format (except in series 8 and 9). This change aimed to manage scheduling and enhance post-performance content, such as group routines, while maintaining tension through edited reveals. Production scale expanded concurrently, with the number of dancers increasing from 8 in series 1 (2004) to 20 by series 20, enabling larger ensembles and more elaborate staging. Sets and costumes evolved from minimal props in early seasons to themed, intricate designs, particularly for specials like Week, supported by growing budgets and audience demand. Series 18 (2020) introduced temporary production modifications due to the , including no live , protocols, and a "bubble" system for participants to minimize health risks. Audience seating reverted briefly to small tables around the dancefloor during restrictions, echoing early series setups before standard rows of chairs were adopted. Following allegations of misconduct in rehearsals during series 21 and 22 (2023–2024), involving professional dancers such as and , the implemented enhanced welfare protocols in July 2024. These included mandatory chaperones in all rehearsal rooms, the addition of two dedicated welfare producers (one for celebrities, one for professionals), and expanded duty-of-care training for dancers, crew, and production staff. The measures addressed reported issues like claims from celebrities including and , prioritizing participant safety without altering core on-air format.

Format and Rules

Competition Structure

Strictly Come Dancing pairs 15 celebrities with professional dancers at the season's launch, forming mixed-sex couples who prepare routines in predetermined or Latin styles each week. Rehearsals occur under production supervision, including welfare producers, with a cap of 48 hours per week to balance training intensity and participant well-being. The competition unfolds over 12-14 weeks, starting with a non-elimination where all couples perform, followed by progressive eliminations until four finalists compete in the Grand Final. Live performances air weekly on Saturday evenings, with each couple executing one (or two in later stages like the semi-final) choreographed routine to a popular song, judged on technique, timing, and execution. The four judges—, , , and —award scores from 1 to 10 each, totaling up to 40 points per performance, which contribute to a cumulative leaderboard when combined with viewer input. Public voting, conducted online via or the app post-performance, equals the judges' scores in weight (50/50 split) to determine safety, with votes converted proportionally to points; ties are resolved by public preference. The two couples with the lowest combined totals enter a dance-off during Sunday's results show, reprising their routines for ' re-evaluation. Each votes to save one couple based on which showed greater improvement or merit, aiming for consensus; in deadlocks, a designated 's decides elimination. From the 2025 series, this casting role rotates weekly among rather than defaulting to head , a change implemented to distribute decision-making and mitigate targeted criticism. The process continues until the semi-final (five couples, two dances each), narrowing to four for the final, where competitors perform a judges' choice, showdance, and favorite routine; public votes alone determine the winner, treating ' scores as advisory. This structure ensures viewer influence can override , as even high-scoring pairs risk the bottom via low public support.

Dance Styles and Scoring

Strictly Come Dancing features a core set of ten dance styles divided between Standard (ballroom) and Latin categories, which have been performed since the show's in 2004. The Standard dances include the , , , and , emphasizing closed hold positions, smooth gliding movements, and rise-and-fall actions aligned with the music's rhythm. The Latin dances comprise the cha-cha-cha, jive, paso doble, , and , characterized by open holds, hip action, and more flirtatious or dramatic expressions, with footwork focused on quick, syncopated steps. Additional specialty dances are introduced in later weeks or themed episodes, expanding beyond the core ten to include the American smooth (a hybrid of ballroom and Latin with open holds and lifts), (featuring close embrace and improvisational flair), Charleston (energetic 1920s flapper-style with syncopated kicks), salsa (Cuban-influenced with partnering turns and hip isolations), and occasionally freestyle or couple's choice routines allowing creative interpretations like contemporary or . These variations, such as the or rock 'n' roll, appear sporadically based on series themes or challenges, with rules requiring adherence to each style's technical fundamentals to avoid deductions. Scoring is determined by a panel of four judges, each awarding a mark from 0 to 10 per performance, yielding a maximum of 40 points per couple per dance. Judges assess based on execution of required technique, timing to the music, posture, content fulfillment (e.g., incorporating specific lifts or figures for the style), and overall performance quality, though subjective elements like influence scores. Weekly totals combine these judge points with public telephone and app votes, converted into ranked points (e.g., the highest-scoring couple receives points equal to the number of remaining participants), ensuring no elimination relies solely on judges' tallies as viewer preference can override leaderboard positions.

Judging and Elimination Processes

The judging panel consists of four members: , head judge , , and . Each judge awards a score from 1 to 10 for technical execution, content, and performance quality after every dance routine performed by a celebrity-professional couple. These individual scores are aggregated to yield a maximum of 40 points per couple per performance. Judges' scores are converted into a ranking system where the highest-scoring couple receives points equal to the number of competing couples that week (e.g., 15 points if 15 couples remain), with subsequent ranks receiving one fewer point down to 1. In cases of tied scores, both couples receive the higher points value, and the next rank is reduced accordingly (e.g., two couples tied for first both get 15 points, third gets 13). These points represent the judges' contribution to the weekly standings and are combined on a 50-50 basis with equivalent points derived from viewer votes, ensuring no couple is safe based solely on judges' scores. Viewer votes, cast online via a BBC account during live episodes, are tallied similarly into ranking points, with voters able to allocate up to five selections per couple per voting window by clicking a "+" icon next to their names on the Strictly homepage. Voting opens after all first-round performances and closes at specified times each night, with results independently verified before conversion to points. Ties in the combined judges-viewer points total are first broken by raw viewer vote counts; unresolved ties proceed to a judges' decision. Eliminations begin in week 2, with the two couples holding the lowest combined points entering a dance-off during the results show. In the dance-off, each couple reprises one of their recent routines, after which the judges deliberate and vote to save one pair, citing factors such as improvement, technique, and overall merit. If the judges' votes split evenly (2-2), a casting vote determines the outcome; prior to series 23 in 2025, this was held by head judge Shirley Ballas, but the format changed to rotate the casting vote among panel members, selected weekly by public input to distribute decision-making responsibility. The eliminated couple exits the competition immediately following the decision. In the grand final, judges' scores serve only as a reference, with the winner determined solely by public vote.

Cast and Production Elements

Presenters and Hosts

has served as a presenter since the show's debut on 18 May 2004, initially co-hosting the main programme alongside . Forsyth, a long-established British entertainer, hosted from series 1 through 11, spanning 2004 to 2013, during which he became synonymous with the show's opening catchphrases and audience engagement. His tenure contributed to the programme's early popularity, with Forsyth appearing in 10 full series before stepping down at age 86, citing the demanding schedule as a factor. Claudia Winkleman first joined the production in 2004 as host of the companion show Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two, before transitioning to co-present the main results episodes from series 8 in 2010. She fully co-hosted the flagship programme with Daly starting in series 12 in 2014, following Forsyth's exit, forming a presenting duo that emphasized rapport and continuity through 22 series. Winkleman temporarily stepped aside for the 2011 results shows due to , with substituting. On 23 October 2025, Daly and Winkleman announced their departure after the conclusion of series 23, stating they had "loved working as a duo" but sought new opportunities. The confirmed the change, with no immediate successors named, amid speculation linking the move to the show's evolving format and external pressures. Guest hosts have occasionally filled in for specials or absences, such as Forsyth's return for the 2014 launch, but the core duo of Daly and Winkleman stabilized the presentation through the .

Judges Panel

The judging panel of Strictly Come Dancing consists of four and experts who provide critiques and award scores out of 10 for technical execution, content, and showmanship, with the head judge holding the authority to break ties in leaderboard disputes. The panel's composition has evolved since the show's launch in 2004, reflecting changes in personnel due to retirements, scheduling conflicts, and production decisions, while maintaining a core emphasis on professional credentials in dance adjudication. has served continuously since series 1, recognized for his stringent focus on technique. The original panel for series 1 (2004) included head judge , known for his encyclopedic knowledge of ballroom traditions; , a choreographer emphasizing precision; and Revel Horwood, with joining in series 3 (2005) for his energetic Latin expertise. Phillips departed after series 6 (2008), replaced by singer for series 7–9 (2009–2011), a move that drew criticism for prioritizing youth over experience, as Phillips was 66 at the time and had been a fixture in dance judging. Dixon's tenure ended upon her move to , succeeded by from series 10 (2012) to 17 (2018), a former principal ballerina valued for her classical perspective. Goodman retired as head judge after series 14 (2016), with assuming the role in series 15 (2017), bringing her competitive credentials as a 10-time Latin champion. Bussell exited in 2019 citing family commitments, replaced by , a South African-German Latin champion and winner of the German Let's Dance. Tonioli stepped back after series 18 (2020) to focus on the U.S. , leading to — a long-time professional dancer on the show—joining as the fourth judge from series 19 (2021).
JudgeTenure (Series)Notable Background
1–14 (2004–2016)Head judge; ballroom historian and former dancer
1–6 (2004–2008)Choreographer; West End and TV director
1–present (2004–)Ballet and ballroom coach; longest-serving judge
3–18 (2005–2020)Latin champion; choreographer for music videos
7–9 (2009–2011)Singer; brief dance experience as contestant
10–17 (2012–2018)Royal Ballet principal; ballroom partnerships
15–present (2017–)Head judge; Latin world champion
18–present (2019–)Latin champion; German TV judge
Anton du Beke19–present (2021–)Professional dancer on show since 2004
For series 23 (), the panel remains Ballas, du Beke, Mabuse, and Revel Horwood, with no announced changes amid ongoing scrutiny of the show's production practices. Guest judges have occasionally appeared, such as in early series or specials, but the core four-person format has predominated.

Professional Dancers

The professional dancers on Strictly Come Dancing are accomplished and Latin competitors tasked with training partners in ten core styles, choreographing routines, and performing both individual and numbers. Recruited primarily from international competitive circuits, they often possess credentials such as British National Championship titles or successes, ensuring high technical standards for the program. The roster typically comprises 14 to 16 dancers, balanced by gender, though this fluctuates with retirements, injuries, and production decisions to maintain dynamism. For the 2025 series (series 23), the lineup includes returning professionals , , , , , Neil Jones, , Gorka Marquez, , and , alongside newcomers Julian Caillon and Alexis Warr. Over the show's history since 2004, the professional ensemble has seen significant turnover, with early stalwarts like —winner of series 1 with —departing after series 9 amid reported tensions with producers, and serving from inception through series 18 before shifting to judging duties. Notable exits include multiple-time winners such as after series 19 and following two victories (series 10 and 15), often for family or career pursuits. Recent years have featured high-profile departures linked to misconduct allegations, including and in 2024, prompting investigations into training room conduct and the introduction of mandatory welfare protocols for subsequent series. Other former pros, such as James Jordan (series 2–11) and (series 6–14, with one Glitterball Trophy in series 12), have transitioned to choreography, touring shows, or independent teaching.

Music, Staging, and Companion Programming

The music for Strictly Come Dancing is performed live by a band led by musical director Dave Arch, who has arranged and conducted since series 4 in 2006. The ensemble includes musicians on guitars (John Parrichelli and Paul Dunne), keyboards (Jeff Leach and Pete Murray), bass (Trevor Barry), and additional instruments, delivering arrangements of popular songs tailored to each dance routine. This live performance approach avoids reliance on pre-recorded tracks for the main routines, emphasizing real-time adaptation to dancers' timing, though vocalists and playback elements supplement certain segments. In October 2024, production adjustments reduced the band's visibility or scale amid cost considerations, yet Arch's leadership persisted into the 2025 series. Staging occurs at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, utilizing a 15,825-square-foot BBC Studioworks space accommodating a 750-person audience and expansive dance floor. The set features a robust steel framework with 15 mezzanine levels, staircases for presenter entrances, and oversized spherical chandeliers for dramatic illumination. Lighting rigs incorporate over 80 Chauvet COLORdash Accent Quad fixtures, Vari-Lite VL1100E LEDs for key lighting, and Robe moving heads for dynamic effects, enabling rapid scene changes across themed weeks. Augmented reality (AR) and LED graphics, supplied by firms like JP Motion and Potion Pictures, integrate virtual elements such as floating props or enhanced backgrounds, introduced prominently from 2018 onward to amplify visual spectacle without physical alterations. Companion programming centers on Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two, a series launched in 2004 during the main show's second series to provide extended coverage. Aired weekdays for 12 weeks per season, it features rehearsals footage, judge interviews, and performance analyses, hosted initially by (2004–2013) and later Zoë Ball, with and taking over for series 23 in 2025. The format replaced an earlier companion, Strictly Come Dancing: On Three, and focuses on behind-the-scenes insights, including pro dancer challenges and fan reactions, broadcast from separate studios to complement the flagship without overlapping airtime.

Series Overviews

Series 1–5 (2004–2007)

Strictly Come Dancing launched on on 15 May 2004 with its debut series, featuring eight celebrity contestants paired with professional dancers competing in and Latin routines over seven weeks. The format involved weekly live performances judged by , , , and , combined with public telephone voting to determine eliminations, culminating in the final on 3 July 2004. News presenter and her partner emerged as winners, defeating runner-up and in a close contest that highlighted Kaplinsky's rapid improvement from novice to competitive level. The second series aired from 23 September to 11 December 2004, expanding to nine couples and maintaining the core structure of alternating dance weeks with results shows hosted by and . Actress and professional Darren Bennett won the Glitterball Trophy, edging out and , with Halfpenny's performances noted for technical precision despite her limited prior dance experience. This series introduced group dances in early rounds to showcase all couples, a feature retained in subsequent early seasons to build audience familiarity before individual spotlights intensified. Viewer engagement grew, averaging around 7 million per episode, establishing the show's appeal through accessible celebrity transformations. Series 3, broadcast from 15 October to 17 December 2005, increased to 12 couples, including sports figures like cricketer , who partnered with to claim victory over runners-up and . The season emphasized endurance with progressive elimination based on combined judge scores—out of 40 per dance—and public votes, where low-scoring pairs faced off in dance-offs starting mid-series. Notable for introducing more diverse celebrity backgrounds, such as politician Ann Widdecombe's humorous yet resilient participation, the series drew peak audiences exceeding 9 million for the final, reflecting rising popularity without altering core rules like mandatory waltzes and cha-chas in initial weeks. In 2006, series 4 featured 14 contestants from 7 January to 29 July, adopting a split transmission across winter and summer blocks to accommodate scheduling, with cricketer and Karen Hardy dominating to win against and . This edition tested stamina through extended runs, incorporating themed weeks like "Eras" for historical costumes, but retained strict sequencing of dances to ensure balanced skill progression. Ramprakash's cricketing discipline translated to consistent high scores, often 35-40 from judges, underscoring the format's emphasis on partnership synergy over raw talent. Average viewership hovered at 8-10 million, with no eliminations until week four after initial group showcases. Series 5, running from 6 October to 22 December 2007, maintained 14 couples and the established elimination process, where judge critiques focused on technique, content, and showmanship, leading to Alesha Dixon's triumph with over and by a narrow two-point margin in viewer votes. Dixon, a singer with minimal background, exemplified the show's narrative of underdog success through rigorous training, as her final freestyle earned perfect scores. The series saw minor production tweaks, such as enhanced backstage footage in companion show It Takes Two, but preserved early-season controls on variety to prevent overload, with public voting influencing 50% of survival decisions. Finals peaked at over 11 million viewers, signaling the format's solidification before later expansions in contestant numbers and types.
SeriesAir DatesWinner and PartnerRunners-UpCouples
1 (2004)15 May – 3 July & & 8
2 (2004)23 Sep – 11 Dec & Darren Bennett & 9
3 (2005)15 Oct – 17 Dec & Lilia Kopylova & 12
4 (2006)7 Jan – 29 Jul & Karen Hardy & 14
5 (2007)6 Oct – 22 Dec & & 14

Series 6–10 (2008–2012)

The sixth series aired from 13 September to 20 December 2008, with 14 celebrity contestants paired with professional dancers competing weekly in ballroom and Latin routines judged by , , , and . Actor Tom Chambers and partner Camilla Dallerup won the Glitterball Trophy, defeating S Club 7's with in second place and presenter with in third. The seventh series ran from 19 September to 19 December 2009, retaining the 14-couple format and the same judges except for the addition of replacing Phillips. presenter Chris Hollins and emerged as champions, overcoming actor with as runners-up, noted for Hollins's improvement from low initial scores to a competitive final performance. Series eight, broadcast from 11 September to 18 December 2010, introduced stricter training protocols and maintained 14 pairs under the core judging panel of Horwood, Dixon, Goodman, and Tonioli. Actress and debutant claimed victory, edging out Countryfile's with ; the series marked Bruce Forsyth's reduced role to results shows only alongside . The ninth series spanned 10 September to 17 December 2011, featuring 14 contestants and the established judges, with drummer and securing the win over actress with in second and actor with in third, highlighted by Judd's consistent high scores in Latin dances. Series ten aired from 15 September to 22 December 2012, again with 14 pairs and judges including guest appearances, where Olympic gymnast Louis Smith and triumphed, surpassing actress with James Jordan; a mid-series injury to Kristina Rihanoff's partner led to her replacement by , though not directly impacting the final.
SeriesYearWinnerProfessional PartnerRunners-Up
62008Tom ChambersCamilla Dallerup &
72009Chris Hollins &
82010Matt Baker &
92011 &
102012Louis Smith & James Jordan

Series 11–15 (2013–2017)

Series 11, which aired from September 27 to December 21, 2013, was won by model partnered with , who triumphed in a closely contested final against , , and . The series marked the final appearance of longtime host in a primary role, with and handling much of the presenting duties. The final drew a peak audience exceeding 12 million viewers, though it represented the lowest final rating since 2009. In series 12, broadcast from September 26 to December 20, 2014, television presenter and claimed victory, edging out and in the public vote despite strong judging scores. Flack's win highlighted the influence of viewer telephone votes in determining the champion, as the couple led in cumulative judge points but relied on public support for the title. Series 13 ran from September 25 to December 19, 2015, crowning singer and as winners after they overcame a final-round judges' placement at the bottom, propelled by substantial public backing against competitors including . The season featured intense competition, with McGuiness's progress from early vulnerabilities to polished performances underscoring the format's emphasis on improvement over initial skill. The fourteenth series, from September 23 to December 17, 2016, saw sports presenter and secure the glitterball trophy, topping both judge scores and public votes ahead of and . This edition achieved one of the show's highest viewership peaks, with the final attracting up to 13.1 million viewers and an average series audience reflecting sustained popularity. Oduba's emotional victory emphasized the program's appeal to non-dancers who excel through training rigor. Series 15, airing September 9 to December 16, 2017, concluded with actor Joe McFadden and Katya Jones as champions, prevailing via public vote despite second-place judge scores over runner-up Alexandra Burke. McFadden's journey from Holby City to dance floor success exemplified the series' narrative of transformation, with the final underscoring viewer preference in tiebreakers.
SeriesYearCelebrity WinnerProfessional PartnerFinal Date
112013December 21
122014December 20
132015December 19
142016December 17
152017December 16

Series 16–20 (2018–2022)

Series 16, which premiered with a launch show on 8 September 2018, featured 15 celebrity-professional pairs competing over 14 weeks, culminating in journalist Stacey Dooley and partner Kevin Clifton winning the Glitterball Trophy on 15 December 2018. The series introduced a "Couple's Choice" dance category, allowing participants greater flexibility in routine selection beyond standard ballroom and Latin styles. A major off-screen event involved comedian Seann Walsh kissing his professional partner Katya Jones, both in relationships at the time, captured in photographs published during week six, leading to public backlash and scrutiny over the show's informal "curse" of romantic entanglements. Series 17 launched on 21 September 2019 and saw actor , a late replacement for Made in Chelsea's , triumph with professional on 14 December 2019, securing victory through strong public support despite lower judges' scores in the final. The competition maintained the standard format with weekly eliminations based on combined judges' and viewer votes, featuring 15 couples and no major structural changes from prior seasons. The eighteenth series, delayed and condensed due to the , began live shows on 24 October 2020 after a launch on 17 October, running for nine weeks with 12 participants and strict protocols including audience masking and reduced episode length to minimize health risks. Comedian , aged 55, became the oldest winner in the show's history, partnering to claim the title on 19 December 2020, praised for technical progress and audience appeal amid the restricted production environment. Series 19 returned to a fuller schedule starting 18 September 2021, with actress , the first deaf contestant to win, and partner lifting the trophy on 18 December 2021 after routines including a silent to highlight her hearing impairment. The season featured 15 couples and incorporated group performances with enhanced accessibility elements, such as integration. In series 20, which aired from 24 September 2022, wildlife cameraman and newcomer won on 17 December 2022, defeating finalists including singer through consistent high scores and public votes favoring their energetic styles. The format reverted to pre-pandemic norms with 15 participants, though no significant controversies emerged comparable to prior years' scandals.
SeriesPremiere DateWinnerProfessional PartnerFinal Date
16 (2018)8 September 201815 December 2018
17 (2019)21 September 201914 December 2019
18 (2020)17 October 202019 December 2020
19 (2021)18 September 202118 December 2021
20 (2022)24 September 202217 December 2022

Series 21–23 (2023–2025)

The 21st to 23rd series of Strictly Come Dancing aired amid heightened scrutiny over participant welfare, prompted by multiple allegations of verbal and physical misconduct during rehearsals, which led to BBC investigations, professional dancer departures, and enhanced oversight protocols including chaperones and welfare officers. These issues, primarily surfacing in series 21, eroded some public trust in the production's safeguarding, though the BBC maintained the show's core format while introducing reforms. Viewership for the period reflected mixed trends, with series 22 rebounding to over 8 million for the final after prior dips, amid broader concerns over ratings and sponsor pullouts linked to the scandals. The 21st series commenced with a launch show on 16 September 2023, followed by live episodes from 23 September to 16 December. Actress and professional dancer were crowned winners on 16 December, defeating finalists including and . Post-series revelations included claims by of "gross misconduct" by partner , involving kicking and spitting incidents, resulting in Di Prima's dismissal from future involvement; McDermott reported the behavior to producers after the final. Separately, alleged "threatening and abusive" conduct by , including aggressive training methods, prompting a probe that found some complaints substantiated, leading to Pernice's exclusion from series 22 and 23; Abbington withdrew mid-series citing medical reasons. Series 22 launched on 14 September 2024, running through to the final on 14 December, with comedian —the first blind winner—and taking the Glitterball Trophy in a final noted for record-high scores across performances. The production incorporated new safeguards like mandatory psychological support and rehearsal observers in response to prior allegations, yielding a relatively controversy-free run aside from viewer complaints over final elimination decisions perceived as biased toward scoring over public vote. Pernice and Di Prima's absences marked the first major professional roster shake-up since 2014, with no direct replacements named at the time. The 23rd series, the final under hosts Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman, featured a launch on 20 September 2025 and live shows from 27 September, with the pair announcing their departure on 23 October amid reports of pay disputes, casting challenges, and lingering scandal fallout. As of 25 October, the competition was in its fifth week (Icons Week), with early eliminations including Nick King (paired with Jowita Przystał) on 12 October and Chris Robshaw (with Nadiya Bychkova) on 19 October; no winner has been determined. New professionals Alexis Warr (American, So You Think You Can Dance winner) and Julian Caillon (Australian) debuted, securing celebrity partners—the first additions post-Pernice and Di Prima—while veterans like Nancy Xu and Gorka Márquez performed in group routines without individual pairings due to roster adjustments. Ongoing welfare measures persist, though the series faces criticism for persistent leaks of elimination results and questions over long-term viability.

Special Episodes and Spin-offs

Strictly Come Dancing has produced numerous special episodes, primarily charity-driven collaborations and seasonal festivities, which deviate from the standard competitive format to raise funds or celebrate milestones. These include annual tie-ins with , featuring select celebrities performing dances to support disadvantaged youth, such as the 2015 edition with actress partnered with a professional dancer. Similar specials occurred in 2016 with kayaker Joe Clarke, 2017 with presenter , 2018 with Boyzone's , and 2019 with actor , each integrating performances into the broader on November 14–15 annually. The 2020 special was omitted due to the , replaced by fan-voted highlights, while a 2024 edition incorporated an animated performance by the character Bluey for added family appeal. Christmas specials form another staple, airing on Christmas Day since the mid-2000s, with six celebrity-professional pairs competing in festive-themed routines judged in the usual manner. The format emphasizes holiday spirit through dances inspired by classics like Alice in Wonderland or Puss in Boots, culminating in a winner determined by viewer votes and scores, as seen in the 2020 countdown of 25 memorable dances aired at 4:45pm. The 2022 special featured returning contestants like Debbie McGee, who won with partner Giovanni Pernice performing a quickstep. More recently, the 2024 installment, broadcast from 3:55pm on BBC One, included participants such as comedian Josh Widdicombe, racing driver Billy Monger, and RuPaul's Drag Race star The Vivienne, each delivering "festive fuelled" performances. Spin-offs extend the franchise through companion programming, most notably Strictly: It Takes Two, a daily BBC Two series launched in 2004 that provides behind-the-scenes insights, rehearsal footage, contestant interviews, and choreographer commentary during the main show's run. Originally hosted by Natasha Kaplinsky and later Zoe Ball, it shifted to Claudia Winkleman from 2013, who helmed it until 2023, emphasizing "secrets, slips, and stories" from training rooms. The program airs weekdays, with the 2025 edition confirmed to launch alongside series 23, maintaining its role in building viewer engagement through exclusive access. Additional one-off spin-offs include Strictly: The Professionals in 2019, a September 14 episode highlighting professional dancers' routines and series archives without celebrities.

Live Tours and Extensions

Arena Tours Format

The Strictly Come Dancing arena tours, officially known as the Strictly Come Dancing Live Tour, adopt a competition-style format distinct from the televised series by emphasizing audience-driven eliminations rather than a combination of judge scores and viewer votes. Participating celebrities and their professional dance partners, typically drawn from finalists and high-placing contestants of the preceding TV season, perform recreated routines from the show alongside new group numbers and ensemble pieces. Each couple generally executes two dances per performance round, with the structure progressing through elimination stages until a tour winner is determined by cumulative audience votes. Judges from the main series, such as , , and , provide critiques during the shows but lack decisive authority; their role is advisory, focusing on technical feedback without influencing outcomes directly. The power resides with the live audience, who vote via electronic keypads or mobile devices after each round of performances, leading to the elimination of the lowest-scoring couple based on real-time tallies. This format often results in tour winners who differ from the TV champions, as regional audience preferences can diverge from national voting patterns observed in the broadcast series. Performances are staged in large-capacity arenas across the , with tours typically commencing in late January or early February following the December TV finale, spanning 20 to 30 dates over several weeks. Each show lasts approximately two hours, incorporating high-energy opens, interval breaks, and closing celebrations, directed by figures like Revel Horwood to replicate the glamour of the studio while adapting to arena-scale production with enhanced lighting, sound, and video elements. British Sign Language interpreters are featured on auxiliary screens to ensure accessibility. The format has evolved minimally since its inception in 2008, maintaining a focus on replaying fan-favorite dances while introducing minor variations like themed nights or pro-only showcases in select years, though core competitive elements remain consistent to preserve the event's appeal as an extension of the TV format.

Key Tour Highlights and Reception

The Strictly Come Dancing arena tours, launched in 2008, replicate elements of the television series through live performances by professional dancers, returning celebrities, and judges who often participate in judging panels or comedic interludes. These annual events, typically spanning January and February, visit prominent UK venues including in , Utilita Arena in Birmingham, and AO Arena in , emphasizing recreated routines, freestyle segments, and audience interaction. Notable highlights across tours include large-scale group numbers uniting professionals, celebrities, and additional dancers, which showcase synchronized choreography and elaborate staging on expansive arena floors mimicking the BBC studio setup. In the 2025 tour, such all-cast routines, incorporating judges, drew praise for their energy and inclusivity. Earlier iterations featured standout individual couple performances, like passionate Latin routines in the 2019 tour, blending technical precision with emotional storytelling. Productions consistently highlight live orchestral accompaniment and thematic variety, from romantic waltzes to high-impact contemporary pieces, often directed by figures like judge Craig Revel Horwood to amplify dramatic flair. Reception from audiences and critics has centered on the tours' escapist appeal, with consistent acclaim for vibrant visuals, skilled execution, and feel-good escapism amid the series' format. The 2022 outing was lauded for its "phenomenal" dancing and joy-inducing atmosphere despite post-pandemic constraints. In 2023, reviewers noted its "slick, glitzy" delivery of fan-favorite elements, including elevated central platforms for dynamic visuals. The 2024 tour earned descriptors of grand-scale light entertainment, spotlighting glamour, camp humor, and veteran performers like Angela Rippon. While some attendees in 2025 expressed minor production quibbles, the consensus affirms the tours' role in extending the show's accessible, high-production spectacle beyond television.

Reception and Cultural Impact

Strictly Come Dancing experienced rapid growth in viewership following its premiere on May 15, 2004, with initial episodes attracting around 8.4 million viewers, rising to an average of 9.5 million by the series finale. Audiences continued to expand, reaching peaks of over 13 million by series 6 in 2008 and sustaining high figures through the early , driven by family-oriented night scheduling and broad appeal across demographics. The show's ratings stabilized at 10-12 million per episode during the , with finals often exceeding 14 million, reflecting its status as a flagship program. A temporary surge occurred in amid the , with the launch episode drawing 11.2 million viewers on four screens. However, post-pandemic trends indicate a consistent decline, attributed to streaming competition and shifting viewer habits, with average weekly audiences falling below 8 million by 2022.
SeriesLaunch Episode Peak (millions)Average Weekly (millions)Notes
2020 (18)11.2~10.5Pandemic boost
2022 (20)5.4 (avg launch)~7.5Post-lockdown dip
2023 (21)6.2~7.0Stable but lower than peak eras
2024 (22)5.76.4 (Saturdays)20-year low amid scandals; live peaks at 6.6-6.7
Recent series have seen further erosion, with the 2024 launch marking the lowest in two decades at a peak of 5.7 million, and live shows averaging 6.4 million despite minor recoveries in consolidated figures including catch-up viewing. This downward trajectory aligns with BARB-reported shifts, where 2024's first live show reached 7.69 million in 7-day consolidated data, down over 400,000 from 2023. Ongoing controversies in 2024-2025, including participant misconduct allegations, have exacerbated the decline, positioning below historical benchmarks and prompting concerns over its long-term viability as a ratings driver for .

Awards and Critical Recognition

Strictly Come Dancing has garnered significant accolades, including 26 wins and 57 nominations across various ceremonies as of 2025. The programme has secured multiple (BAFTAs) for Best Entertainment Programme, with victories in 2016, 2020, and 2024. In 2025, it won the public-voted Memorable Moment Award at the BAFTAs for contestant and professional dancer Dianne Buswell's waltz to "," highlighting an emotionally resonant performance despite McCausland's blindness. However, the show faced a rare exclusion from the 2025 Best Entertainment Programme nominations, marking a departure from its history of 13 prior nods in the category. At the National Television Awards (NTAs), Strictly Come Dancing claimed the Talent Show award in 2025, affirming its ongoing popularity among viewers. The series has previously triumphed in categories such as Best Entertainment Programme and Most Popular Reality Show, reflecting sustained public endorsement. Critically, the programme has been lauded for its high production standards, blend of competition and spectacle, and role in popularizing ballroom and Latin dance forms, with reviewers noting its appeal as family-oriented Saturday night entertainment. User and critic feedback often praises the emotional depth in performances and the skill of professional dancers, though some analyses question the balance between technical judging and public voting.

Broader Influence and Legacy

Strictly Come Dancing has played a pivotal role in reviving and Latin American dancing in the , sparking a marked increase in public participation since its debut. Referred to as the "Strictly effect," this resurgence prompted higher enrollments in dance classes and inspired a wave of new dance-themed television programs, shifting from a specialized pursuit to a broader cultural activity accessible to amateurs. The program's format has exerted substantial global influence, serving as the basis for over 60 international adaptations titled , which have proliferated across more than 50 countries on five continents by 2016. This expansion, licensed by , underscores the show's role in disseminating British entertainment concepts worldwide, with versions appearing in regions from to and contributing to elevated viewership in diverse markets. Beyond participation trends, the series has influenced perceptions of by challenging conventional barriers on performers' demographics, abilities, and pairings, fostering greater experimentation in styles and inclusivity within the medium. Its enduring legacy in British media includes annual live arena tours featuring past contestants and professionals, which generate additional revenue streams and extend audience engagement beyond broadcasts, while professional dancers leverage post-show opportunities such as workshops and endorsements.

Controversies and Criticisms

Early Voting and Fairness Issues

In the early series of Strictly Come Dancing, telephone voting via premium-rate lines raised fairness concerns due to the high costs—ranging from 15p to 80p per vote—and the ability for viewers to cast unlimited votes by repeatedly calling, which favored contestants with organized fan campaigns or wealthier supporters capable of bulk voting. This system was criticized for creating an uneven playing field, as it disadvantaged casual viewers or those in lower-income households who could not afford multiple calls, while benefiting celebrities with dedicated, resource-intensive fanbases. A notable incident occurred during the final, where technical overload on phone lines prevented timely vote registration, leading to over 200 complaints to the and ; producers suspended telephone voting mid-process after confirming that calls could not reliably save contestants like Tom Chambers, prompting accusations of procedural failure that undermined in the elimination process. Such issues highlighted broader inequities in , where reliance on paid voting amplified disparities in viewer engagement rather than pure merit based on performances. Early rounds of the competition have frequently sparked debates over perceived biases in voting outcomes, particularly claims of racial unfairness following the quick eliminations of non-white contestants; for instance, in 2016, Melvin Odoom's exit in week two ignited viewer backlash, with social media users labeling the result a "fix" and attributing it to systemic racism, arguing that early public votes disproportionately penalized black participants despite competitive showings. Similarly, Tameka Empson's elimination shortly after fueled online assertions that "early voting on Strictly is straight up racist," though these remain unsubstantiated opinions from disgruntled fans rather than evidence of deliberate bias, often amplified by selective outrage on platforms prone to echo chambers. The 2025 series introduced further contention with the 's shift to online-only voting, eliminating phone lines entirely to reduce costs and align with modern habits, where over 90% of votes were already digital; this change, however, drew complaints for alienating older demographics less comfortable with apps or websites, with critics accusing the broadcaster of "contempt" toward loyal, traditional viewers who previously relied on calls. Judge publicly decried the narrowed voting window—often just minutes after live broadcasts—as a "shame," noting it excluded shift workers, families, or international audiences unable to tune in real-time, potentially skewing results toward those with flexible schedules. The defended the update as equitable and cost-effective, citing low phone vote usage, but the backlash underscored ongoing tensions between , technological , and preserving broad participation in a format where public input decisively influences eliminations.

Casting and Judging Decisions

Casting decisions for Strictly Come Dancing have drawn criticism for selecting celebrities with controversial backgrounds or political affiliations, potentially prioritizing ratings over uncontroversial participants. In the 2025 series, the inclusion of former The Apprentice contestant Thomas Skinner provoked significant backlash due to his attendance at a with U.S. Vice President JD Vance, leading online commentators to label the choice as divisive and question the BBC's vetting process. Similarly, was cast despite prior lewd comments during a live tour launch, which resulted in his dismissal from in May 2025, highlighting perceived leniency in pre-casting scrutiny amid ongoing show scandals. Critics argue such selections exploit controversy for viewership, as evidenced by descriptions of 2025's lineup as the show's "most divisive casting ever," though producers maintain choices aim to balance entertainment value with diversity. Judging decisions have faced repeated accusations of bias and inconsistency, particularly from head judge , whose scoring has been called into question for favoring certain contestants. During the 2025 series Week 4, Ballas awarded singer just two points for a routine she claimed she "can't judge," yet the contestant avoided the dance-off, prompting viewers to decry the outcome as a "fix" and accuse Ballas of undue leniency despite the low score. This incident fueled broader claims of favoritism, with former professional in November 2024 demanding a review of scoring standards, arguing judges apply inconsistent criteria across performances. In response to such criticisms, the introduced a rotating decisive vote among judges starting in September 2025 for results shows, aiming to mitigate perceived bias by distributing elimination authority weekly rather than relying solely on Ballas. Academic analysis has identified patterns of racial bias influencing outcomes, though primarily tied to audience voting rather than judges alone. A 2023 University of London study published in 2025 found that racial minority celebrities paired with minority professionals were disproportionately assigned to dance-offs, suggesting viewer preferences disadvantage non-white contestants regardless of performance quality. Viewer complaints on platforms like and echo this, alleging stricter judging standards for ethnic minorities, though these remain anecdotal and unverified by official investigations. Historical precedents include 2024 elimination decisions, such as saving over Tom Dean, which sparked "fix" claims due to Ballas's tie-breaking vote, underscoring persistent perceptions of subjective judging over objective merit. Despite these, the maintains judging adheres to technical criteria, with no substantiated evidence of deliberate rigging beyond fan speculation.

Introduction of Same-Sex Pairings

The introduction of same-sex pairings in Strictly Come Dancing occurred in the eighteenth series, which aired in 2020, marking a departure from the show's traditional format of heterosexual celebrity-professional couples. The announced the change prior to the season's launch on October 17, 2020, pairing retired Olympic boxer with professional dancer as the first same-sex celebrity couple. This followed earlier non-competitive same-sex performances by professionals in 2018 and 2019, but represented the first instance of same-sex partners competing for the Glitterball Trophy. The decision aimed to promote inclusivity, with producers stating that contestant would no longer dictate pairings. Adams and Jones debuted with a quickstep to "Get Happy" by Ella Fitzgerald on October 24, 2020, receiving positive scores from judges but sparking viewer backlash. The performance prompted approximately 189 to 200 complaints to Ofcom and the BBC, primarily citing concerns over the alteration of traditional ballroom dance roles, which conventionally feature a male leader and female follower. Critics argued that the change disrupted the gendered aesthetics and historical conventions of dances like the waltz and foxtrot, though such complaints represented a tiny fraction of the show's multimillion-viewer audience. The BBC defended the pairing, emphasizing that eligibility should depend on skill rather than gender and dismissing complaints as unrepresentative. Adams and Jones withdrew after four weeks due to a COVID-19 exposure, but the precedent continued: the nineteenth series in 2021 featured the first male same-sex couple, John Whaite and Johannes Radebe, who reached the final. Subsequent seasons included same-sex pairings until 2024, when none appeared amid broader scandals, with insiders citing a desire to refocus on "traditional roots." The introduction highlighted tensions between modernization efforts and adherence to ballroom's structural norms, where empirical adaptations in professional circuits had long accommodated same-sex leads without competitive precedent on the show.

Dancer and Participant Misconduct

In 2009, during rehearsals for the seventh series, professional dancer referred to his celebrity partner using the ethnic slur "Paki" after she underwent a spray tan that darkened her skin tone, reportedly in frustration over her tanning appearance. Du Beke immediately apologized to Rouass, who accepted the apology and stated he was not racist, emphasizing the comment was made in private without malice. The conducted an internal review but allowed Du Beke to continue competing, with the incident becoming public after Rouass informed her family. During the sixteenth series in October 2018, celebrity contestant , a comedian in a relationship with actress , was photographed kissing his professional partner outside a pub following a celebrity event. Jones was married to fellow professional dancer Neil Jones at the time. Walsh publicly apologized, describing the incident as a "one-off mistake" fueled by alcohol, while Humphries ended their relationship and criticized Walsh's initial response. The couple, Walsh and Jones, were eliminated two weeks later amid public backlash, with the event cited as an example of the show's informal "curse" involving romantic entanglements.

Recent Scandals and Investigations (2023–2025)

In late 2023 and throughout 2024, faced multiple allegations of misconduct during rehearsals, prompting investigations into professional dancers' behavior toward celebrity partners. These claims, primarily from the 2023 series, centered on verbal and physical mistreatment, leading to the departure of two prominent male pros and broader scrutiny of the show's training environment. The responded by upholding some complaints while clearing others of the gravest accusations, and implemented safeguards like welfare producers and chaperones for subsequent seasons. The most publicized case involved professional dancer and his 2023 partner, actress . Abbington withdrew from the competition in October 2023 citing medical reasons, later alleging Pernice's rehearsals involved "unnecessary, abusive, cruel and mean" conduct, including verbal and . A -commissioned investigation, concluded on September 30, 2024, upheld complaints of verbal but exonerated Pernice of physical and dismissed broader sexual claims, prompting the BBC to apologize to Abbington for its handling of her concerns. Pernice, who denied the allegations and cooperated with the probe, exited the show in June 2024 after nine seasons; three other former partners had reportedly raised similar issues, though the review focused on Abbington's testimony. Another investigation targeted , paired with influencer in 2023. Di Prima was dismissed in July 2024 following reports of "gross misconduct," including footage reviewed by the showing him kicking McDermott once during rehearsals; he admitted the incident in a statement expressing "deep regret" but attributed it to frustration in a high-pressure setting. McDermott, who had remained silent initially amid reported fears for her career, later described feeling "scared" and confirmed multiple witnesses observed aggressive behavior, leading to his exclusion from the 2024 lineup. Producers had allegedly been warned twice about Di Prima's conduct prior to his exit. By 2025, additional probes emerged, including a investigation into alleged use by two unnamed Strictly professionals during filming, revealed in a legal submission by law firm Russells on behalf of 2024 contestant . The claims, denied by the as unsubstantiated, contributed to ongoing concerns about the show's culture amid falling ratings and presenter departures. Director-General publicly apologized in July 2024 for any failures in safeguarding, emphasizing reforms, though critics questioned the network's initial oversight of rehearsal dynamics.

References

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