Week 8: Top 9 Perform - 11 November 2017
Last week! We were truly spoilt for drama with both our
first 40 of this series and our first SHOCK!BOOT as well as the latest in
Anton’s campaign to demolish the entire Latin canon. Tonight! It’s the best of
all the theme weeks - Week before BLACKPOOL Week. Which means I have to recap
both this and BLACKPOOL Hangover Week, thank you Steve. [Yeah, sorry about that. Entirely unplanned, I swear. - Steve]
Cue credits! Pasha looked like he checked out from the very
start, in hindsight.
Tess and Claudia enter on the arms of Giovanni and Kevin.
Daly dresswatch: white, with some weird slittage going on and an uncomfortable
gap in the midriff that makes even Tess’s slim stomach look a little chubby.
What Winkleman’s wearing: a black trouser and blouse - it's OK. We also get our
first glimpse of this week’s celebrity audience - including previous winner
Caroline Flack and pretty much nobody else of note. [Major burn on Vincent, ouch. - Steve] Tess and Claudia remind us
that BLACKPOOL is coming up and jokes that last year they said the word BLACKPOOL
283 times and this year they’re trying for the record of saying it 300 times. I
can’t work out whether it’s cute or annoying that the show is this self-aware.
Cue the judges - each entering individually this week: Darcey,
Bruno, Craig and Shirley. Darcey is in a red dress with slashes up the side that
looks rather risqué - I love this new saucy Darcey we’re seeing. Shirley is in a
white lacy dress patterned with black sequins and Craig has a purple tie
replete with tie pin, whilst Bruno is wearing a black velvet jacket.
Our couples enter: Ruth and Anton; Davood and Nadiya; Mollie
and AJ; Gemma and Aljaž; Debbie and Giovanni; Joe and Katya; Susan and Kevin;
Jonnie and Oti; Alexandra and Gorka. Blimey, that was a lot easier than the
last time I had to do this. The jigging along to the theme tune seems to have
improved in the last couple of weeks as well, with only Ruth not bothering to
even vaguely attempt any kind of motion and I like to think that’s less a case
of willing and more a case of ability.
First tonight are Susan and Kevin, looking rather
traditional with him in full bow tie’n’tails and her in a sparkly red dress
with a red flower in her hair. Now on It
Takes Two, we’ve been promised a set of VTs that are purely training
footage, so let’s see how that goes, shall we? Theirs features both of their
hair flopping about uncomfortably and deciding that they’re going to do their
tango seriously, with Susan trying to pull an intense face. In their training
footage, she is wearing stripy socks and the ubiquitous lip print heels. Now,
these heels being used by all the female celebs has been a major talking point on It Takes Two in terms of Zoe noticing them at least, but I feel
we’re overdue the actual story of them. Are they genuinely a kind of Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants type single
set of shoes (meaning that all the female celebrities somehow magically have
the same sized feet) or, as I suspect is more likely, did wardrobe just get a job
lot of them from Wynsor’s World of Shoes’ £1 bargain bin?
For all that this has been promoted as their first serious dance,
it’s still a tango being done to Katy Perry’s 'Firework' (a week too late,
surely?). Her footwork isn’t bad, although she does look terrified most of the
time rather than moody. Her framing is still not particularly elegant, but I
kind of feel that maybe she just isn’t capable of that, due to a combination of
height, weight and personality. The set is covered in sparkly fake trees, which
are little distracting, possibly deliberately so? Also the singing? Sounds as
you might imagine. It ends with a very dramatic pose’n’hug. Overall, a solid
but unremarkable piece of dance then, and perhaps a little boring compared to
what we’ve seen from them in previous weeks, which could be interesting in
terms of whether or not their vote will drop.
Over with Tess, Susan is crying and trying to catch her
breath. It’s always the dances you least expect that do this to them, isn’t it?
Tess introduces us to Dave Arch, the band and our singers: new girl Tori,
Lance, Andrea and Tommy. Are Hayley and New Boy Jamie together somehow? And is
that place more fun than this one? If the show hires more than four singers at
once would it bring down the whole BBC in a new expenses scandal? Or is it just that there isn’t room for more
than four in that tiny orchestra pit? [I think you've just storylined the entire next series of W1A. - Steve]
Shirley says she’s used to seeing Susan in a comedic role
and then goes on to list the themes of their previous dances. She says that tonight Susan brought it,
remembering every step and whilst she still needs to work on her frame, Shirley
can see the real progress from week 1 to now. Bruno says she he loved how she
channels the dramatic persona and felt it was like watching Suranne Jones in Doctor Foster. Susan pulls an ‘is that
meant to be a compliment?’ face, which I fully understand - either you’re being
lauded as a great dramatic actress, or you’re being called batshit crazy. Mind
you, it is Bruno, so both are probably A-OK in his world. Bruno says she did
every step at the right time, placed her heel correctly and what a way to
improve. Craig says her posture is the thing that lets her down, which the
audience boo, but Susan pulls a ‘yes, that’s fair, come on, even I know my
frame sucks’ face. He said her face looked in pain, but he loves the serious
side of her. I think that just means he likes seeing you in pain Susan, I
wouldn’t take it as a compliment. Darcey says that once you get too emotional,
the frame can slip, so Susan needs to keep her focus all the way through, but
she’s done a much better job.
In the Clauditorium, we learn that they’ve been dancing in a
car park. Wasn’t that their first VT? There really are no new stories with these two, are there? Scores: five, six ('much better', Darcey?), eight, eight for a total of 27. Kevin is very happy with the two eights, Susan
looks a little disappointed with the five and six. Personally I would say it
was a 6/7 so overall that score doesn’t feel too out of whack even if some of
the individual elements that comprised it do.
We are reminded that BLACKPOOL is
next week and everyone starts to wave streamers about. Pasha, Neil and Brendan
are doing their usual naughty trio antics - had you told me before the series
that those three would become the closest thing to LADZ BANTER this show has
ever had (which, to be clear, is still a million light years away from your
typical BANTERLOLZ thank god) I don’t think I would ever have believed you.
In the death slot, it’s not Jonnie and Oti, even though it
probably should be after he’s been late on nearly all the time, but Joe and
Katya, which demonstrates how much faith they must have in his rumba. Their
training footage did look like a complete car crash during ITT and doesn’t
appear to be much better in this VT. Oh
well, perhaps it will look better on the actual dancefloor.
They are dancing to the Mary Blige version of ‘One’, with a
large chunk of the opening verse absent. Joe’s in sleek black, whilst Katya is
in a very raggedy nude colour dress. This
is actually nowhere near as bad as I was expecting-in fact, it’s pretty solid
for a bloke rumba even if he does look a bit constipated throughout. He is
having a really decent go at doing some of the shaping in his body. His hands
are a complete state though. God knows
what he’s doing with them but they’re giving Craig an ample opportunity to get
out his spatulistic word, if nothing else. A pleasant surprise there - this
partnership seems to really be working. Having been on the fence about Katya
last series, I’m enjoying a lot of what she’s bringing this time round. [I, unfortunately, find my tolerance for Katya's personality waning with each passing week. - Steve]
Tess reminds us that rumba is DIFFICULT FOR MEN. Bruno says
he’s a sensitive lover with a caring touch, 'which you won’t find in Magaluf,
Craig' (although he pronounces it Mega Loof, which sounds more like a bargain
bathroom supplies outlet). Bruno praises him for correct placing and a great
shape, but says his hands need to carry on the movement as they felt really odd
throughout. Craig says it was a little bit juttery on dancing through the
four-one, and his feet were a little bit parallel rather than turned out, with
some pigeon-toed moments, but he says he hasn’t seen many celeb men do it well.
Can we just put an end to this lie? Look over your statistics - men generally do
as well as women and in the last couple of series have tended to be higher
scorers - look at the scores you gave Danny, Ore and Jay, for example. FFS. [Also this is entirely anecdotal but in my limited experience of learning ballroom and latin dances, the rumba was the one I found easiest, SO THERE. - Steve] Anyway
Darcey says there was a nice resistance between them and a good sense of
balance in his legs, with him giving fabulous lines. Shirley says he is still
the 'dark horse'-as with our comments on Gemma a few weeks ago, can he really be
classed as dark horse given he was the second celebrity to earn tens and he’s
got into a nice routine of nines and tens recently. Especially with Aston gone,
surely he is the closest thing to a male front runner they have? Also, she
thinks he did an exquisite job, but I’m too annoyed by the dark horse comment
to care. If anyone’s a ‘dark horse’, surely it’s Davood, anyway, with his
unexpected comeback narrative.
Up to the Clauditorium they bounce, and Katya seems ecstatic
by how that went, which I’m guessing is much better than in any rehearsals. Joe
says he’s learned not to hate it. Scores: seven, eight, nine, nine, which both
of them seem a little surprised with, for a total of 33. Katya and Claudia lie
that this is a really difficult score for a male celebrity to get. No, no it
isn’t.
Ruth and Anton now and they are not doing party Latin so I’m
much less invested and in them this week.
And to think, they could be putting the nails in the coffin of cha cha
cha (the second time Anton would have put Latin in a coffin for the sake of this show). Apparently they’re doing a
dance called the slow foxtrot - since when was it called that in this show, not
just foxtrot? [Dunno, but it was always called "slow foxtrot" when I was learning it. - Steve]Their VT shows Ruth struggling with her frame and saying this is
the most difficult dance she’s done. Bodes well. God, these training VTs are glum as fuck tonight.
They are wearing glam outfits – although Ruth’s dress is a
mismatch of three separate ones – a lacey front panel, a striped sparkly arms
and side panel with gold, silver and black stripes a white and black striped
skirt which looks a little like a circus tent. Her hair is done up in an elaborate pile on her head (I’m sure there is
a technical term for this, but as I only have three variations on my own
hair - straight aka could be bothered drying it, wavy aka couldn’t be bothered
drying it and in a ponytail aka couldn’t be bothered washing it - I’m not
really the person to ask [and I'm rapidly balding so definitely don't ask me - Steve]) – which actually looks nice, although it’s arguably
less fun than a wig. They’re dancing to
that old Simon Cowell staple ‘Mack the Knife’ and open with much more than 10
seconds of faffing about with hats and canes - and Ruth can’t even hold the hat
at the correct angle, bless her. As they get into hold, Ruth’s hands seem quite
uncomfortable - the one perched on Anton’s shoulder seems to be shaking
throughout. Her footwork doesn’t seem to be entirely terrible, if a bit too
fast and staccato for the foxtrot, but her frame is a real problem and towards
the end that goes so wrong that it puts the footwork out of place as well, as
she starts to stutter backwards and out of time, looking like she’s lost
confidence. Still, she manages to catch the hat and cane when they are thrown
back on stage to her and they’re both smiling at the end. With the show presumably needing to do a
storyline around voting for the dancers who have the most merit following Aston’s
shock boot (sidestepping the fact that the judges put him there by making him
second bottom on the leaderboard), the knives could well be out for her this
evening.
Craig says the side-by-side at the beginning lacked any real
style, but doesn’t pull out the 10 second rule. He said they came down the
stairs at completely different times and Anton says that was his own fault, not
Ruth’s. Ruth’s face says probably not, but there we are. Craig says she was
trotting too much like a horse in the dance.
Darcey says there was a lot of content, but no gliding and she felt that
foxtrot is really challenging and that Ruth was slightly out of her depth.
Foxtrots are about as good as cha cha chas this year, aren’t they? It felt like
we started well with Aston’s (that was more of an American Smooth, let’s face
it) and it all went downhill from there onwards. Shirley says that she feels
like she has to be quite firm because they going to BLACKPOOL. She says it’s
called the slow foxtrot and they just went quick quick quick quick quick the
whole time. Anton said they didn’t want to labour the whole slow point. Bruno
says the Fox lost the trot and it turned into a gallop and calls Anton An-TUN
with a really weird emphasis on the TUN, and says the whole thing became a dash
to the end.
In the Clauditorium, Claudia says she’d give them 20, then
realises that’s a bad score and adds ‘out of five’. Because this school show
famously scores out of five. Scores: four, five, four, five for a total of 18
and Ruth looks really deflated and starts crying. Then Susan pulls her in for a
hug, and then somehow Claudia gets into the hug as well and Alexandra looks
really awkward not knowing what to do. Can we get back to demolishing Latin now
please? This is just too uncomfortable for all concerned.
Davood and Nadiya now and we’re reminded that last week they
had a somewhat unexpected breakthrough moment. Their training VT covers him
saying that the Charleston is a really technically complex dance. Not really,
Davood, but foxtrot and cha cha seem to be killing everyone this series whilst
lots of the pasos have been epic so I’m not sure what’s what anymore.
They open with a tribute to Natalie Lowe - Nadiya playing with
her tomatoes - though she doesn’t quite get the saucy wiggle and wink on point.
They are dancing to the Lambeth walk, set on a market stall, with Davood in a
waistcoat, shirt and slacks, and Nadiya in a dress that appears to be top half
flaps of zebra and bottom half flamingo feathers. This is cheesy as you like,
but full of energy and character - with Davood looking like he’s having a ball.
There is an uncomfortable moment when Nadia gets upon his shoulders and he
tries to swivel his legs but can’t because of the weight, but once she’s down,
he gets back into it pretty effectively. It also ends spectacularly with her
flinging herself upside down over his shoulder and him tucking an arm under her
knee and walking around with her like a hod carrier with a load of bricks. Then
he carries her around like that for ages and Tess has to tell him he can put
her down now.
Darcey says he is on the way up and calls him a ‘tall strong
man’ which is such a great dancing compliment, but says he was able to keep the
details and the speed and control. She liked that he kept the character and
that he was still swivelling when he had Nadiya on his shoulders. Well, he was trying anyway. Shirley said the
choreography was outstanding and they executed it really well. I love how Nadiya
doesn’t respond to the choreography comment, given that presumably it was still
a specialist choreographer that did it – could that even be a slight dose of
shade in relation to Nadiya’s own choreo? Bruno says he has real versatility and
he’s getting better week on week (other than last week, his scores wouldn’t
suggest quite that pattern, Bruno, but I guess we need a journey contestant). Craig
does his ah-may-zing, and Nadiya squeals-at least she is familiar enough with
the show to know what that means.
They jump up to the Clauditorium, the rustles on Nadiya’s
dress bouncing all over the place. Claudia
reminds Davood that his children vote for Jonnie and he asks them to vote for
daddy this week. Scores: nine, nine, 10, 10 for a total of 38. Remember when
the judges started this series and they were being all strict with their
numbers? Now they’re throwing tens around like they’re going out of fashion. I have no problem with early 10s, if a dance
is exceptional, but I’m not sure that all the dances that have 10ed so far have
warranted it and there’s also the danger that, with little room to improve, we
might not get so many real breakout dances in coming weeks. [Yeah, I know overscoring charlestons is nothing new, but I was not convinced that was a 10-worthy dance. - Steve] We cut to Davood’s wife in the audience who
is crying and does not appear to be that happy with being on camera doing so.
Time for Claudia’s comedy corner. Tess asks Claudia if she’s
brought a big trunk to take to BLACKPOOL and we get a fake elephant’s trunk
coming into shot-made all the funnier by the fact that the runner holding it
has their hands clearly in shot.
Gemma and Aljaž now. Last week they did those god-awful
lifts that we’ve been reminded of ever since, poor Gemma. She’s
hopeful that now they’re back to ballroom things will go well for them, however.
Their VT features them both dressed in navy blue and even training in a room
with blue walls and another room with blue seats. That’s some real commitment
to colour blocking, right there. Aljaž wants Gemma to do as many pivots as she
can, and Gemma Blair Witches to the camera that everybody is getting better and
she doesn’t feel safe. What an uplifting VT.
They are dancing the Viennese waltz to ‘You Don’t Have To
Say You Love Me’ and Gemma’s in a lilac and silver sparkly dress, whilst Aljaž is
in a grey trousers and waistcoat with a blue shirt. The trousers are not as
tight as the ones AJ was wearing the other week, but whilst you might normally
be looking out for Aljaž’s bum, there is what I assume to be his mic pack
sticking out like Anton’s marshmallow bunny tail, which is all rather
distracting. As for the dance itself, the purple lighting makes it feel a
little more elegant and romantic than it actually is. Gemma starts by looking
really uncomfortable, although her face gets more into it as the routine goes
on and she remembers to perform. The footwork is inconsistent - there are moments
where they do pretty decent pivots and moments where their legs appear to get
tangled up in each other. It’s pretty fast, and the elongated spins at the end
get worse as they go along - and then Gemma collapses on him and manages not to
vomit. Hooray.
Tess asks if she’s dizzy and says she know she’s been
suffering from ‘rotation sickness’. Is
that not just motion sickness, Tess? Shirley
says they got tangled up in the fleckerl and Gemma says her shoe nearly came
off. Shirley then tries to create a catchphrase: ‘you have to get your motion
and devotion to come out as emotion’. Sounds like a great Hairspray lyric. She tells Gemma to work on those inner emotions
because she wants to feel what Gemma feels. What, dizzy and slightly sick?
Bruno praises her for looking extremely pretty, which is always the best of
starts. He said she needs to express rather than looking like she’s carrying a
laundry basket everywhere. Craig says that he thought she was struggling to
keep up and that it really lacked emotion. Darcey says she noticed a difference
in her eye level which was brilliant and that her top line was taking too much
strain but it wasn’t bad. Tess tells them
there was a standing ovation in the studio. The studio audience would give a
standing ovation to somebody just sweeping the floor (aka yer average Anton paso).
In the Clauditorium, Gemma takes her shoe off and throws it
on the floor. You might need to find it again if you’re in the dance off, Gem.
We learn that Gemma was also wearing motion sickness bands but Davood already
used that narrative in his Viennese waltz VT and Gemma used her own travel sickness quota during
the foxtrot, so good luck getting anyone to care about that. Scores: Seven, seven, seven, seven for a
total of 28. And how refreshing it still
is to just hear ‘seven’ and not ‘Sev-UHN’.
We get a half-time leaderboard with Davood and Joe above the
three women who’ve danced so far. Could
the men finally be seeing a resurgence?
I know we’re due a female winner but the last time the men were
demolished like this Jay ended up winning anyway so keeping a few around for a while may be no bad thing.
Gorka and Alexandra now for our first Argentine Tango of the
series. Shirley says they’re looking for a real connection between the two
performers and she wants to ‘feel’ the Argentine Tango and then she asks Darcey
if she wants to feel it with her. I love that the show is no longer afraid of
lady homoeroticism.
Their training VT involves the use of an enormous fan, which
bodes quite well. We get our annual reminder that the tango and the Argentine
Tango are nothing alike and we see Alexandra doing the banderas with her legs
and we get a demonstration of how they work, which is actually fairly
technically informative for a VT well done. She is also wearing the kiss shoes
in some of it as well as rocking stripy socks with sandals in other parts. Not quite Debbie McGee style icon levels of training outfit yet, but I appreciate the attempt.
Alexandra’s wearing a short lacy dress, with a really weird
bunch of strapping over one of her breasts that makes it look like she's sporting Mr Bump on her chest, only
with black bandages instead of white. Her eye make-up involves some cute little diamonds though and she’s
really rocking a dark sultry lip. They
are dancing to ‘Mi Confession’ and it opens with Alexandra waving a huge red
fan at the top of the staircase what a legend. Gorka joins her on the bridge as
she slaps her leg over the banister like Debbie McGee reaching for a
tambourine. They dance their way down the stairs having a play-off with one another,
before getting into hold, and then they execute a very good Argentine Tango –
it’s full-on and moody, with Alexandra’s legs looking more controlled than they
have been all series [although still a bit spider-y and flaily for my tastes - Steve]. The kicking through each other’s legs works well with
nobody kneeing anybody in the privates, and there’s a really neat bit of
choreography where she moves around Gorka by standing on his feet-extra
impressive given the length of her heels, which she doesn’t stab him with even
once. Now what I would give to see Ruth and Anton demolish the Argentine
Tango. In the meantime, that will have
to do as a very good example of this genre that leaves me slightly disappointed
we didn’t get to see Aston’s take on it and very excited for what Giovanni and
Debbie might bring when they do it. In the audience we see Vincent Simone looking
on and pondering his legacy on the show and why he hasn’t even been invited to
choreography corner yet when Jo’s done it twice, and she was only a pro two and a half times.
Bruno calls it ‘pure undiluted passion’ and says the sequence
of razor-sharp ganchos they had was extraordinary. Craig says she never ceases
to amaze and that was incredible. Darcey praises the sensuality and the fact
that she engages them straight away but notes that sometimes she needs to
finish off her line more clearly, and that the emotion comes a little bit too
much into Alexandra’s shoulders, but it was really good otherwise. Shirley says she felt like she was transported
to a nightclub and loves the way they connect with one another.
In the Clauditorium, Claudia says there was huge pressure as
the dance is ‘a fan favourite’ and checks that Alexandra was really supposed to
step on his feet. I guess years of
watching comedy contestants means you can never be too sure what’s deliberate
and what isn’t (nor can the contestants, if Anton and Ruth’s protestations
about their ‘fall’ last week being off the cuff). We also say hello to her
friends Lance and Ryan in the audience. I love that they have names, unlike her
boyfriend and brother. Scores: nine, nine, 10, 10 for a total of 38.
In the background the evicted female pros and Chloe are
wearing variations of gold two pieces. Karen looks like she’s wearing cowboy
trousers and Chloe’s hair is done up with a really unfortunate little curly
quiff. Not the best look for any of
them, if I’m honest, especially compared to the red velvet jackets the evicted
male pros and Neil get to wear.
Now we have ringer vanquishers Mollie and AJ. She cries in
the VT that she’s scared and doesn’t want the journey to come to an end and we
see some training footage of their Paso that looks like a complete train wreck.
AJ is also wearing the most ugly t-shirt I’ve seen in a long time-grey with a
blue stripe across the top and then what looks to be tyre tracks all-round it. These millennials and their commitment to ethical consumption - if it's been run over I don't think anyone would judge you for disposing of it, AJ. Mollie then sits on camera pulling terrible Paso faces and we see her going
through AJ’s legs in rehearsal and almost breaking her back. She ends by saying ‘I hope we can nail it in
the Strictly ballroom’ which is a great pun very well done.
We open with AJ in the traditional Paso jacket - it’s not
clarified if this is the same one of Neil's that Joe wore, in the male equivalent
of the kissy shoes, but let’s say so for the sake of narrative. Also, his chest
is as smooth as a Ken doll, unsurprisingly. Mollie arrives behind him in gold, with the weirdest hairstyle – I suppose
it’s meant to be a bit like Robin Wright-Penn in Wonder Woman but the way a
plait in the centre blends into crimped hair bunched into a multi-stage
ponytail brings to mind an elaborate curtain pull. She’s clutching the big red ceiling hankies
that we haven’t seen for some time. Then the music kicks in (‘Layla’) and they
get into hold and the dramatic opening gives way to something much less
sensational. Her arms are all over the place and her leg work is not much
better. She does okay in the shaping, but once they have to travel around the floor
she looks completely lost. Her skirt wafting
brings to mind Jo/Amy in their jives and her hand shaping is about as awkward
as Joe’s was in his rumba. She is also staring at the floor the whole time looking
like she wants to vomit, but she does manage to get flung through AJ’s legs at the end so well done her.
Craig says some of the shapes were very awkward and her
shoulders were coming up too much and looking ungainly, but it did have a real
sense of power and presence. Darcey said it really had attitude and drama and
determination, but she did throw a lot away and she needs to think about the
still moments and keeping her core tight to help her balance throughout. Shirley
said there was some nice Paso content and it looked good in closed hold but
when they parted it looked a bit jerky and she needs to keep her core, with her
head maintaining a vertical line with her body to stop herself from falling.
Bruno says she was so pumped up that she ‘popped like a Christmas cracker’ (if they’re
anything like the ones I have, that means they pull without a snap and then you
have to break it afterwards... which describes the last couple of week's of Mollie's narrative on this show come to think of it) and lost some control and artistry. He said
something went out of time while they were travelling, and he knows it’s a
difficult balance between power and clean lines but that’s what the Paso Doble
requires. In a series that’s been filled
with both epic and terrible pasos, having a mediocre one feels disappointing,
quite frankly.
As they bound up to the Clauditorium AJ tells her that she
did really well, because Saturday is his nice day. It’s actually quite sweet. Mollie says being
in the bottom two has knocked her confidence but she is grateful to have danced
again. Scores: five, six, six, five for a total of 22. I don’t think it was a
particularly good dance, but those fives feel a little bit mean. Still, I think
they are over her at this point and have decided she can be easily disposed of
if she’s in the dance off yet again – at least if she’s up against one of the
favourites. [Mollie has officially become my woobie of this series. She tries so hard, trains all hours, and still can't get the hang of it. I desperately need her to have just one moment of triumph before she's inevitably dispatched. - Steve]
Jonnie and Oti now and I thought at one moment they might
get yet another pimp slot. I like these two but they really have had enough
second-half placings. The training footage features Oti telling Jonnie not to
stick his bum out so much and trying to convince us that the foxtrot can be an
amazing dance if it’s done right (i.e. not like what we’ve seen the series) and
Jonnie saying that as a sprinter, his leverage comes from his bum and his knee
so he finds it hard to be precise in his movement.
For the foxtrot, Oti is in a lovely lemon dress with a
slightly odd brown back panel whilst Jonnie is in a grey suit jacket and black
trousers and a really bizarre black shirt with sparkly patterns on that almost
look to be fragments of dominoes. They are dancing to ‘Someone Like You’, which
apparently has not been as overdone on this show as I imagined. [It's an overdone song to begin with, although I appreciate that's not what you meant. - Steve] And… it is not good. Oti is doing her usual
trick of trying to cover up Jonnie’s deficiencies, but in a dance that is
devoid of acrobatics it’s hard to disguise what he’s doing too much. He looks
quite uncomfortable throughout and tentative in a lot of his movements. As with
Ruth, it’s not particularly smooth, although they do have the benefit of a more
suitable tempo to work with meaning it probably comes out as a more assured
performance overall.
Tess says Jonnie wanted to get his posture right this week and
did he, Darcey? Tess really needs to stop
asking this kind of question, because the answers seem to regularly be ‘no’.
Darcey says it felt uncomfortable-when he’s in hold he looks like he’s
straining, particularly through his shoulder and she could see that he found
the dance difficult but he was better a couple of weeks ago. Two weeks ago, when he got his worst score of
the series, even worse than in the week we had three judges. Harsh, Darcey, harsh. Shirley says there were
parts of the dance where he seems improved and parts where it needs improvement
still. She noticed his elbows were better but he had got on the wrong side places
and whilst it was okay, we’re at week eight now and he needs to improve. Bruno
said it was quite emotional and he thinks Jonnie will bounce back (is that a
cue for him to use the blade again? It
might not be a bad idea…). He says Jonnie’s hands are still like shovels but
that’s another lesson and it’s hard to lead in a foxtrot. Is there any dance it
isn’t hard to lead in according to this show? Craig calls it dull, dull, dull
and Tess does a ‘how very dare you’ at him. Eh, it’s a foxtrot, Tess, they’re not noted for their entertainment
qualities.
In the Clauditorium Claudia says ‘at least you were dancing
in Paris’ (albeit a projection thereof not like that time Louise got to have a
free holiday on behalf of the BBC) scores: four, five, six, six for a total of
21.
That means that closing the evening we have Debbie and
Giovanni - pimp slot at last! Sadly, it’s for a salsa, when they’ve had at least three
other dances - probably four - that would have been better showstoppers. We see
Tess in the audience with Caroline Flack, forgetting which series Caroline was
on and then, because the dance is set in an opticians, everyone puts glasses on
and I’m not sure if this was some kind of under the radar product placement on
behalf of SpecSavers or not, but you can bet the Daily Mail are trying their hardest to find out.
Debbie and Giovanni’s VT involves them still using the
magical transporting special effects, which is real commitment to a bit on
behalf of the VT editors. There is also some background music that seems to
include the lyrics ‘I’ve got a feeling’ which is a funny nod back to last week,
well done everyone. Debbie lies that she is finding lifts difficult. Sure you
are Deb, sure.
In the latest from their book of porn clichés, we have
Debbie as a sexy optician and they’ve gone to the trouble of sourcing two full
racks of spectacles as prop backgrounds - as well as spectacle lighting effects.
It opens with Giovanni reading out from the charts ‘D E B B I E – Debbie’. Incorrect, Gio, should be an EH at the end
there. They are both in bright red, Debbie with a cutout panel just above her
bum, the saucy minx, and Giovanni with his shirt fully open to reveal a
god-awful sun tattoo. It’s not often you
want the male pros (except Anton) to put their chests away, but it’s making me
go off him a tiny little bit. [It also looks a bit like the tattoos that the Winchesters have in Supernatural to prevent against demonic possession, which makes me wonder if Giovanni hunts monsters in his spare time. - Steve] They are dancing to ‘Can’t Take My Eyes Off You’
and new singer Tori completely biffs the song, going into the ‘I love you baby’
far too early and then having to hold a note for ages to allow the music to
catch up. The dance itself? A fun piece of party Latin that isn’t going to top
any best dance polls of the series, but nor is it likely to put them into much
danger. There is an amazing lift where Giovanni literally grabs her by the vag
and spins her around at his hip, which is truly impressive, although the
dismount is a bit clumsy, and there are a couple of uncomfortable moments
coming out of spins, but otherwise they must just be glad to get another party
Latin ticked off the list. Now give us their American Smooth already.
Tess tells Debbie she’s fearless and Debbie just shrugs like
‘I used to get cut in half on a weekly basis this is nothing’. Shirley said
they had some mistakes in their spins and reverse turns where Debbie missed
Giovanni’s arm at one point, but she commends how Debbie gets out and goes for
it with the lifts in particular. She says Debbie is amazing but she keeps
repeating that there were some mistakes just so that we dampen down the ‘judges’
favourites’ moaning that’s been out there. Bruno says she was saucy, although
there was an error, and the dance was the essence of salsa, infused with the spirit
of Cuba (much like Bruno every week). On replay - he actually said spirit of
youth, but I prefer my mishear better. Craig says he wants something of what
she is on and Darcey praises the vagina lift-although she calls it ‘upper thigh’
because were still pre-watershed.
In the Clauditorium, Claudia asks Debbie if she ever says no
to Giovanni’s lifts and she says she always just assumed he is joking. Not really the lesson in consent we’re
looking for in These Troubled Times. Scores, nine, nine, eight, nine for a
total of 35. Claudia opens the vote lines to ‘Viva Las Vegas’ and Neil and Brendan
dance on in big pink showgirl headdresses - I guess they couldn’t fork out to get
one for Pasha as well. Poor Pasha.
So that was a weird evening, wasn’t it? The foxtrot joins
the cha cha as the dance most massacred this series, with the Viennese waltz
chomping at their heels. At least the Argentine Tango has got off to a steady
start and we got through a bloke rumba that wasn’t too trying, so hurrah for
that. Tomorrow somebody will not be going to BLACKPOOL and therefore their life
will no longer be worth living, but who shall it be? Join me tomorrow to find
out!
6 comments:
Can someone explain why the judges complain about Jonnie’s bum (and Greg’s last year), but not Aljaz’s which was even more prominent this time. Why is it okay on a professional, but not on a celebrity? A bum is a bum, isn’t it?
I suppose they don't consider it their job to comment on the pros and their physique, posture, technique as that might seem unprofessional or as if the pros don't know what they are doing which can undermine them and undermine some of the show's internal logics. So criticising the choreo is a safer way of going at problems because it can be about whether ot not the pro is getting the best from their celeb rather than criticising them as professional, expert, elite dancers, if that makes sense?
Someone asked Susan about the shoes they wear for training and she said they are given them by the show, that's why they're all the same.
Sadly no massive shoe shopping trip together.
And they cost 130Euro so that'd be a pretty generous gift!
http://www.roandancewear.nl/international-dance-shoes-katya-heather-split---lipstick----inspired-by-katya
Oh- and I think Mollie *has* had her moment- it was coming third with her VW; fab dress, fab hair, fab bridge-bothering and some very nice comments. It's just a shame for her that all the subsequent traumas may have obliterated the happy memory.
130 euros for those things? The mind boggles.
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