Top 13 Performance Show. Saturday October 19 2013
Last week! LURVE was the tenuous theme;
largely, it seemed, because James and Ola were celebrating their tenth wedding
anniversary. The 9s were out in force
for Natalie, Dave continued his march towards SargeWiddy-dom, Julien continued
to be ignored by the GBP and he found himself in the dance-off with Vanessa,
who was swiftly dispatched so that at least one woman could leave before the
MAN MASSACRE begins.
This week! ‘Superstition’ is in the air – 13 couples – ‘unlucky for one’ – and they
show everyone avoiding ladders, pavement cracks etc, whilst Julien and Janette
wear shamrocks, wave horseshoes and scream DOOOOOOMED. Welcome to Strictly Come Dancing!
Bruce arrives in a natty waistcoat, they do the leg to
Tess’s delight as per. Daly Dresswatch –
black with sparkly lacy sleeves. It’s
unremarkable and therefore it’s actually a success. Bruce makes a political joke about pensioners
and heating and shouts ‘VOTE FOR BRUCE’ – but in what sense, Bruce? If we’re getting to vote on the presenting
team of this series now then I’m firmly team Tess/Claud – I continue to find it
remarkable how Tess is a good lead presenter and a poor second-wheel. Bruce then grabs her with a ‘come here my
beauty’ that’s straight out of the Brothers Grimm’s book of fairytales
(What? I’m not going to make any jokes
about Operation – redacted).
The couples enter and there’s about 40% participation in
jigging along with the theme tune. Tut
tut. Bruce discusses Craig’s hip
operation and makes an obligatory Craig is a pain joke. The camera cuts to
Rachel and Pasha. Pasha is stony-faced
but Rachel has her Bruce joke faces down pat. She knows her audience. Bruce then calls everyone chicken for not
laughing at the obvious joke.
First up, Sophie and Brendan. Their dance is ‘1920s and 1930s inspired’
because a) Brendan can’t tell the difference and b) it seems to be Sophie’s
era, if their Charleston is anything to go by. ruce says he was born in the 1920s, and the midwife congratulated his
mother on having a lovely chin. The
audience laugh at this which gives Bruce another opportunity for one of his
crises of conflict where he has got a laugh but at his own expense, so he
quickly descends into shouting ‘SHUT UP’ at them all. I think we’re at the stage now where ‘shut
up’ is an official Brucie catchphrase, aren’t we? [I think we're at the point where anything he manages to say without fluffing his lines is a catchphrase. - Steve]
Sophie decides that going vintage shopping will help her get
into character – cue lots of dress shopping where Sophie looks awesome in an
array of period outfits. Their foxtrot
is to ‘Cheek to Cheek’. Sophie’s dress
is a glittery peachy thing with pink ruffles and her hair’s been curled up with
flowers. The foxtrot is glamorous and
controlled and fits with the Hollywood themed backdrop they’ve been given. Sophie’s arms seem to flail a little in a
couple of places, but other than that it was a decent effort. Bruce reminds us that Craig is having a hip
op and gets everyone to shout ‘hip hip hooray’. I’m not entirely sure that’s sensitive, but… Bruce.
Len says Brendan and Sophie got straight into the routine,
with no silly stuff (those of you who had MAHCKIN ABAHT on your bingo cards –
close, but no cigar). Bruno says she’s
brilliant but needs to watch her top line.
Bruce says it’s because she’s a singer, because, erm? Craig agrees with Bruno about the top line
(but gets booed for that unlike Bruno) but says other than that it was clean
and had some lovely footwork. Darcy says
she has style and grace but needs to watch her spins and her shoulders when she
comes out of them. Bruce declares it
‘near perfection’ because he hasn’t yet learned that his opinion doesn’t count. Up in the Tess Circle, Tess says she excels
in both ballroom and Latin, although I think it’s too early to tell with the
Latin yet, but never mind that, she has a NAN in the audience (DRINK!) Scores: 8, 9, 9, 9 for a total of 35 and I
think Brendan is way more nervous about messing this one up than Sophie
is. When are we envisaging the ‘Brendan
vs Artem (possibly also vs Ola) for the first pro to win twice’ storyline
kicking in, by the way? My money’s on
either the first or second weekend in November, when they’ve had a chance to
lose some more deadweight (otherwise known as 'men').
Fiona and Anton are next. Bruce makes a BOND BOND BOND joke which is offensive to Judi Dench and
is also about BOND and I had enough of that storyline last year with Colin
Salmon so I refuse to bow to it this year and discuss it in any detail. Anton is thrilled to have 28 points as he
doesn’t think he had that in the last three series put together. Oh boo hoo, Anton. WIDDY got you to sixth place, and
you had a third with Lesley Garrett, a fifth with Patsy
Palmer and a fourth with Laila Rouass, so forgive me if I don’t join
your pity party, especially given what they did to Erin most of the time;
Robin’s steady stream of mid-table wonders [Robin got a contender last year and failed to do anything useful with her, so I'm still not feeling terribly sorry for Robin - Steve] and Kristina’s ability to get a
hoofer on paper who’s a duffer on the dancefloor.
Fiona reminds us she is a SUPERFAN and has a dad WHO IS DEAD
(wrong show). She watches Strictly with
her mum and daughter [...how, exactly? She is ON STRICTLY. - Steve] and brings Anton home to dance with her mum. Sidebar: Her daughter looks like Kimberley
Walsh.
Their rumba is to ‘World of Our Own’ which is a curious
choice, and not one that’s especially suited to the singers. It’s a bit clunky. Fiona does a decent floor spin but has
difficulty getting up again, and generally she’s better when she’s being posed
than when she’s moving. Her hair and
make-up look lovely though, and it’s nice that they’re both wearing a kind of
indigo shade that is not seen enough on this show. Although Anton’s ‘issues’ don’t seem to be as
bad as I’d feared given what I saw on Twitter last night as I was on a train
home, he would benefit from better tailoring.
Bruce calls them over and shouts ‘DID SOMETHING GO WRONG?’
even though he always snaps at contestants when they point that out
themselves. Such a class act. Bruno says it didn’t have enough fluidity for
a rumba (not helped by the totally inappropriate song choice, I’d add). Craig says the hips were a bit clunky, her
exit from the floor spin was bizarre, she lost her balance in places and the
connection with Anton wasn’t really there. I’d kind of blame him for this – I don’t think he’s exactly comfortable
with a rumba, what with it being Latin and all. Darcy says she needs to focus more and bring out more fight next
time. Len says the steps were there and
the attitude was good but the slowness of the rumba amplifies any mistake and
he slips in a quick promo for Len’s Lens. He says there were a few issues. Fiona: I thought there was only one issue. Bruno: one in each section. Ouch. Can we get over the ‘Anton’s bestest partner ever’ narrative now? [Especially since Anton's bestest partner ever is and shall always be Nancy Dell'Olio. - Steve] Tess asks if the nerves got to her. Fiona says she thinks she’s concentrating
really hard but she lost her balance which she hadn’t done in rehearsals and
she thinks going wrong is something she just seems to do. Scores: 4, 6, 6, 6 for a (slightly generous)
total of 22.
Mark and Iveta are next and OH MY DAYS can we have a
moment’s reflection on their costumes?
Iveta is a hardcore urban gangsta princess [someone on Twitter said she was Jentina, which is SO PERFECT - Steve] whilst Mark is a comedy Elvis
as a rapper in gold and bling. I can’t
wait to see what’s about to unfold. It’s
as if Iveta saw Dave and Karen trying to reap the comedy votes and decided to
bring her A-game. Bruce makes a LOL I’M
OLD joke which gets a laugh. VT – Mark
says he likes that they get good marks for storytelling but when he gets
nervous his hands go wrong. Their
cha-cha is going to be to ‘U Can’t Touch This’. Oh Iveta, I am beginning to love your ridiculous ways. If only you’d been here when they randomly
did Jive Bunny, it may even have made some ludicrous kind of sense.
They begin with a dance-off of ‘hip-hop’ moves before moving
into a more regular cha-cha coupled with some ACTING. Mark’s wearing gold trainers and MC Hammer
pants which probably don’t really help his performance, as his feet are quite
stompy and flat. He’s having a good go
at the steps though – even if he doesn’t always make them – he doesn’t have
much refinement in his arms or legs - but he does have good rhythm and
energy. It could have had more cha-cha
moves in it, but if they’re going down the comedy route, then I’d rather see
this semi-competent comedy than whatever it is Dave is doing. [Agreed - it wasn't a cha cha, but it was a lot of fun, and I laughed more at this than I ever have at Dave. - Steve]
The audience give a standing ovation. Craig says he can’t believe the audience,
giving him a false sense of security as it was stompy and the cha cha chaaaar
bit was very stompy. Darcy says she
disagrees and Mark has put a lot of work into the details. She says it was fabulous and she loved
it. Len says Mark’s full of talent
unlike Craig who is full of… He says the
basic steps were all there and he wants him to do it again (is that a
backhanded way of saying he wants to see him in the dance-off). Bruno says it was unique, different,
memorable and funny – none of which is a comment on the actual steps, purity of
the dahnce fans. Tess says the audience
loved it and Mark’s found his funky Latin side. Iveta says they have a lot of fun and he works really hard in
training. Scores: 3, 8, 8, 7. Everyone (apart from Bruno, possibly) earns a
LOLWHUT from me for those scores.
Ashley and Ola are next. Ashley loved getting good remarks for his salsa. This week he has to be ‘lovey’ in their
Viennese Waltz. I thought that theme was
last week? They go to a cinema and watch
him kissing various women in Hollyoaks (whom he calls birds, nicely done,
Ashley). I’m sure watching your work
makes you feel totally romantic and not at all awkward. They’re dancing to ‘Angel’ and the singing is
as you might expect. The dance is not
bad – his arms certainly seem to have improved although there’s a bit where his
feet stutter. It’s a sweet dance,
although he does look to be concentrating more than enjoying it.
Bruce snaps at him for wearing a lycra vest instead of a
proper shirt like wot a proper man would wear all these poofs I dunno (I
paraphrase slightly). Darcy tells us
what a Viennese Waltz is and says this was many of those things but it was a
bit too safe and placed, but his top line has improved. Len says it had romance, elegance and style
but it was a bit ‘wafty’ on occasions. He liked the fleckerl but it was a bit stiff. So, was it stiff or was it wafty, Len? Make your mind up. Bruno says he didn’t mind the wafting – it
was tender and romantic but it needed more WHOOMPH and drive. Craig says his arms out of hold still seem
unnatural and were a bit stiff rather than wafty. Bruce snaps at him for wearing a vest and
blames Ola. Somewhere, Vicky from
wardrobe is sticking pins in a Bruce voodoo doll. Up in the Tess Circle, Ashley says he
probably was a bit stiff with nerves, but he enjoyed it. Scores: 7, 8, 8, 8 for a total of 31. Ola reveals that Ashley is kicking her a lot
in training.
Julien and Janette are next, wearing all the colours of the
rainbow to dance a samba to the Spice Girls.
It’s as if Janette has decided to throw every GAYTASTIC element she
could think of at the dance to go out on a high. Julien’s VT says that he used to dress the
Spice Girls and hadn’t realised they were all Strictly fans. Even though one of them came third in THIS
VERY SHOW and another was runner-up in Dancing with the Stars. It’s not their fan credentials I’m
questioning right now, Macdonald. He
gets a voice call from Mel B who half-arsedly tells him not to mess it up and that she'll be 'thinking of' (note: not 'watching' him).
Janette then says “she” created a game show memory game with
a Spice Girls theme to help him remember his steps. Oh Janette, bless you and your lack of
commitment to the narrative – it’s basically the conveyor belt round from the
Generation Game, cuddly toy and all, but she entirely misses that, much, I’m
sure, to Bruce’s chagrin. For that
alone, it’s my favourite VT so far this series.
OH MY EARS. This
intro to ‘Spice Up Your Life’ is quite possibly the worst the singers have been
all series, and that’s saying something. If I wasn’t recapping this, I would definitely mute my TV – it’s so, so
awful. [You're such a trouper. - Steve] The dancing is ropey in places
but in other parts, Julien manages a few more moves than in many other
attempts. And he’s in uber-gurn
mode. Len says it needs more dynamic but
it was an improvement. Bruno says it
looked like he was trying to do all the Spice Girls at once. Leave that kind of mental image for your fan
fiction Bruno. Bruce starts snapping
that Julien was on the beat more. Julien
says he loves it but he finds it difficult. Craig says there was no real hip action and Julien lacks musicality. Darcy says it was fun and in sync and his
best dance yet. In the Tess Circle,
Julien says he’s giving ‘400, 500, 1000 percent’. Reality show percentages are laughable at the
best of times but to make up three contradictory figures on the spot is really
testing things – I can only assume he’s angling for a spot on the Celebrity Apprentice
if they ever do one of those again. Scores: 4, 6, 7, 6 for a total of 23 and their best score yet.
Rachel and Pasha are playing bank robbers in their dance,
which gives Bruce the cue for a half-hearted bank=rip-off joke that gets a
half-hearted laugh. He then shouts at
the audience ‘well, is it there, or isn’t it?’ until they respond more
noisily. He then starts to berate them,
saying he hates it when and another awesome Bruce rant is cut off by the
editors, whilst someone backstage probably gets the emergency Claudia on
standby.
Rachel was pleased with last week’s cha cha and hopes she
can only get better. To help Rachel get
into the speed of quickstep, Pasha is taking her to play squash. OK then. Their quickstep is to some Caro Emerald type thing called 'Johnny got a Boom Boom'. [It's Imelda May, apparently. Yeah, I'd never heard of it either. - Steve] They’re wearing natty outfits with leopard
print bits and red sparkles. Rachel is
in trousers and they just look adawwable as usual. The dance itself is pacy and Rachel’s legs go
wrong in a couple of places and she seems a bit scared, but generally this is
much better than I could have ever imagined her doing a quickstep and some bits
go very right. [Those TROUSERS, though. Good lord. - Steve] There’s a bank vault set
behind them and at the end they break in to steal the glitter ball but fall
before grabbing it, which is… how Pasha’s narrative usually goes.
Bruno says she almost got away with it and needs to work on
her control. Craig says that her top
line let her down and it look as though she was being flung about and there
were a lot of mistakes. She needs to
tighten her bum cheeks to glide more beautifully. Darcy says that was a very challenging dance
and she needs to watch not to grip on to him – but it’s Pasha – who
wouldn’t? Len says Craig will be
clenching his bum cheeks when they dig his hip out. I think Len has some… niche preferences. He says the quantity of steps was there but
the quality in the top and the posture were lacking. ‘Everything downstairs’ was beautiful. Filth. Up in the Tess Circle, Tess asks if she found her dancing feet. Rachel: ‘Well I found them, then I lost them,
then I found them again, so maybe
one.’ Dawwww. Scores: 5, 7, 7, 7 for a total of 26.
We then get a trail for all the couples coming up making
their faces. We’ll probably see this in
their VTs so I’m not recapping that. Get
on with it, show. Bruce asks Len why he
didn’t say ‘yum yum pig’s bum’. Because,
as insufferable as Len is, he doesn’t tend to just randomly shout his
catchphrases willy nilly? Bruce then
snaps at a camera person ‘I know which camera it is’ and gets all huffy. CONSUMMATE PROFESSIONAL.
Ben and Kristina’s VT is about Ben falling over and Kristina
reminding him that Matt Dawson did well and AUSTINWUZROBBED so he has rugby
tradition to keep up. Matt Dawson them
comes into their training. I don’t like
Matt Dawson. [Nobody likes Matt Dawnson. - Steve] The end.
Their salsa to ‘Hot to Handle’ sees them both in powder
blue, which is a curious choice. As you
might expect, Kristina is doing all the work and BENZ GUNZ get a very early
airing. There are lots of lifts and he
looks even more like he’s trying to carry her through a scrum than ever, and
then there’s a bit where he looks like he’s trying to strangle her. [OH KRISTINA. - Steve] Erm, also, it was fast and there was a quite
good bit where he does steps over her. It gets a standing ovation because of BENZ GUNZ. Craig says ‘dirty, oiled, mechanic, ticks
every box’. Darcy says he can ‘handle
Kristina with ease and confidence’ because he’s just treating her like a rugby
ball. Len says he’s got the guns and
tonight he’s got the ammunition. Bruno says it was surprisingly smooth for
such a big brute and Bruno wants to see ‘more of you’. Kristina does the check on which gender Bruno
is fancying that week and he confirms Ben.
Am I missing something here?
Kristina worked very hard and the lifts were great (except one really
ugly one) but she was pretty much doing the whole thing and all Ben had to do
was lift her a bit for the most part. I
mean it was enjoyable to watch, but I think the judges are all just hypnotised
by BENZ GUNZ at this stage. Even Bruce
cops a good feel of them. (Also:
Kristina’s abs. Wowsers). Tess asks if he was having more fun, he says
he feels more comfortable doing some throwing around. Scores: 8, 8, 8, 7 for a total of 31. Nonsense. And Bruno even got booed for the 7!
Deborah and Robin are doing the jive which leaves Bruce room
to make a joke about her doing the ‘cokey cokey’ – which surely is a cue-card
to use for Julien, ho ho. Then Bruce
moans about having to do live television.
Deborah was pleased with last week and is desperate to keep
getting better. Robin has talked her
into jiving to Bucks Fizz because he’s desperate to out-camp Janette. Deborah worries about the skirt ripping
bit. They watched the Eurovision clip
and Deborah says it really helped her remember what the dance was about in the
same earnestness she talked about understanding the Latin dance because of her
travels (which then led to the dragon v drag queen dance). Aww, bless her taking Bucks Fizz seriously. She’s definitely my favourite Robin pairing
yet.
You can tell this is everything Robin has ever wanted to do
since he was a kid watching Eurovision – he’s wearing the stripy jacket and
everything. [And the wig! ♥ - Steve] They start on Perspex stairs
doing a hand jive. The singers continue
their ‘form’, and I have no idea what the hell the wig is that they’ve thrust
upon Robin – it’s brunette and cut in the style of Clint Boon from the Inspiral
Carpets rather than the blonde mullet-mop of the Bucks Fizz boys. He then whips his white trews off to reveal
silver ones underneath. Basically, this
is his time to shine and so Deborah almost feels like an afterthought
here. She is struggling with some of the
kicks and flicks and it’s largely another example of Robin giving his partner
choreography that’s too hard for them, but he is clearly having the best time
of his life (and they do the skirt thing too). Essentially, I imagine Robin when he was younger as Kylie, the best
friend from short-lived sitcom Beautiful People – all energy and showboating
and desperate for a stage upon which to be fabulous. Deborah smiles throughout, even
when Robin seems to be running away from her rather than leading her. The love of dahnce, everyone!
Darcy says it was a difficult dance and a bit soft for a
jive and missed her confident self. She
says there’s always a dance that isn’t someone’s and that wasn’t hers. Len says it had plenty of fizz and enthusiasm
but the feet weren’t there and she needed better technique. Bruno says it was lots of fun but the
technique wasn’t there. Craig says there
wasn’t much spring and the kicks were lame – not her dance. Deborah loved it anyway even though she knew
she was struggling. Scores: 5, 6, 6, 6
for a total of 23. Robin looks like he’s
half laughing and half-crying.
Anton and Natalie now. Natalie injured her back and had to take two days off training, but O
NOES WHAT IF SHE SUDDENLY GOT RUBBISH THROUGH LACK OF REHEARSAL? The strings of INJURY PORN doom play as she doesn’t want to let Artem
down. Who would have thought that it
would be Artem’s partner and not Artem
himself who got the first injury porn VT of the series?
They’re both in black and white (Natalie in some odd flarey
trousers) for their Quickstep to a very weird swing version of Usher’s
‘Yeah’. It starts out with some saucy
business with canes before they go into hold. Natalie has excellent sass-face and there are some lovely jumps, flicks
and patented Natalie Lowe head rolls. There’s a clicking of fingers bit where they ever-so-slightly get out of
time with each other but other than that, it was fast, complicated, energetic
and fun. Len says it was a bit long-winded
getting started, but still no ‘MAHCKIN ABAHT’ and he doesn’t think they were on
hold for long enough. Bruno says he
can’t believe she delivered a dance of that standard in such a short space of
time and it was like being at the Cotton Club – she has some brilliant musical
nuances. Craig loved the fusion of
quickstep and jazz and thinks there’s no stopping her. Bruce tries to give his opinion. Darcy says she needs not to be too ambitious
in case she breaks again and Natalie cries a bit. Artem holds her back as they go up to the
Tess Circle. Natalie says the show has
really looked after her this week. [The way things are going, we might all have to become Strictly contestants just for the free healthcare. - Politically Satirical Steve] Scores: 9, 9, 8, 9 for a total of 35.
Spotted in the background! Aliona is still here!
Patrick and Anya are back. Patrick takes Anya on the set of Casualty but they missed an opportunity
to cover her in fake blod and make her stiff of the week. Casualty spoiler spot: some new nurse we’ve
never seen before!
Their cha cha is to ‘Mercy’ and his hips are OK, but his
arms are a bit clumpy. He has generally
good rhythm and timing though, and has been practicing his dance gurn. Anya’s perhaps trying to get more attention
by wearing fewer clothes this week. He
has a couple of nice bits of footwork and then there’s a clumsy spin where he
nearly pushes Anya over. Overall, a
solid attempt and he’s still one of the better male dancers but I imagine it’s
probably nothing much to propel him out of that upper-middle of the table
groove he’s gotten into. Bruno and Craig
loved it though, so what do I know? Bruce
warns him not to kiss Craig in case the bisexualness catches. Darcy tells him to look at Anya more but he
has an inner groove. Len says it’s happy
hour, and ‘you were steaming, I was beaming’. Again with the niche fetishes, Len. They bound up to the Tess Circle and Anya tries to get his chest out in
the hope of getting more votes. Scores:
8, 8, 9, 8 for a total of 33 and their best score yet.
Abbey and Aljaž are next and I kind of hope they get kicked
out soon, only because Aljaž is giving us blog problems which we entirely blame
on Blogger, so that sometimes his name looks fine, but sometimes it doesn’t, so
Steve’s blogs often look like Alja on my computer but if I put in a ž then they
look like Aljažž sometimes. So if you
see weird anomalies, it’s not because we can’t write his name properly, but the
vagaries of the system. [I think I've found a solution. Famous last words and everything, but we'll see next week when it's my turn to recap again. - Steve] (Their VT is
also so boring, involving an assault course and I can’t be bothered recapping
it).
Their tango is to ‘Spectrum’ and it has some attack and
purpose although Aljaž is clearly driving things. Abbey’s head flicks are a bit sloppy and her
‘fierce’ face looks a little gormless, but it’s a much better attempt than her
jive, with a lot of pace and the end pose is great.
Craig says it had great staccato moves, real intent and
purpose and was amazing. Darcy wasn’t
expecting it but her top line was better, it was sexy and cool with some great
changes of direction. Len says they are
a formidable couple with snap, crackle and pop. Bruno says it had power, passion, drama and beauty and snappier than the
crack of a whip and they have great chemistry. Janette’s reaction to this is not pictured. Tess suggests mud wrestling with Aljaž must
have been utter hell. They’re doing this
on purpose now. Scores: 9, 8, 9, 9 for a
total of 35 and their highest score yet, as well as the joint highest of the
night so far.
Dave and Karen next. Dave boasts about how he got a standing ovation last week and moans that
he’s trying hard. I liked Dave in week
one but he’s getting more and more like Widdy as the weeks go on. Karen takes him for a manicure and pedicure
because so early on, the VTs have already run out of steam. Project SUPERFUNCOMEDYLOLS can only be a week
away.
For their waltz to ‘Take it to the Limit’, his hair has been
slicked back and their set is all romantic music and flowers even though LOVE
WEEK WAS LAST WEEK. He walks very
awkwardly with his hands perched behind his back as if he’s pretending to be a
chicken and then there’s a bit where he becomes a doll in a music box, which
Anya already did with Patrick the other week. In hold he does less damage although it’s pretty stiff and slow and
hunched over, then there’s a hug bit that looks like the end even though the
music is still going, and then Karen goes home and waves at him and Dave cheers
and does an air punch, the moral of the story seemingly being ‘even ugly blokes
can get fit girls’. Nice, show, nice. [It's also the moral of about 90 per cent of late nineties US sitcoms. - Steve]
Darcy says he needs to travel more and try a ballet class to
sort out his posture, which is the “only” thing letting him down. Len says on Strictly, the only failure is the
failure to try - which explains why they keep giving certain singers work on an
ongoing basis. Bruno says he scrubs up
well and there’s a ray of hope on the horizon – what he did was minimal, but it
was a waltz, even though it didn’t travel. Craig says it was very placed and he needs to feel the music a lot more and
move more, but it was nice to see a serious side to him. Bruce says they’re still his favourites. Scores: 5, 6, 6, 6 for a total of 23, which
Karen is ecstatic about.
Susanna and KevinfromGrimsby are our final couple. She gets into the BABYWARZ by bringing her
three sons in as judges. Two want more
from her, one thinks she’s brilliant.
They score her 8, 8 and 10.
Kevin from Grimsby has nicked Pasha’s braces and is wearing
his glasses. [I don't think they're his usual glasses, though. They're bigger, I think, and a slightly different shape. I didn't like them as much. I'm very finicky. - Steve] Unfortunately he’s also
wearing explorer garb for their jungle-themed samba, and Susanna is wearing a ‘tribal’
print dress and it’s vaguely close to the edge, xenophobic-stereotype-wise. They’re dancing to ‘Whenever, Wherever’ and
it’s all a bit over the top although Susanna’s face sits between embarrassment and
enjoyment at times. They spend quite a
bit of it away from each other. It’s
quite exuberant and fun and silly although I’m not sure how the judges will
take to it. Len says she should be
ashamed as a nice girl off the news being all ‘bounce, bum and bongos’. Bruno says she can go for it any time, any
place with him but she needs a cleaner finish. Bruno is such a slut, I love it. Craig thought it was a bit muddy and they seemed to be fighting each
other at times. He thinks it lost impact
and she’s losing her neck at times, and she could go further with the hips – it’s
OK and he wants more. Darcy likes the
wild samba queen and thinks she should ‘go for it’. Thanks Darcy! Up on the Tess Circle and Susanna shakes it some more. Tess mentions a standing ovation like that’s
even a thing that means anything on this show any more. Tess and Susanna then get into mutual
appreciation about being mums and having careers and that. Right on, sisters. Tess reminds us that Kevin’s family are
ballroom champions, the dirty ringer… oh wait. Wrong side of the partnership. Scores: 6, 7, 8, 8 for a total of 29.
Scoreboard time and it’s all quite samey –
Sophie and Brendan 35
Natalie and Artem 35
Abbey and Aljaž 35 – all of whom get 13 points
Patrick and Anya 33 for 12 points
Ashley and Ola 31
Ben and Kristina 31, both for 11 points (MAN POWER in this
bottom half of the top half)
Susanna and Kevin 29 for 10 points
Mark and Iveta 26
Rachel and Pasha 26 – both couples get 9 points
Julien and Janette 23
Deborah and Robin 23
Dave and Karen 23 – all on 8 points
Fiona and Anton 21 for 7 points. ANTON’S “BEST” PARTNER EVER, EVERYBODY.
Tess implores us to ‘use and abuse’ our voting power – I’m
sure someone from BBC Compliance is having kittens about that statement right
now.
And now for the epic, beautiful Doctor Who trailer (*crosses
fingers* please don’t be rubbish, anniversary special). A part of me did hope they’d gone completely
mad in Who’s 50th year and cast Strictly entirely from Who cast
members. It would be pretty easy, after
all, Kate O’Mara could be the older woman who’s still ‘got it’ and is also a
bit of a sassy bitch, Bonnie Langford could be the ringer, Sophie Aldred could
be the mum doing it for all the other over-50s mums (HOW? How can that woman be over 50?), Sylvester
McCoy could be the sweet older man first boot, Katy Manning could be the
eccentric whom the VT makers love, Colin Baker and Tom Baker could fight to be
the Dave, Arthur Darvill could be the first man to be paired with a man and he
and Kevin from Grimsby could together take adorkability to a whole new level,
and the final would probably be BARROWMAN vs Freema Agyeman, Jenna Coleman and a
Dalek - cast for comedic purposes and coasting its way through via a
combination of public love/terror and its smooth gliding across the dancefloor
(Ola would be its partner, as I think she’s the pro most likely to replicate this
for publicity shots, plus the Dalek would likely give ample starfish
choreography options). I may have
thought about this whole scenario a bit too much. [Just a smidge. - Steve]
3 comments:
Worry not, Steve. They were comedy glasses.
They had no lenses...
It's nice that my career in optics comes in useful for something!
I guess it's the fault of elf and safety and all that /Daily Mail
Why am I only discovering this blog now?? It's absolutely hilariously astute. Crying laughing. I now look forward to reading the blog review as much as the show itself. Love your work guys. Mark.
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