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Strictly Come Dancing

2014-7-19 22:03| view publisher: amanda| views: 1002| wiki(57883.com) 0 : 0

description: From series 1-11, 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 s ...
From series 1-11, 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 will join Daly as full-time co-presenter for series 12 following Forsyth's departure after 2013. 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.[6] The profits from the telephone lines were donated to Sport Relief in series 1, and to Children in Need from series 2 to 5.
The show is broadcast live on BBC One on Saturday evenings, and is currently presented by Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman. Sir Bruce Forsyth presented the live shows alongside Daly from 2004 to 2013, announcing his departure in 2014. He will continue to present special editions of the show.[7] For some of the second series, Natasha Kaplinsky stood in temporarily for Daly while she took maternity leave, Claudia Winkelman has hosted the results show and editions that Forsyth had missed from 2010-2013. The judging panel initially consisted of Bruno Tonioli, Arlene Phillips, Len Goodman and Craig Revel Horwood. Alesha Dixon took Phillips' place from series 7 to 9, after which she left the programme to judge Britain's Got Talent which led retired ballerina Darcey Bussell replace Dixon and remains a judge alongside Tonioli, Goodman and Revel Horwood.[8] Goodman and Tonioli commute weekly between Hollywood and London to judge both the American and British versions of the show simultaneously. Each judge gives the performance a mark out of ten, giving an overall total out of forty. The voice-over announcer is Alan Dedicoat. During series four, an hour-long highlight show was shown on Sundays at 19:00 on BBC Two, and during series five and six, the results show moved to Sunday evenings, although it was filmed on Saturday and then broadcast "as live" on the Sunday.
The singers on the show are Tommy Blaize, Hayley Sanderson, Lance Ellington, Andrea Grant and formally the well known UK 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 show was broadcast from a specially constructed set at the BBC Television Centre, moving to the Elstree Studios in 2013. 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.[9][10]
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.[11][12] In 2005 though the BBC announced that they would not be returning to the venue for the third series due to "logistical problems".[13] 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, the show did return to the Tower Ballroom, for series 7, where Blackpool-born Craig Kelly was eliminated. The episode was aired live on 7 November 2009.[14] Strictly Come Dancing returned to Blackpool for the 2010[15] and 2011 series.[16] Then after series 10 when Strictly Come Dancing didn't go to Blackpool, they announced that they would return for series 11.[17]
Presenters
Key:
     Presenter of Strictly Come Dancing
     Presenter of It Takes Two
Presenter    Series 1    Series 2    Series 3    Series 4    Series 5    Series 6    Series 7    Series 8    Series 9    Series 10    Series 11    Series 12
Sir Bruce Forsyth+        
Tess Daly*    
Claudia Winkleman^            
Zoë Ball                                        
Notes
+ Between series eight and eleven, Sir Bruce Forsyth only hosted the main show.
* Tess Daly only appeared from week six onwards during series two due to maternity leave. Natasha Kaplinsky served as a temporary replacement for the first five weeks
^ From series eight onwards, Claudia Winkleman has presented the results show of the main Strictly Come Dancing alongside Daly and occasionally the main show replacing Forsyth. She also presented It Takes Two alongside the results show for series eight. Following Forsyth's departure after 2013, Daly took over Forsyth's role as main presenter and Winkleman took over Daly's role as co-presenter.

Other
Year(s)    Series    Presenter    Show    Notes
2004    1    Justin Lee Collins    Strictly Come Dancing On Three    
2004    2    Natasha Kaplinsky    Main show    Maternity cover for Tess Daly
2008    6    Fearne Cotton    Children in Need Special    
2009    7    Ronnie Corbett    Main show    Guest host, Week 9
Live Tour
Year(s)    Presenter
2008–10, 2012–13    Kate Thornton
2010    Amanda Byram
2011    Zoë Ball
2014–    Lisa Riley
Judging panel
Key:
     Judging panel
     Guest judge(s)
Judge    Series 1    Series 2    Series 3    Series 4    Series 5    Series 6    Series 7    Series 8    Series 9    Series 10    Series 11    Series 12
Len Goodman+    
Bruno Tonioli    
Craig Revel Horwood    
Darcey Bussell*                                        
Arlene Phillips                            
Alesha Dixon                                        
Jennifer Grey^                                                
+ Goodman is the head judge, but missed week six of series nine, so Revel Horwood served as temporary head judge
* Bussell served as a guest judge throughout weeks twelve to fourteen for series seven
^ Grey served as a guest judge for week six during series nine as a cover judge for Goodman
Professional dancers and their partners
[show]Professional    Avg.    Series 1    Series 2    Series 3    Series 4    Series 5    Series 6    Series 7    Series 8    Series 9    Series 10    Series 11    Series 12
Key:
     Winner of the series
     Runner-up of the series
     Third place of the series
     First elimination, or joint first elimination of the series
     Withdrew in the series
Iveta Lukosiute was a replacement partner for Johnny Ball in series 10 after his original partner, Aliona Vilani, was injured in training.[18]
Although Ian Waite and Karen Hardy no longer dance competitively on the show, they do still make regular appearances on companion programme It Takes Two. Waite and Darren Bennett both participated in the professional dance troupe in series 8.
Brendan Cole and Anton du Beke are the only two professional dancers who have taken part in all ten series of the show. Anton has never won the competition; Brendan won the first series with Natasha Kaplinsky.
Only four professionals have managed to win the title in their first series of being a Strictly professional. Those four are Brendan Cole (Series 1), Darren Bennett (Series 2), Artem Chigvintsev (Series 8) and Aljaž Skorjanec (Series 11).
In series 11, Aliona Vilani (who had previously been announced as leaving the show) was a replacement for Natalie Lowe who was injured before the series started. The producers of the show announced this on 2 September 2013.[19][20]
Professional pairs
As of September 2013, the professional pairs are:
Male    Female
Brendan Cole    Aliona Vilani
Pasha Kovalev    Anya Garnis
Robin Windsor    Kristina Rihanoff
Anton du Beke    Iveta Lukosiute
James Jordan    Ola Jordan
Aljaž Skorjanec    Janette Manrara
Kevin Clifton    Karen Hauer
Many of the dancers form professional partnerships, dancing together competitively or on the show. Darren Bennet and Lilia Kopylova,[21] and James and Ola Jordan are married,[22] while Matthew and Nicole Cutler are divorced but still professional partners.[23][24] Anton du Beke and Erin Boag,[25] have danced as professional couples since 1997; Vincent Simone and Flavia Cacace are a former Argentine Tango world champion couple.[26] Brendan Cole and Katya Virshilas danced professionally for several years before parting in November 2009.[27][28][29] Karen Hauer and Kevin Clifton were engaged when Kevin entered the show in 2013, Janette Manrara and Aljaž Skorjanec are also a couple.
In 2013, due to injury, Natalie Lowe had to withdraw, meaning Aliona Vilani dances in her replacement with Brendan Cole. Due to the odd number of couples, there will always be an extra male professional, therefore Chigvintsev dances with different female professionals.
Dances
The Waltz, Cha Cha Cha, Quickstep, Rumba, Tango, Jive, Foxtrot, Paso Doble and Samba have all been danced since Series 1.
The American Smooth, the Salsa and the Viennese Waltz were added in Series 3.
The Argentine Tango was added in Series 4.
No more dances were added until Series 7, week 11 when couples performed either a Charleston (which winner Chris Hollins chose to perform again in the final) or a Rock N' Roll routine. The final also featured a head-to-head Lindyhop. Of these dances, only the Charleston was retained for subsequent series.
Series 8 introduced the Swing-a-thon, where all remaining couples dance Swing simultaneously and are voted off the dancefloor one by one by the judges until only one couple remains. This returned in Series 9 and 11.
The tenth series featured a "Dance Fusion", in which the couples attempt to perform two dances consecutively in one routine.
A Showdance (Freestyle) has always been performed in the series final as a last chance for couples to impress the public.
Coaching
As of series four, coaches are Jaclyn Spencer and Chris Marques (aka Cuban Groove) for Salsa and Mambo, and Jenny Thomas and Ryan Francois for Swing, Jive, Rock n Roll and The Charleston. The Argentine Tango coaches in series three were Flavia Cacace and Vincent Simone, both of whom have subsequently competed in the show.
Dance Off
In Series 5, a new system was introduced called the Dance Off. The Dance Off is performed by the two couples with the lowest scores following the judges' scores and public vote. After performing their dance again, the judges are asked one-by-one who they would like to save, and the couple with more votes remains in the competition. If there is a tie, head judge Len Goodman has the deciding vote.
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.[30]
Throughout the Sunday results show the presenters refer to 'last night' in reference to the main show, due to the timing of the Sunday programme, and Tess Daly's dress is changed to present an illusion of a second live broadcast.
For Series 7, the Sunday results show was axed and put back to Saturday nights as a result of a revamp of the show.[31]
From Series 8, the dance off was axed with the public having 50% of the decision of who is to be eliminated, the other 50% coming from the judge's scores. The result show is shown on Sunday evenings.
In Series 10, the dance off was reintroduced and has continued since.
Strictly: It Takes Two
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two
During the run of Strictly Come Dancing, Strictly: 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 has had to leave the series, and Zoë Ball took over from Series 9.[32]
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 doing. It Takes Two replaced Strictly Come Dancing on Three, hosted by Justin Lee Collins, which ran on BBC Three during the first series. BBC Two Scotland airs the programme on four nights only, running their own Gaelic-language programming on Thursdays instead.
Main series results
Series    Premiere date    Finale date    Number
of couples    Number
of weeks    Honour places
Winner
Second place
Third place
1    15 May 2004    3 July 2004    8    8    Natasha Kaplinsky & Brendan Cole    Christopher Parker & Hanna Karttunen    Lesley Garrett & Anton du Beke
2    23 October 2004    11 December 2004    10    8    Jill Halfpenny & Darren Bennett    Denise Lewis & Ian Waite    Julian Clary & Erin Boag
3    15 October 2005    17 December 2005    12    10    Darren Gough & Lilia Kopylova    Colin Jackson & Erin Boag    Zoë Ball & Ian Waite
4    7 October 2006    23 December 2006    14    12    Mark Ramprakash & Karen Hardy    Matt Dawson & Lilia Kopylova    Emma Bunton & Darren Bennett
5    6 October 2007    22 December 2007    14    12    Alesha Dixon & Matthew Cutler    Matt Di Angelo & Flavia Cacace    Gethin Jones & Camilla Dallerup
6    20 September 2008    20 December 2008    16    14    Tom Chambers & Camilla Dallerup    Rachel Stevens & Vincent Simone    Lisa Snowdon & Brendan Cole
7    18 September 2009    19 December 2009    16    14    Chris Hollins & Ola Jordan    Ricky Whittle & Natalie Lowe    Ali Bastian & Brian Fortuna
8    1 October 2010    18 December 2010    14    12    Kara Tointon & Artem Chigvintsev    Matt Baker & Aliona Vilani    Pamela Stephenson & James Jordan
9    30 September 2011    17 December 2011    14    12    Harry Judd & Aliona Vilani    Chelsee Healey & Pasha Kovalev    Jason Donovan & Kristina Rihanoff
10    5 October 2012    22 December 2012    14    12    Louis Smith & Flavia Cacace    Kimberley Walsh & Pasha Kovalev
Denise Van Outen & James Jordan    N/A
11    27 September 2013    21 December 2013    15    13    Abbey Clancy & Aljaž Skorjanec    Natalie Gumede & Artem Chigvintsev
Susanna Reid & Kevin Clifton    N/A
12    Autumn 2014        15                
Series 1 (2004)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 1)
In Spring 2004, Strictly Come Dancing commenced its first season. The professionals were: Brendan, Hanna, Anton, Erin, John, Paul, Camilla and Kylie. This is the only series that happened in the Spring/Summer season. From the next series and future series, the show will happen from September/October to December.
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Jason Wood    Kylie Jones    Week 2
David Dickinson    Camilla Dallerup    Week 3
Verona Joseph    Paul Killick    Week 4
Claire Sweeney    John Byrnes    Week 5
Martin Offiah    Erin Boag    Week 6
Lesley Garrett    Anton du Beke    Third place
Christopher Parker    Hanna Karttunen    Runners up
Natasha Kaplinsky    Brendan Cole    Series winners
Series 2 (2004)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 2)
In Autumn 2004, the second series commenced. 5 of the 8 professionals returned. These professionals were: Brendan, Anton, Erin, Paul and Camilla. There were 5 new professionals who are: Darren, Ian, Lilia, Nicole and Hazel. Hazel only participated in this series while other professionals competed in other series than this.
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Quentin Willson    Hazel Newberry    Week 1
Carol Vorderman    Paul Killick    Week 2
Esther Rantzen    Anton du Beke    Week 3
Diarmuid Gavin    Nicole Cutler    Week 4
Sarah Manners    Brendan Cole    Week 5
Roger Black    Camilla Dallerup    Week 6
Aled Jones    Lilia Kopylova    Week 7
Julian Clary    Erin Boag    Third place
Denise Lewis    Ian Waite    Runners up
Jill Halfpenny    Darren Bennett    Series winners
Series 3 (2005)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 3)
In 2005, the third series commenced. Brendan, Anton, Erin, Camilla, Darren, Ian and Lilia returned from last series. Nicole, Paul and Hazel did not return. They were replaced by Karen, Hanna, Izabela, Andrew and Matthew.
The celebrities that took part in this series were as follows:
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week eliminated)
Siobhan Hayes    Matthew Cutler    Week 1
Jaye Jacobs    Andrew Cuerden    Week 2
Gloria Hunniford    Darren Bennett    Week 3
Fiona Phillips    Brendan Cole    Week 4
Dennis Taylor    Izabela Hannah    Week 5
Will Thorp    Hanna Haarala    Week 6
Bill Turnbull    Karen Hardy    Week 7
Patsy Palmer    Anton du Beke    Week 8
James Martin    Camilla Dallerup    Week 9
Zoë Ball    Ian Waite    Third place
Colin Jackson    Erin Boag    Runners up
Darren Gough    Lilia Kopylova    Series winners
Series 4 (2006)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 4)
The show ran from 7 October to 23 December 2006. Over 12 million votes were cast, raising £1.5 million for Children in Need. A peak of 13 million viewers tuned into the final show of series four to see Mark and Karen crowned 2006 Strictly Come Dancing champions.
This series introduced four new professional dancers – Flavia Cacace, James Jordan, Ola Jordan and Vincent Simone. Andrew Cuerden, Hanna Haarala and Izabela Hannah did not return to the series. This series also saw the return of Nicole Cutler, who had taken part in Series 2 but not in Series 3.
The couples in order of elimination:
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Nicholas Owen    Nicole Cutler    Week 1
Jimmy Tarbuck    Flavia Cacace    Withdrew
Mica Paris    Ian Waite    Week 2
DJ Spoony    Ola Jordan    Week 3
Georgina Bouzova    James Jordan    Week 4
Jan Ravens    Anton du Beke    Week 5
Ray Fearon    Camilla Dallerup    Week 6
Peter Schmeichel    Erin Boag    Week 7
Claire King    Brendan Cole    Week 8
Carol Smillie    Matthew Cutler    Week 9
Louisa Lytton    Vincent Simone    Week 10
Emma Bunton    Darren Bennett    Third place
Matt Dawson    Lilia Kopylova    Runners-up
Mark Ramprakash    Karen Hardy    Series winners
Series 5 (2007)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 5)
The fifth series of Strictly Come Dancing began on BBC One on 29 September 2007, with Bruce Forsyth and Tess Daly returning as presenters. For the first and only time, the line up of professionals was unchanged from the previous series. The first programme was a catch-up show and preview to the new series, before the start of the competition on 6 October, which ran for 12 weeks. The show featured 14 new celebrities, who were paired with 14 professional dancers. 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. In addition to this, the two couples who were at the bottom of the table after the viewers' vote were subject to a dance-off, where they reprised their routine, for the judges to decide who left. Head Judge Len Goodman had the casting vote in case of a tie. The series raised just over a million pounds for Children in Need.[33]
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Brian Capron    Karen Hardy    Week 1
Stephanie Beacham    Vincent Simone    Week 2
Willie Thorne    Erin Boag    Week 3
Gabby Logan    James Jordan    Week 4
Dominic Littlewood    Lilia Kopylova    Week 5
Penny Lancaster Stewart    Ian Waite    Week 6
Kate Garraway    Anton du Beke    Week 7
John Barnes    Nicole Cutler    Week 8
Kelly Brook    Brendan Cole    Withdrew[34]
Kenny Logan    Ola Jordan    Week 9
Letitia Dean    Darren Bennett    Week 10
Gethin Jones    Camilla Dallerup    Third place
Matt Di Angelo    Flavia Cacace    Runners up
Alesha Dixon    Matthew Cutler    Series winners
Series 6 (2008)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 6)
A sixth series of the show was confirmed after the dancers' pay dispute was called off in late June 2008.[35] The series lasted for 14 weeks, which is the longest series so far.[35] The series involved three new professional dancers, Brian Fortuna, Hayley Holt and Kristina Rihanoff.[36] Nicole Cutler did not return to the series.
In July 2008 it was reported that current EastEnders cast members were banned from taking part in the competition due to the length of the series.[37]
The sixth series began on 13 September with a behind-the-scenes look at the new series, followed by the first live show on 20 September.[38]
On 19 November 2008, John Sergeant announced that he would be leaving the show because he believed he may "win it".[39]
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Phil Daniels    Flavia Cacace    Week 1
Gillian Taylforth    Anton du Beke    Week 2
Gary Rhodes    Karen Hardy    Week 3
Jessie Wallace    Darren Bennett    Week 4
Don Warrington    Lilia Kopylova    Week 5
Mark Foster    Hayley Holt    Week 6
Andrew Castle    Ola Jordan    Week 7
Heather Small    Brian Fortuna    Week 8
Cherie Lunghi    James Jordan    Week 9
John Sergeant    Kristina Rihanoff    Withdrew[39]
Jodie Kidd    Ian Waite    Week 10
Christine Bleakley    Matthew Cutler    Week 11
Austin Healey    Erin Boag    Week 12
Lisa Snowdon    Brendan Cole    Third place
Rachel Stevens    Vincent Simone    Runners up
Tom Chambers    Camilla Dallerup    Series winners
Series 7 (2009)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 7)
The seventh series of Strictly Come Dancing ran from 18 September until 19 December 2009.[40] Tess Daly signed a two-year deal to continue presenting the programme for at least the 2009 and 2010 series'.[41]
On 9 July 2009, former competitor Alesha Dixon was confirmed to be joining the judging panel for this series, and that Darcey Bussell would be a guest judge towards the end of the series run. Dixon replaced Arlene Phillips who moved to The One Show as a Strictly Come Dancing expert.[40] It has been reported in the media that many of the show's professional dancers are furious at Phillips being replaced by Dixon. They apparently feel that they "will be judged by someone who knows less than they do about dancing".[42] Bosses at the BBC have also been accused of sexism, as none of the male judges on the show had been replaced. But as well as that, the BBC received over 5,000 complaints along with the Deputy Prime Minister (at the time) who accused the BBC of agism. Dixon's fans were also unhappy as she had to cancel a number of dates on her autumn tour in order to do the programme.[43]
The official line-up was revealed on 25 August 2009 and the winner was BBC Breakfast presenter Chris Hollins:[44]
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Martina Hingis    Matthew Cutler    Week 1
Richard Dunwoody    Lilia Kopylova    Week 2
Rav Wilding    Aliona Vilani    Week 3
Lynda Bellingham    Darren Bennett    Week 4
Joe Calzaghe    Kristina Rihanoff    Week 5
Jo Wood    Brendan Cole    Week 6
Zöe Lucker    James Jordan    Week 7
Craig Kelly    Flavia Cacace    Week 8
Phil Tufnell    Katya Virshilas    Week 9
Jade Johnson    Ian Waite    Withdrew
Ricky Groves    Erin Boag    Week 10
Natalie Cassidy    Vincent Simone    Week 11
Laila Rouass    Anton du Beke    Week 12
Ali Bastian    Brian Fortuna    Third place
Ricky Whittle    Natalie Lowe    Runners-up
Chris Hollins    Ola Jordan    Series winners
Series 8 (2010)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 8)
The eighth series of Strictly Come Dancing began with a launch show on 11 September 2010, then three weeks later the live shows started on 1 October 2010.[45] Three new professional dancers have been announced,[46] The celebrities were revealed on 8 September 2010[47] and the professional partners were revealed during the launch show.[48][49]
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Goldie    Kristina Rihanoff    Week 2
Paul Daniels    Ola Jordan    Week 3
Peter Shilton    Erin Boag    Week 4
Tina O'Brien    Jared Murillo    Week 5
Jimi Mistry    Flavia Cacace    Week 6
Michelle Williams    Brendan Cole
Ian Waite (Week 4)    Week 7
Felicity Kendal    Vincent Simone    Week 8
Patsy Kensit    Robin Windsor    Week 9
Ann Widdecombe    Anton du Beke    Week 10
Gavin Henson    Katya Virshilas    Week 11
Scott Maslen    Natalie Lowe    Week 11
Pamela Stephenson    James Jordan    Third place
Matt Baker    Aliona Vilani    Runners-up
Kara Tointon    Artem Chigvintsev    Series winners
Series 9 (2011)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 9)
Strictly returned with a launch show on 10 September 2011, with the final in December at the Tower Ballroom, Blackpool. Bruce Forsyth and Tess Daly returned to front the main show, and Claudia Winkleman presented the Sunday night results show along with Daly.[citation needed]
For Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two, a new presenter joined the team. Winkleman had to pull out of the 2011 series as it would be difficult to do a daily programme so soon after giving birth. Zoë Ball was chosen to replace her.
All of series eight's judges returned to the show. This was the last series to feature Alesha Dixon as a judge after she left the show after the final to become a judge on Britain's Got Talent
The professional line-up was announced on 15 June 2011 with most of the Series 8 professionals returning, except for Jared Murillo who was replaced by Siberian dancer Pasha Kovalev.[50] The celebrity line-up was announced on 6 September 2011 on The One Show and the couples were paired up for the first time on the launch show.
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Edwina Currie    Vincent Simone    Week 2
Dan Lobb    Katya Virshilas    Week 3
Rory Bremner    Erin Boag    Week 4
Nancy Dell'Olio    Anton du Beke    Week 5
Lulu    Brendan Cole    Week 6
Audley Harrison    Natalie Lowe    Week 7
Russell Grant    Flavia Cacace    Week 8
Anita Dobson    Robin Windsor
Brendan Cole (Week 9)    Week 9
Robbie Savage    Ola Jordan    Week 10
Alex Jones    James Jordan    Week 11
Holly Valance    Artem Chigvintsev
Brendan Cole (Week 7)    Week 11
Jason Donovan    Kristina Rihanoff    Third place
Chelsee Healey    Pasha Kovalev    Runners-up
Harry Judd    Aliona Vilani    Series winners
Series 10 (2012)
Main article: Strictly Come Dancing (series 10)
The tenth series began on 15 September 2012 with a launch show to reveal the celebrity/professional partnerships, and the live shows began on 5 October.
On 25 April 2012, it was confirmed that Darcey Bussell would be joining the judging panel, replacing Alesha Dixon who left the show to be a judge on Britain's Got Talent.[51]
Katya Virshilas was the only professional dancer not returning to this series, and she was replaced by "Burn the Floor"'s Karen Hauer.[52] The full line-up was revealed on 10 September during The One Show.[53]
Aliona Vilani was originally Johnny Ball's partner, but injury resulted in her being replaced by Iveta Lukošiūtė.[18][54]
Celebrity    Professional    Result (week voted out)
Johnny Ball    Iveta Lukosiute    Week 2
Jerry Hall    Anton du Beke    Week 3
Sid Owen    Ola Jordan    Week 4
Colin Salmon    Kristina Rihanoff    Week 5
Fern Britton    Artem Chigvintsev    Week 6
Richard Arnold    Erin Boag    Week 7
Victoria Pendleton    Brendan Cole    Week 8
Michael Vaughan    Natalie Lowe    Week 9
Nicky Byrne    Karen Hauer    Week 10
Lisa Riley    Robin Windsor    Week 11
Dani Harmer    Vincent Simone    Week 12
Denise van Outen    James Jordan    Runners-up
Kimberley Walsh    Pasha Kovalev    Runners-up
Louis Smith    Flavia Cacace    Series winners

Strictly Come Dancing is a British television show, featuring celebrities with professional dance partners competing in Ballroom and Latin dances. The title of the show suggests a continuation of the long-running series Come Dancing, with an allusion to the film Strictly Ballroom. The format has been exported to over 40 other countries (see Dancing with the Stars), and has also inspired a modern-dance themed spin-off Strictly Dance Fever.
The show has run on BBC One since 15 May 2004, primarily on Saturday evenings with a following Sunday night results show (with certain exceptions). The eleventh series ended on 21 December 2013 and a further ten stand-alone Christmas specials have also been produced, in consecutive years from 2004 to 2013. Nine charity specials have also been produced since 2008. Since the fourth series, the show has also been aired in high definition on BBC HD, and BBC One HD from series 8.

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