Strictly Come Dancing: Caroline Quentin, Max George and Jason Bell CONFIRMED for 2020
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Caroline Quentin, Max George and Jason Bell have been unveiled as the first three celebrities to take part in Strictly Come Dancing 2020.
The big reveal took place on Tuesday’s instalment of The One Show – following a year of uncertainty amid the COVID-19 crisis.
Things were as cloak-and-dagger as always as the first contestant was announced, with Caroline and Jason beamed into the studio via Skype, while Max was sent into the studio via the studio basement, to ensure secrecy.
Caroline Quentin has been unveiled as the first celebrity to take part in Strictly Come Dancing 2020
Caroline explain that she used to do ballet as a girl, as well as tap and modern dance, but is worried her knees will let her down.
As shows were forced off the air or postponed, fans worried the annual dance competition would air at all this year, given the intimate nature of the series.
But the pros have started rehearsals, with their celebrity counterparts slowly being unveiled over the coming days.
The dancers are pre-recording their big numbers — and they are quarantining in a hotel in Elstree, Herts, before the official launch of the show at the end of this month.
The celebrity contestants will be asked to ‘bubble’ with their dance partners for the duration of the series, which is set to be shorter – nine weeks instead of the normal 13 – and quieter, with no live audience to clap and boo.
Judge Bruno Tonioli will be dialling in from Los Angeles for the first five weeks, unable to travel back and forth from his duties at Dancing With The Stars due to the pandemic’s travel rules.
It’s back! Strictly Come Dancing rehearsals have started and the dancers are pre-recording their big numbers before the official launch of the show in late September
The BBC’s head of entertainment, Kate Phillips, said: ‘Strictly is a slightly shorter run but, apart from that, I don’t think it will be a lesser show at all. If anything, I think this series will be rather special.’
THE £275,000 HOOFERS’ QUARANTINE
Strictly dancers including reigning champ Oti Mabuse have been seen arriving at The Manor in Elstree, Hertfordshire, a historic hotel which stands on the site of an old Tudor house dating back to 1540.
The hotel is set in ten acres of gardens and was a private country club in the Thirties.
The front door was previously part of the dungeons in Lewes Castle, and some of the wood in the entrance hall is said to come from ships involved in the battle of the Spanish Armada.
Previous guests include actors Tom Cruise, Peter Sellers and John Cleese.
There are 49 rooms, and the hotel has been block booked — a notice on its website says: ‘The hotel will be closed for an exclusive booking from Monday, August 24 until Sunday, September, 20, 2020. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.’
The dancers — Aljaž Škorjanec, Amy Dowden, Anton Du Beke, Dianne Buswell, Giovanni Pernice, Gorka Márquez, Graziano Di Prima, Janette Manrara, Johannes Radebe, Karen Hauer, Katya Jones, Luba Mushtuk, Nadiya Bychkova, Nancy Xu, Neil Jones and Oti Mabuse — will quarantine here for two weeks before pre-recording all their group dance routines for the entire nine-week series.
A source said: ‘The dancers are isolating so that they will count as one house- hold. They are rehearsing in a huge marquee space where the hotel often holds weddings.
‘After 14 days, they will be able to go to Elstree studios and film the group dances.’
A physiotherapist and a couple of choreographers are also staying at the Manor, but not the hair and make-up team or the rest of the production crew.
Bed and breakfast plus dinner costs from £200 a night, meaning that it may be costing the Beeb £9,800 a day, or £275,000 over the required period.
Sources indicate that once the dancers have finished and gone home, the hotel will be used to do recorded segments, promotional shoots with celebrities and for costume fittings, too.
Strictly dancers have been seen arriving at The Manor in Elstree, Hertfordshire, a historic hotel which stands on the site of an old Tudor house dating back to 1540
For the first five weeks, Bruno Tonioli will film comments from Los Angeles to be shown in the results show and not deliver a mark for the contestants, before returning to the UK
MOTSI’S BIG COMMUTE
Last year, new judge Motsi Mabuse decided to commute to London each week from her home in Germany, where she lives with husband Evgenij Voznyuk.
She said at the time: ‘I have to travel because I have a little baby and I really don’t want to stress her, so it’s better to stress me.’
She will continue to commute but plans to move to London if there is a realistic prospect of Germany going into lockdown.
MASKS, SCREENS . . . OR NEITHER?
The German version of Strictly — Let’s Dance — was filmed when the pandemic was raging this spring. Motsi is also a judge on that show.
There was no audience and the judges sat behind a desk with Perspex screens between them.
The professional dancers and celebrities danced in hold without face masks, as is the plan for the British series.
However, a BBC source says it is possible that a screen could be used for the judges — Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse and Shirley Ballas — but that the set is still being designed.
No one on camera will wear a mask: not the judges, presenters, celebrities or dancers.
Presenters Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman will keep a distance from each other and the competitors.
This week, Daly, 51, shared a photograph on Instagram of her and co-star Winkleman recording a ‘Best of Strictly’ special show — seated some way from each other.
She wrote: ‘Dreamy being reunited with @claudiawinkle today for some (socially distanced) filming for our ‘Best Of’ Strictly shows — on TV in September.’
STILL DANCING CHEEK TO CHEEK
Because the dancers and celebs are ‘bubbling’ together, they will still partner as normal — without the need for masks — sequinned or otherwise.
Judge Bruno said: ‘The hold is a huge part of the routine. No one will wear masks because everyone will be tested regularly.’
BBC boss Kate Phillips said: ‘I’d say Strictly is probably the hardest show to do in the current circumstances — a live weekly show that relies on body contact.
‘Having said that, I think studios have really risen to the challenge and there’s that old line, necessity is the mother of invention.
‘I would say that across all the entertainment shows, we’re seeing constant good ideas and surprising ways of working to overcome the challenges.’
SO WILL IT BE MAKE-UP IN PPE?
Kate Phillips said the corporation is having to ‘look at how hair, make-up and costume will work backstage’.
Sources say dancers and contestants will have access to professional make-up artists, led by Ant McPartlin’s ex-wife, Lisa Armstrong.
The make-up artists will, though, have to wear PPE. Bruno says he is ready to do his own make-up, though he won’t be in London initially.
LET THE MUSIC PLAY, DAVE
It wouldn’t be Strictly without director of music Dave Arch and his band playing live for the performances, as they have done since 2006. The band features up to 15 musicians, including three trumpets, two trombones and three woodwind/saxophones, as well as four vocalists.
No one on camera will wear a mask and presenters Tess Daly and Claudia Winkleman (above) will keep a distance from each other and the competitors during filming
The celebrity line-up is still secret but interior designer Kelly Hoppen (above) has considered an offer and former Coronation Street actress Lucy Fallon is said to be keen to take part
There are strict social distancing regulations for indoor musical performances.
Sources say Arch will be ‘pretty much in the same place’ as normal in the studio, as will the band, but that his singers will probably have to stand further apart from each other, or be separated by screens.
BARE-BONES CREW AND NO ENTOURAGE
There will be a smaller crew than usual, and less elaborate staging and sets. It’s said the aim is to have 75 per cent fewer people on set than usual.
Celebrities — including pop singers who record a performance for the Sunday results show — will be told they cannot bring an entourage.
Some singers may pre-record their performances several weeks in advance, as setting up the stage for them will take longer with fewer crew.
A source said: ‘There will be no agents hanging around, no friends or family members. It will be basic crew and talent on set.’
As for the live audience, the BBC has said it is ‘impossible’ to have an audience, but this week Kate Phillips said she is hoping to have a small audience in the studio.
A final decision will be taken nearer the time.
WHY LESS WILL MEAN MORE
There will be fewer episodes of the show than usual.
Last year, Strictly started airing on September 21, but this year it won’t come to the screens until October 24.
The final will be on December 19 after an overall nine-week run, rather than the usual 13.
As a result there will be fewer celebrity contestants, and the two landmarks of Halloween and Blackpool will come earlier in the run.
There was talk that Blackpool, which is filmed at the legendary Tower Ballroom, may be scrapped due to the pandemic, but at the moment — local lockdowns permitting — the plan is to go ahead as normal.
The shorter run is partly in order to minimise risks and quarantining, and partly to allow for as much as possible to be pre-recorded in order to keep the Elstree studio working.
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