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Clapping, dancing and a year to remember

Countdown presenter Rachel Riley loves being a mum to baby Maven but tells Lisa Salmon she thinks parenting will be different in a post-COVID world.

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Mathematic­ian and Countdown presenter Rachel Riley has loved her first year of being a mum – despite the pandemic restrictio­ns.

Riley, 35, had baby Maven Aria in December 2019, a few months before the pandemic started, and after a brief maternity leave has successful­ly combined motherhood with presenting Countdown and 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown.

In one way, the pandemic has made her busy life a little easier, as it’s meant her husband, the dancer Pasha Kovalev who she met on Strictly Come Dancing in 2013, has been around more.

“It’s been lovely in a lot of ways,” she says. “All of Pasha’s work has been cancelled – he was supposed to be on tour, and on stage, but he’s not been able to do any of those things. So, when I’ve gone up to Countdown, he’s been able to come with us and he takes Maven out, and brings her in for a feed, so it’s been lovely family-wise.

“But on the other hand, she’s not seen my parents for three months and she’s just not socialised with other children at all, because there’s not been the baby groups that we most likely would have gone to. It’s been different – we’ll have to learn to be parents in the real world when things open up again, because we’ve only done it in the toneddown, Covid restrictio­ns time.”

It can be a worry for parents when toddlers have had such little interactio­n with other people.

“She’s really unsocialis­ed,” laments Riley. “We had one little friend around in the summer, and it was the first time we’d had anyone here. Whereas when we’re out in the street, she loves seeing the other little children. When my friend’s daughter was here, she was so jealous – she took all her toys away and even shoved her away when my friend was hugging her own daughter.

“But there’s nothing we can do about it,” she says stoically. “We just hope that when things open up again, kids will learn quickly. They’re malleable, so fingers crossed she’s not a little terror when she has to actually share things.

”She’s definitely missed out, but she didn’t know any different, and she’s had a lot of parental time, which is really important when they’re little.”

While Maven understand­ably hasn’t yet learned how to play with other children, she’s clearly a joy when she’s alone with her parents.

“She’s in this little phase where she won’t let us sit down for dinner,” says Riley, fondly. “We put music on during dinner, and if a song comes on that she likes, she shoves us off the chairs and forces us to dance, so every night it’s like ‘OK, we’re not sitting down…’ She definitely keeps us busy!”

But is Maven a better dancer than her parents yet?

“She’s better than me,” laughs Riley, who was eliminated from Strictly in week six of the show in 2013. “She’s got my moves so far, rather than Pasha’s. Barry Manilow came on the playlist the other day and she started twirling and twirling. Some songs she doesn’t respond to, and then some – it can be Nineties garage, and she’s like ‘Yeeeah!’”

Riley is a big Manchester United fan – her dad’s from Salford – and lMaven’s got her own miniature kit. During one match, Riley was thrilled her daughter appeared to be supporting the Reds – but her delight didn’t last long.

“Ages ago, we watched the Tottenham game. We scored first and she was sitting there in her little kit, and she started clapping – I was so proud,” remembers Riley, “And then when Tottenham scored, she clapped again – she loves a good clap!”

Football is just one of the sports Riley enjoys, and her love of sport is one of the reasons she’s involved with the new Always Fuel Her Future campaign, to highlight the long-term benefits of girls participat­ing in sport.

“A third of girls are dropping out of sport around puberty, and that’s for a bunch of reasons – 28% said it’s because they don’t think they’re good enough, and 25% said they’re not encouraged enough,” she says.

“This campaign is about highlighti­ng all the benefits of doing sport that you might not think about, like building resilience and confidence, and being vocal. I think you need a lot more resilience than you possibly did when I was younger,” she admits.

Riley played football, netball and hockey at school, and was in all the teams.

She says: “I really enjoyed sport at school – thinking back to my teenage years, some of the girls in my class would be off smoking and drinking, and me and my mates, none of us smoked, we were training, and at lunchtimes or after school, we’d go to the court or to the pitch. We had to look after ourselves, because we wanted to do well in the next tournament or sports meet.”

But playing sport wasn’t an option at Riley’s girls’ school sixth form, and were it not for collegiate sports at Oxford University, where she played football and was college netball captain, she says she thinks playing sport would have “fallen by the wayside” for her, like it does for so many teenage girls.

“Sport kept me out of trouble and I made lots of friends,” she says. “I found it really valuable – learning the value of practice and making improvemen­ts.”

Riley says playing sport has even helped her with her role as the maths whizz on 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown, and explains: “When I started playing football, they really drilled into us that you have to be vocal, so if you wanted the ball, you had to shout ‘Riley’s ball!’

“Looking now at the work I do, where you go into a room with possibly intimidati­ng people – in 8 Out Of 10 Cats, you’ve got a bunch of profession­al comedians and if you want to get a word in edgeways, you have to be able to take your chance and speak out, so I credit football for that.”

W The Always Fuel Her Future campaign highlights the long-term benefits of girls participat­ing in spor t.

An exciting new public arts programme is under way at Shanly Homes’ Waterside Quarter developmen­t, which stretches alongside the rejuvenate­d waterways in Maidenhead.

Created as a thought-provoking ‘Maidenhead Memories Sculpture Series’, the works have been commission­ed from a selection of artists and the sculptures are being delivered as a series of installati­ons set across the public spaces in and around the developmen­t.

Shanly Homes worked with one of the UK’s leading artists in the field of public art, Gordon Young, to create this series of sculptures, seeking to install artwork that will compel passersby to pause and reflect, creating a sense of place for the community. Gordon comments:

“Shanly Homes tasked me with curating a series of public art pieces that are connected to the heart of Maidenhead. Things that have a raison d’etre for being. Each piece has been commission­ed to strike a chord with the neighbourh­ood and to enhance the public realm through the integratio­n of high-quality contempora­ry artwork.”

“The waterway in Maidenhead has always connected with commerce, engineerin­g and use of the place. People have always worked, played and performed beside it, creating plenty of stimulatin­g clues for the Maidenhead Memories Sculpture Series.”

The first piece to be installed, in July 2019, was the White Lion, dedicated to former Maidenhead resident Sir Nicholas Winton, who was awarded the highest honour of the Czech Republic, the Order of the White Lion, by Czech president Miloš Zeman in 2014 for his part in saving 669 children, mostly Jewish, on the eve of the Second World War and finding them new homes in Britain.

The artist selected to produce this piece, along with the vampire bats and an alligator, was Owen Cunningham who expressed what a privilege it was for him to be chosen to celebrate Sir Nicholas Winton’s huge contributi­on to survival. The vampire bats, which have just recently appeared on the walkway next to Waterside Quarter, took their inspiratio­n from the Count Dracula films that were made created locally at Bray Studios.

The toucan is another striking piece to emerge on the façade of Waterside Quarter. The eye-catching bird pays tribute to the famous English actress Diana Dors, who opened the popular Le Toucan café at this location in 1955 and was created by father and son artists, George and Brian Fell.

Vasos Ptohopoulo­s, sales and marketing director for Shanly Homes Thames Valley said: “We have been excited to work with Gordon Young on the Maidenhead Memories Sculpture Series, each piece acting as a waymarker, giving Waterside Quarter its own distinct character. The toucan, vampire bars and white lion are just the beginning of a whole programme of public art which will capture and enhance the unique spirit of Maidenhead.”

Over the next few months more striking pieces will join the current installati­ons. Maidenhead can look forward to a life-size pig – a nod to the award-winning pigs that were once raised in the vicinity. This will be joined by a two-meter long alligator that has strong links to Diana Dors and a life-size funfair horse from a carousel.

 ??  ?? Rachel Riley, mathematic­ian and Countdown presenter. Photo: PA/Matt Crossick
Rachel Riley, mathematic­ian and Countdown presenter. Photo: PA/Matt Crossick
 ??  ?? Rachel with her daughter Maven. Photo: Rachel Riley/PA
Rachel with her daughter Maven. Photo: Rachel Riley/PA
 ??  ?? Rachel Riley and Pasha Kovalev. Photo: Alamy/PA
Rachel Riley and Pasha Kovalev. Photo: Alamy/PA
 ?? By Owen Cunningham. ?? White Lion was created in memory of Sir Nicholas Winton.
By Owen Cunningham. White Lion was created in memory of Sir Nicholas Winton.
 ?? By Owen Cunningham. ?? The vampire bats pay homage to the Hammer horror films produced at nearby Bray.
By Owen Cunningham. The vampire bats pay homage to the Hammer horror films produced at nearby Bray.
 ??  ?? Toucan, by artists George and Brian Fell, is a nod to Diana Dors.
Toucan, by artists George and Brian Fell, is a nod to Diana Dors.
 ??  ?? Waterside Quarter, Maidenhead by Shanly Homes.
Waterside Quarter, Maidenhead by Shanly Homes.

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