The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Strictly Special

Dance floor divas Nicola Adams and Caroline Quentin chat to P.S.

- WORDS LAURA SM ITH

Strictly Come Dancing has filled our dark winter months with warmth, sparkle and joy for the past 16 years. After a bleak seven months of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the spirit of Strictly is more welcome, and needed, than ever. Despite some setbacks and challenges, the show returned this weekend as 12 new celebritie­s began their quest to lift the Glitterbal­l Trophy. We spoke to some of the stars of Strictly 2020 about social distancing in sequins, the joyous power of dance and how this series will be unlike any other

Olympic boxer Nicola Adams admits that trading the boxing ring for the Strictly dance floor will put her far outside her comfort zone. But she says it will be worth it to land a knockout blow for gender equality, when she becomes the first contestant to dance in a same-sex pairing.

“I wanted to do something different and didn’t see what the big deal would be to partner with another female,” said Nicola, 37, whose girlfriend Ella Baig will be a rock of support throughout the competitio­n.

“We go to nightclubs and dance with other girls all the time, and profession­al dancers dance with other girls all the time, so I don’t think it’s a big deal!”

Earlier this month, it was revealed that the Olympian would be paired with profession­al dancer, Katya Jones. Nicola added:“it’s good to show diversity and for the younger generation to see somebody from the LGBT community on Strictly and think,‘that could be me one day’.”

It was watching re-runs of Muhammad Ali winning Olympic gold that inspired Nicola to take up boxing in her youth so she could emulate her hero, even though there were no Olympic women’s boxing events at the time.

Nicola achieved her childhood dream in 2012 when she became the first woman to claim an Olympic boxing gold medal, winning the flyweight competitio­n for Team GB at the London Games. She defended her title at Rio in 2016 and, in the same year, became the world flyweight champion.

While she retired from boxing last November, with an undefeated record, Nicola isn’t fazed about coping with the gruelling Strictly schedule. She also hopes her years of boxing training will give her a competitiv­e edge.

“I’ll have the fitness side down. I’m quite light on my feet and used to being on my toes, so I’m hoping that will give me an advantage,” she said.“i’m super-competitiv­e. I want to be in the final, so I’ll be working as hard as I can every day to make that happen.

“This is going to be a huge challenge for me because it’s totally out of my comfort zone. It’s going to be exciting, though. I’m looking forward to it.”

As always, the contestant­s will face feedback from judges Motsi Mabuse, Shirley Ballas and Craig Revel Horwood. Bruno Tonioli will share his thoughts via a live video link from LA but he will not be scoring contestant­s.

Nicola intends to take any constructi­ve criticism on the chin. “I’m used to having tough coaches telling me what I’m doing wrong. It’s important to be able to take criticism because that’s how you progress and move forward.”

The self-described tomboy also plans to be open-minded about her glitzy Strictly outfits. She added: “My wardrobe is looking glittery and sparkly and I’m committed to that this season. I’ll be in trousers and shorts but I’m hoping to surprise people.”

I’ll have the fitness side down and I’m super competitiv­e

The hardest thing for me is not seeing my husband or my kids

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ● Strictly star Nicola Adams with her gold medal at London Olympics in 2012, left
● Strictly star Nicola Adams with her gold medal at London Olympics in 2012, left
 ??  ?? ● Caroline Quentin admits she suffers pre-show nerves
● Caroline Quentin admits she suffers pre-show nerves

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