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BBC Young Dancer
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BBC Young Dancer is a televised national dance competition, broadcast on BBC Four and BBC Two between 2015 and 2022. The competition, inspired by the success of the biennal BBC Young Musician of the Year, was designed for British amateur dancers of ballet, contemporary, hip hop and South Asian dance, all of whom must be aged between 16 and 20.[1]
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History
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BBC Young Dancer was launched in October 2014 by Director-General of the BBC, Tony Hall and was part of BBC Four's Year of Song and Dance. Cuban ballet dancer Carlos Acosta was the competition's ambassador. On 14 January 2015, ballet dancer and Strictly Come Dancing judge Darcey Bussell was announced as co-presenter and dance expert for the Grand Final of the inaugural competition, which was aired live from Sadler's Wells Theatre on BBC Two in May. Zoe Ball and Clemency Burton-Hill were her co-hosts.[2] There were different judges for each style. The category finals for each style were filmed at the Riverfront Arts Centre in Newport and later broadcast weekly on BBC Four. Contemporary dancer Connor Scott won the inaugural competition on 9 May 2015.[3] The grand final was judged by a panel of dance experts: Matthew Bourne, Mavin Khoo, Wayne McGregor, Tamara Rojo, Kenrick Sandy and Alistair Spalding.[4]
The next competition was held in 2017, contemporary dancer Nafisah Baba was announced as the winner of the overall title on 22 April.[5] The category finals were moved to The Lowry in Salford, however the grand final remained at Sadler's Wells Theatre. The televised grand final was hosted by Bussell, Anita Rani and Ore Oduba; it was judged by Kevin O'Hare, Jasmin Vardimon, Marc Brew, Kate Prince, Kenneth Tharp, and Nahid Siddiqui.[6]
The 2019 title, held on 18 May at Birmingham Hippodrome, was won by street dancer Max Revell. The judges this year were McGregor, Shobana Jeyasingh, Emma Gladstone, Christopher Hampson, Junior Bosila Banya and Chitra Sundaram.[7]
The competition returned in 2022 with a new format open to all dance styles; the category finals in Salford were replaced by in-person auditions held in front of a professional panel of judges in Shoreditch, London, with those successful in this round making it through to the final ten who attended a week-long dance residency at Dartington Hall in Devon.[8] Across the four-episode series, the finalists were put through their paces by leading choreographers to prepare new works for the grand final in London's Roundhouse where the winner was crowned. The grand final was judged by Prince, Arthur Pita, Subathra Subramaniam and Ryoichi Hirano.
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Hosts
The following have hosted stages of the competition:[9]
- Darcey Bussell (2015–2017, finals only)
- Zoe Ball (2015 final)
- Clemency Burton-Hill (2015 final)
- Anita Rani (2017–2019)
- Ore Oduba (2017 final, 2019)
- Clara Amfo (2022)
Winners
Past finalists
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2022) |
- Key
† | Person won the competition of that year |
Bold | Performer won the category final and a place to the grand final |
Italics | Performer was given a "wildcard" through to the grand final |
‡ | Performer was awarded one of two jury awards |
2015
2017
2019
2022
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References
External links
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