Nerves, Exhaustion And 12-Hour Days: This Is What It's Really Like To Train For Strictly

We go behind the scenes with Paralympian Will Bayley and his professional partner Janette Manrara as they prepare for the dance floor.
|

I’m stood outside a nondescript building in the middle of a residential street in Brighton on a cold, grey and wet Tuesday morning.

It feels a million miles away from the sparkle and polish of Strictly Come Dancing, but right now, it’s Paralympian Will Bayley’s office from Monday until Thursday while he trains for this year’s series.

The table tennis champ is used to putting in the hours – it helped him win gold in Rio 2016 – but unlike some of the other celebs taking part, he has zero dance experience.

Open Image Modal
Will Bayley and his professional partner Janette Manrara
BBC

I wait with Will on the steps of the studio until his professional dance partner, Janette Manrara, arrives smiling and brandishing the keys to the rehearsal space.

Inside it’s eerily silent.

“Do you want a coffee?”, Janette asks as she tucks into a croissant.

Glamorous, it ain’t, but this is where the magic begins.

So just what goes into teaching a routine to a complete dance novice in the space of a week? A lot more than you might think...

The days are LONG...

Will: “We usually start on Monday morning, early doors and we can train from nine until five and then we have the option to carry on until nine.”

Janette: “We normally do until nine.”

And it can feel like a LONG week… 

J: “We have names for each day of rehearsal: so it’s Motivational Monday, It used to be called Terrible Tuesdays because Tuesday is the day you come in and you’re tired from Monday and you’re going ‘oh my gosh I can’t see the light at the end of the tunnel and I’m never going to get this routine done’. But we’ve changed it to Terrific Tuesdays.

“Then we’ve got Wonderful Wednesday and Thrilling Thursdays because that’s when you do the routine from top to bottom and you’re like ‘oh my gosh this is going to happen on Saturday’. And Freaky Friday, because he was so scared [laughs].”

Open Image Modal
Will and Janette get to work on this week's routine
Matt Bagwell/HuffPost UK

The routines are only put together on the Sunday before training…

J: “I’m very lucky that my husband [Aljaž Škorjanec] is on the show, so we use each other a lot for the man and woman’s steps. We’ll normally do that together on a Sunday, and just have the whole routine ready to go, so when we come in on a Monday we’re ready to teach them.” 

Will’s disability has to be taken into account when creating the routines...

J: “This year is the first time I’ve had to do it very differently. So I’ll choreograph bits and pieces, but because of Will’s disability I have to really adapt things, so my creative process is a little bit slower than normal.

“There are things that I think he can do and he can’t, and the other way round, so I’m really creating a lot for Will and with Will, which is cool because I’ve never done it that way before. I always play to the strengths of my celeb.”

There is a special dedicated team who help the pros out with the routine and production...

J: “We have a team – they’re called the dance team – which is a group of three or four people that come with us pros, and they help us because we get like writer’s block. They’re amazing because they’ll give us ideas, help us with song choices and help produce the routine.

“So for example, in week one, it was all my ideas and I knew in my head what I wanted so I sent them visuals and clips and photos. The team are so good, they just get it. They’re the best in the business.”

But the pros have the final say...

J: “Ultimately, the pro gets final say – so if I don’t like the song or the concept or something’s not working, then the pro has the final say. But the dance team are incredible. I’ve never had anything where I’ve been like ‘what is that?’ [laughs].”

Open Image Modal
Strictly Come Dancing
BBC

Rehearsing without props can be tricky...

W: “I think on the first week where we had a wall it was kind of like ‘how am I gonna get from here to here?’ because I had to walk through it, which I’d never seen before and you don’t want to trip up and stuff like that.”

J: “Sometimes things even change at the studio so the whole thing we did for the Quickstep, where we had the wall we had to get through, I said to Will ‘don’t lock in that routine too much because it might change’.

“Everything went perfectly but you do have to adapt sometimes when you’re dealing with big props and sets. That’s what the Friday rehearsals are for so you can see the floor, the props and the set. You do feel really prepared by the time the show goes out live on a Saturday night. You’ve done it enough times that you’re not worried about it so much.”

There’s only so much preparation the pros and celebs can do...

J: “We try and pre-prepare as much as possible for props and costumes and things like that, but you don’t know if you’re going to stay in or not. It’s really such a huge puzzle to put together.

“I try and tell Will what the next dance is a week in advance, so he knows what we’re doing next week. We talk a little bit about it on Friday and Saturday, but because the pressure is on so much to deliver on the Saturday night I try and keep it so he’s not thinking about it.”

Open Image Modal
Matt Bagwell/HuffPost UK

It really helps if you love music...

J: “I’m teaching him how to dance, but really more than anything I’m teaching him a routine, so steps to music, with technique... hopefully [laughs]. But you cannot teach what Will brings to the table.

“He loves music and for me as a dancer, I know how much I love music and what I feel when I hear a song, so to see someone who is not a dancer or an artist come out and feel what I feel when I hear a song or when I do a certain step is so rewarding. It’s like the biggest battle won, because I don’t have to teach him to enjoy it, he just does.”

The pros don’t get a day off while they’re still in the competition...

J: “You’re so busy during the week and Friday we’re in the studio, Saturday is obviously show day and Sunday is meant to be our day off, but we pros, if we’re in the competition, we don’t get Sunday off. It’s almost the most important day of the week, as it’s the day that you do lots of research and gather your thoughts about the steps and what you want to use and what the storyline is.

“Because the celebs don’t have a lot of time to learn you can’t come in not knowing what you want to do.”

Unlike the celebs...

W: “I just chill out on Sundays. If I know what dance I’m doing then I might watch a few. I listen to the music on Sunday too.”

J: “I do tell him to take the day off because you need the rest time as we’re doing such long hours and are so busy throughout the day. He’s using his body in ways that he’s not used to. And his mind… learning so much new information and remembering steps, you need the day off. It’s a marathon, not a sprint.”

Open Image Modal
Strictly Come Dancing
BBC

Being a sportsperson or athlete doesn’t necessarily make things any easier...

W: “It’s very different. I knew it was going to be physically challenging, especially with my balancing, which is a real problem for me physically. I still don’t feel that strong on my feet and often feel like I could fall over. But we’re working on that, which is why we’re doing a lot of core exercises.

“But I’d say it’s mentally where I find it more tough and I notice that by a certain time, if I’m learning a new routine, my mind won’t take in any information, no matter how hard I try. Literally, I get a mind blank and I’ve never had that before in all the years I’ve been playing [table tennis]. I don’t remember having it because I’ve been good for a long time – like 10 years – so I don’t remember that learning phase when I had to learn how to play.

“Sometimes it goes in reverse too, so I can have a good day and then by six or seven o’clock it can turn really quickly into a bad day.”

The pros use different training techniques depending on the celeb...

J: “Everybody’s completely different so as a teacher you have to become a chameleon. Will, because he’s such an athlete, he really depends on his muscle memory. So the only way we can make things stick in [his head] is not by writing or visualising, he just has to drill it over and over and over again. So we listen to the song a lot [laughs] because it has to become muscle memory.

“But Ranj [Singh] last year struggled a lot with memory. He liked to write things down and I knew he did because he’s a doctor, so I got him a journal so he could write down his routine.”

Open Image Modal
Strictly Come Dancing
Matt Bagwell/HuffPost UK

It really is as nerve-wracking as it looks…

W: “I go out into a big table tennis match and I’m ready for it. I know what I’m doing, I’m really in control of myself. But here I don’t feel in control of anything. So then the nerves really can take over. 

J: “Every now and then you’ve got to let it out. If you’re that nervous, it’s ok to cry.” 

The initial professional group numbers are recorded in advance...

J: “We start pro rehearsals in July and that goes on until the end of August. This year we’ve actually pre-recorded six weeks of the pro dances because the levels of exhaustion from all of the professionals was insane. So now we’re in a very nice place because we’ve pre-recorded so we can just focus on the celebs in the first weeks.

“Normally on Monday mornings we have a group refresher. We’ve already choreographed the routine earlier in the year and then on the Monday we’ll have a four hour refresher in the studio with the choreographer where we sit down and map out the whole routine again. And then after that we go to rehearsals with our celebs.”

Open Image Modal
Strictly
BBC

And yes, all the pros do get on... 

J: “I love love love the pro dances. For us professionals it’s our time to really go for gold. And we have such a nice group. We genuinely all get on and like each other. So it’s really rewarding for us to do them.”

As well as learning to dance, the celebs learn about themselves too...

W: [I’ve been surprised] how I’ve been able to cope. I thought I’d struggle a lot more. And that’s massively down to Janette who has made me look as good as I can look. In the launch show I had zero confidence. It’s not just about whether I look stupid or not – I want to enjoy it. I actually want to put on a show as well.

“It’s not that I just want to survive – I want to win!”

Watch Will and Janette in action when Strictly Come Dancing returns to BBC One this Saturday at 7.10pm.

Strictly Come Dancing's Former Pros: Where Are They Now?
Aliona Vilani(01 of20)
Open Image Modal
Aliona's time on 'Strictly' ended on a high, when she won with former The Wanted star Jay McGuinness.

When Aliona left, she told fans it was because she wanted to concentrate on starting a family. The dancer then welcomed her first child with her husband, Vincent Kavanagh, in July 2017.
(credit:Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment)
Artem Chigvintsev(02 of20)
Open Image Modal
Artem took part in four seasons of 'Strictly', winning with Kara Tointon on his debut year and ending with a runner-up position while paired with Natalie Gumede.

He's one of a number of 'Strictly' stars who swapped the UK for the States and as of 2017, was a 'Dancing With The Stars' pro.

Artem was also a choreographer on the 2011 series of 'So You Think You Can Dance'.
(credit:Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment)
Flavia Cacace(03 of20)
Open Image Modal
Flavia and her then-dance partner (and ex-boyfriend) Vincent Cacace left the BBC show behind in 2013, stating that they wanted to focus on their own stage shows.

While the duo did this, Flavia's personal life also saw her hit headlines as the famous 'Strictly' curse struck.

She split from Vincent back in 2007, and began a relationship with her 'Strictly' parter Matt Di Angelo, but they also then split.

She later got together with - and then married - her series eight partner Jimi Mistry.
(credit:Tim Whitby via Getty Images)
Robin Windsor(04 of20)
Open Image Modal
Robin was forced to pull out of the 2014 series after suffering a back injury and has not returned.

He's hit headlines multiple times since then, thanks to his on-off relationship with 'X Factor' star Marcus Collins, and in August 2017 teased a new professional adventure, the mysteriously titled 'Blazin' Ballroom'.
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Camilla Dallerup(05 of20)
Open Image Modal
Camilla was one of the original 'Strictly' pros and stick around for six seasons, stepping down after winning with actor Tom Chambers.

She went on to star on other TV shows including 'I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here!' and 'Pointless Celebrities'.

Things are very different nowadays though and as of summer 2017, Camilla was running her own life-coaching business.
(credit:EMPICS Entertainment)
Brian Fortuna(06 of20)
Open Image Modal
Brian is admittedly one of the lesser-known 'Strictly' pros, having appeared on just two seasons, but he's been pretty succesful ever since.

In the time since he left 'Strictly' in 2009, Brian has gone on to star in numerous stage shows including 'Aladdin' and 'Over The Rainbow'.

He also trod the boards in 'Burn The Floor', alongside his 'Strictly' partner Ali Bastian (pictured here).
(credit:John Phillips via Getty Images)
Darren Bennett(07 of20)
Open Image Modal
Darren and his celeb partner Jill Halfpenny won the second ever series of 'Strictly' and he was later paired with two other soapstars, Jessie Wallace and Letitia Dean.

In 2012, he joined the Lebanese version of 'Dancing With The Stars'.
(credit:Mark Campbell/REX/Shutterstock)
Erin Boag(08 of20)
Open Image Modal
Erin took part in 10 years of 'Strictly' before doing her final waltz across the ballroom in 2012.

In 2014, she gave birth to her first son, a baby boy, and named her dance partner Anton du Beke as Godfather.
(credit:Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment)
James Jordan(09 of20)
Open Image Modal
Ah, James.

He's not exactly on the best terms with those still at 'Strictly', and has spent a lot of time since he left making wild fix accusations, live-tweeting derogatory comments about the show and slamming its current stars. Bitter? Never...

When he's not been doing that, James has also popped up on a number of other reality TV shows, including 'Celebrity Big Brother' and, errm, 'Through The Keyhole'.
(credit:Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment)
Karen Hardy(10 of20)
Open Image Modal
Fan favourite Karen Hardy was thought to be in the running to replace Len Goodman when he stepped down from the judging panel in 2016, alas, it was not meant to be.

Karen is pretty busy though and runs her own award-winning dance school in Chelsea.
(credit:EMPICS Entertainment)
Gleb Savchenko(11 of20)
Open Image Modal
Oh Gleb. Precious Gleb.

Anita Rani was lucky enough to dance with Gleb on his one and only series of 'Strictly' and quite frankly, we're still jealous.

After the 2015 series, Gleb announced that he wouldn't be back anytime soon, deciding to spend time with his wife and daughter instead.

He then joined 'Dancing With The Stars' in the States - the couple split their time between there and Sydney - before welcoming a second child in August 2017.
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Natalie Lowe(12 of20)
Open Image Modal
After eight years in the 'Strictly' ballroom, Natalie decided to leave the show behind ahead of the 2017 series.

Speaking after quitting, Natalie said she wanted to focus on spending time with her fiancé James Knibbs, hinting at plans to start a family.
(credit:EMPICS Entertainment)
Ian Waite(13 of20)
Open Image Modal
Ian, seen here with Denise Lewis, left 'Strictly' in unfortunate circumstances when his 2009 partner Jade Johnson suffered an injury and was forced to pull out.

Ian is still a fully-paid up member of the dance world and toured with Camilla Dallerup in 2017, while also being joined by dancers including Oti Mabuse, Kristina Rihanoff and Natalie Lowe at other events.
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Kristina Rihanoff(14 of20)
Open Image Modal
It's fair to say Kristina's is one of the most famous former pros and she became the first 'Celebrity Big Brother' star ever to announce a pregnancy while in the house in January 2016.

She welcomed her first daughter with Ben Cohen - who she met on 'Strictly' - later that year.
(credit:Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment)
Vincent Simone(15 of20)
Open Image Modal
Vincent still dances with Flavia Cacace and their West End shows have even won Olivier Award nominations.

You can also book them for corporate events which is something we're seriously considering. Anyone fancy chipping in?
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Oksana Platero(16 of20)
Open Image Modal
One series wonder Oksana jetted off on what looks like - judging from her Instagram - a never-ending holiday with her husband Jon. (credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Joanne Clifton(17 of20)
Open Image Modal
After winning the 2016 series with Ore Oduba, Joanne decided to go out on a high, leaving the BBC show behind and quickly landing a role in a stage production of 'Flashdance: The Musical'. (credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Lilia Kopylova(18 of20)
Open Image Modal
Lilia fast become one of our favourite pros when she partnered with Darren Gough, who won the third series.

She continues to dance with partner Darren Bennett, and also works as a choreographer on Ireland's 'Dancing With The Stars'.
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Ola Jordan(19 of20)
Open Image Modal
Ola's most notable post-'Strictly' job is one she probably regrets - yes, we mean 'The Jump'.

The dancer is one of the programme's many casualties and she was left needing knee surgery after suffering an injury in training, before a single episode had even aired.

She was forced to take a huge break from her dance career and later revealed that her leg "will never be the same".
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Trent Whiddon(20 of20)
Open Image Modal
Trent is another dancer to compete in just one series, taking part with Pixie Lott in 2014.

Trent and his dance partner Gordana have a very snazzy website which lists the various events and places they are performing and reaching at, up and down the country.
(credit:Danny Martindale via Getty Images)