
Arlene Phillips reflects her 'tough' axe from Strictly amid ageism row as she weighs in on show's bullying scandal and her own 'strict' teaching style
Arlene Phillips has opened up about her 'tough' departure from Strictly Come Dancing and the accusations of bullying on the show.
The former judge, now 82, was replaced with a then 30-year-old Alesha Dixon in 2009 with no explanation, despite having decades of experience as a dancer and choreographer.
The BBC was subsequently accused of ageism after Arlene, who rose to fame with the dance troupe Hot Gossip in the 1970s, found out she had been axed on the radio instead of being approached directly.
The controversy surrounding the long-running TV staple was amped up a gear in 2023 when Amanda Abbington, 51, accused her dance partner, Giovanni Pernice, 34, of bullying.
Arelene told The Sunday Times: 'I loved my time on Strictly and it was tough when I left, but I got up and carried on with life.
'I wasn't there when accusations of bullying were made against some of the dancers, but I was quite strict when I started teaching.'
Arlene, who had two children at ages 18 and 47, explained that her offspring taught her how to communicate without losing her temper.
She said: 'I realised there was a different way to talk to people when I had a child - I didn't want to lose my temper.
'There are ways to get people to do as you want without shouting.'
Arlene, who most recently worked as a choreographer on Guys and Dolls, made the revelations in a new interview when she reflects on her life a decade and a half after her Strictly departure.
Describing her granddaughters as the biggest joy in her life now, she said that when her mother passed away when she was just 15, she quickly learned that she had to fight for the life she wanted.
Arlene said the best piece of advice she has ever been given is to 'think carefully about what you say and do to others.'
Her comments come after the accusations against Giovanni were partially upheld and others came forward to share similar stories that painted a picture of a toxic working environment on Strictly.
Giovanni later admitted that while he is a strict teacher, he is not a bully, telling ITV's Lorraine in September: 'Bully is a big word and there's a difference between being a bully and caring about what you do.'
After six months of investigating the Sherlock actress' claims after she previously branded Giovanni 'abusive, cruel and mean', in September, the BBC announced that they did not find him physically abusive, but upheld some claims of verbal bullying and harassment and did issue an apology to Amanda.
Out of 17 complaints, they upheld six, some of which are for Giovanni using swear words. The report says that his language could be 'belittling.' Sources say they found 'instances of it.'
The BBC also agreed with Amanda that at times he appeared to be giving her overly negative feedback.
It also concluded that there were two moments of 'inappropriate behaviour of sexual banter in the workplace' which were found to be made and received as jokes, humour and compliments of Amanda's dancing. The review has found this was a two-way, consensual way of talking and behaving.
However, her complaint that he sent her a video on WhatsApp which she deemed to be inappropriate was also not upheld. The BBC did not find anything sexually inappropriate either.
Arlene claims to this day that the broadcaster has still never given her a reason for axing her from the show.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Revealed: BBC boss Tim Davie was at Glastonbury on day hate chants were broadcast live... as police launch criminal probe
BBC boss Tim Davie faced mounting calls to quit last night as it emerged he was at Glastonbury on the day death chants against Jews were broadcast from the festival. In a Commons debate, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said there was clearly 'a problem' with the BBC's leadership because it has had 'several' editorial failures in recent months. She threatened to hit it with sanctions if the corporation drags its feet over admitting what went wrong after it expressed 'regret' at not pulling the live feed. She said she was still waiting for answers over another fiasco in February, when the BBC aired a Gaza documentary featuring the son of a Hamas official without telling viewers who the boy was. Mr Davie was present at the festival on Saturday at the time of the livestream of the punk duo Bob Vylan, who launched the rant that Ms Nandy described as 'the equivalent to calling for the death of every single Israeli Jew' due to conscription laws. The band's frontman, who goes by Bobby Vylan, repeatedly chanted 'death, death to the IDF' during a performance – referring to Israel's military, the Israel Defense Forces. BBC boss Tim Davie faced mounting calls to quit last night as it emerged he was at Glastonbury on the day death chants against Jews were broadcast from the festival. Bobby Vylan (pictured) repeatedly chanted 'death, death to the IDF' during a performance at Glastonbury BBC boss Tim Davie (pictured) faced mounting calls to quit last night as it emerged he was at Glastonbury on the day death chants against Jews were broadcast from the festival In a Commons debate, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said there was clearly 'a problem' with the BBC's leadership because it has had 'several' editorial failures in recent months The Daily Telegraph reported that Mr Davie visited staff at the festival and was informed of the chant shortly after it was made. He is reported to have decided the performance should not be made available to watch back later, but decided against pulling the livestream from iPlayer, which was available to view for another five hours. A BBC source told the newspaper: 'Tim was there for a few hours to see the team. He was made aware during the time he was there of what had been said on stage. He intervened to make sure the performance was not made available on demand and he was very clear about that. 'Pulling the livestream brings certain technological challenges. With hindsight, we would have taken it down.' Last night, the BBC confirmed Mr Davie attended the festival on Saturday but did not give further details on who decided not to make the broadcast available on demand. The corporation also said the timings of Mr Davie's visit did not align with the Bob Vylan performance. The force said it was also probing footage and audio of a performance by Irish-language rap trio Kneecap. Pictured: Their performance at Glastonbury One member of Kneecap is already facing a terror charge for allegedly brandishing a flag in support of the proscribed group Hezbollah at a gig in London in November. Pictured: Their performance at Glastonbury Avon and Somerset Police have now launched a criminal probe into the chants, which have been recorded as a public order incident and potential hate crime. Footage shows some of the crowd joining in with the chants. The force said it was also probing footage and audio of a performance by Irish-language rap trio Kneecap, one of whom is already facing a terror charge for allegedly brandishing a flag in support of the proscribed group Hezbollah at a gig in London in November. Ms Nandy raised questions about why Glastonbury's organisers gave the artists a stage amid wider concerns about Left-wing extremist hate at the festival, saying the death chant 'raises very, very serious questions at the highest levels of the BBC'. Richard Tice, Reform UK's deputy leader, said many will have concluded that the BBC was 'institutionally anti-Semitic', while Sir Michael Ellis, a former attorney general, joined calls for Mr Davie to resign. Regulator Ofcom said 'the BBC clearly has questions to answer' and that it was seeking more infomation 'as a matter of urgency'.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka perform TikTok dance routine on Wimbledon's Centre Court as top seeds show there are no hard feelings after fall-out from French Open final
There was no sign of any lingering tension between Coco Gauff and Aryna Sabalenka as the two top seeds danced together on Wimbledon 's Centre Court in a light-hearted TikTok routine ahead of this year's Championships. Three weeks after Gauff beat Sabalenka in the French Open final, the pair took to the hallowed grass on Friday for a relaxed practice session that ended with them grooving to C+C Music Factory's Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now). Sabalenka, the No 1 seed in the women's singles at SW19, posted the clip to Instagram, writing: 'TikTok dances always had a way of bringing people together.' Gauff, who is seeded second, also shared a video of the pair lip-syncing outside Centre Court, captioning it: 'OK guys, we're back. Did you miss us? Cause we missed you.' She added a message to fans to confirm the hatchet had been buried, stating: 'The olive branch was extended and accepted! We're good so you guys should be too.' Their playful display comes after a frostier exchange following the Roland Garros final on June 7, when Sabalenka was criticised for saying Gauff won 'not because she played incredible; just because I made all of those mistakes from… easy balls.' Gauff responded at the time by saying she didn't feel the remarks were fair, noting: 'The way Aryna was playing the last few weeks, she was the favourite to win… I think I got the hardest matchup just if you go off stats alone.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Aryna Sabalenka (@arynasabalenka) Sabalenka later admitted her post-match comments were 'unprofessional' and revealed she had reached out to apologise privately. 'I absolutely regret what I said back then. We all make mistakes. I'm just a human being who's still learning in life,' she said. 'I think we all have those days when we lose control. The difference with me is the world is watching.' Any doubt over the state of their relationship appears to have been erased, with the TikTok videos showing smiles, laughter and synchronised dance moves from two of the biggest stars in women's tennis. Sabalenka opened her Wimbledon campaign with a 6-1, 7-5 win over Canada's Carson Branstine on Court 1 on Monday. Gauff will begin her tournament on Tuesday on Centre Court against Ukraine's Dayana Yastremska. Due to their seedings, the earliest Gauff and Sabalenka can face each other at Wimbledon is in the final on July 12 — and Sabalenka has hinted that if she wins, she is ready to celebrate in style. 'If I win the title, of course I'm going to do the dance,' she told Mail Sport last week. 'But it would be more like a TikTok dance — the first one, we're going to create a new tradition!' Sabalenka, who has a tiger tattoo on her left forearm as a reminder to 'fight like a tiger', admitted she has had to learn to manage her fiery on-court persona, saying: 'When I first came on tour, everyone was teaching me to be quiet, not show your emotions… But I found it is much easier when I let those negative emotions go — scream at my team, let it out.' She added: 'Sometimes I go too much in these negative emotions, which is also not right. So we have to balance it.' The Belarusian star has unfinished business at Wimbledon, having reached the semi-finals in 2021 and 2023. She withdraw from last year's tournament due to an shoulder injury, having also missed the 2022 Championships because of the ban on Russian and Belarusian players following the invasion of Ukraine. 'Now I'm here at Wimbledon I feel like I'm a different person. I'm super excited to compete — you appreciate that opportunity much more when it has been taken away,' she said.


Daily Mail
24 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Popular Playschool presenter dies after battle with cancer
Australian actor Donald Macdonald has died aged 86 after a battle with cancer. The former Playschool presenter had a theatre and television career in Australia and the UK which spanned more than 40 years. Journalist Craig Bennett shared the news of Macdonald's death to his social media on Monday. 'One of our showbiz greats left us at 12:45am today,' the post read. 'Donald Macdonald was a stalwart of stage and screen, who'd written smash hit plays like Caravan, dazzled on London's West End, and delighted millions over the decades with his starring turns on TV series like Play School where he was a presenter from 1966 to 1969.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'He guested on shows from Certain Women, The Box, Cop Shop and Skyways, to the raunchy Alvin Purple, and in movies like Superman Returns. Donald was a dapper delight and always great company.' Craig said Macdonald spent time with his cousins Paula Duncan and Amelia Barrett in his last days. 'On Saturday we turned his hospital room into a party, laughs and smiles a-plenty, as Donald enjoyed some bubbly and lemon meringue pie,' he continued. 'Blue was always his colour, even in a hospital gown! He gave his permission to post his last photo, saying "what the heck!" Vale to a true gentleman.' Others also paid tribute to the Australian icon, with one writing: 'Honoured to have appeared in two of his plays. The consummate gentleman. And, no one played a High Court Judge like Donald. RIP.' 'We were VERY LUCKY to meet Donald through you both, get to know him, and be entertained by his lovely demeanor, sharp wit and of course his writing skills. What a lovely, gentle man,' another wrote. 'A sad day! Another stalwart of the Australian television industry has left us,' a third commented. 'Ohh such devastating unwelcome news. What a gentleman and lovely friend. I'm deeply saddened,' another said. Macdonald began his career at Sydney's famous Music Hall. He has starred in several theatre shows including Is Australia Really Necessary, A Cup of Tea, a Bex and a Good Lie Down. The actor had guest roles in A Country Practice, Come in Spinner, Rafferty's Rules, Heroes II, GP, Jag, and Rake. He has also appeared in Skippy the Bush Kangaroo, The Pathfinders, Alvin Purple, Certain Women, Skyways, Chopper Squad, Demolition, Secret Valley, A Town Like Alice and Cop Shop.