Dianne Buswell is set to make Strictly history on Saturday as the first professional dancer to compete on the live show while pregnant.
Strictly Come Dancing returned to BBC One last weekend with a launch show that saw the Australian paired up with her compatriot, Neighbours actor Stefan Dennis.
It also saw her save one last curtain-raising dance for Chris McCausland, the blind Scouse comedian who she waltzed to victory with in last year’s contest – winning a Bafta in the process.
Buswell recently revealed she has a baby boy on the way, due next year, with her real life partner, YouTuber and former Strictly contestant Joe Suggs.
Speaking on her and McCausland’s podcast, Winning Isn’t Everything, she said her doctor had advised that because she had been dancing since she was five years old, she shouldn’t stop now.
“I’m still doing everything I did before,” she said. “Obviously with lifts there’s going to be a bit more caution. But my doctor has said everything is normal.”
She continued: “He said, basically, if you’ve done it before, in terms of being a dancer and you’ve done this, done that, then crack on and keep doing what you’re doing.”
Strictly producers have a back-up plan in place if needed, but a spokesman for the programme tells us they do that every year as a matter of course.
In previous years, for example, dancing pros Kevin Clifton and Lauren Oakley have stepped in to cover for Neil Jones and Amy Dowden respectively.
‘A special time’
US dancer and choreographer Janette Manrara – a Strictly pro from 2012 to 2020 -says she “loved” dancing while pregnant.
Manrara found out she was expecting while performing in a show called A Christmas to Remember in 2022, alongside her husband and current Strictly pro Aljaž Škorjanec.
“I carried on dancing, and I just actually felt really empowered,” she tells us. “I really enjoyed knowing that I was pregnant and that our baby, Lyra, was there with us on stage performing.”
Viewers may recall Manrara’s time on Strictly – there was the iconic salsa with EastEnders star Jake Wood in 2014, a partnership with Paralympian Will Bayley in 2019 and then TV personality HRVY, who she reached the final with, in 2020.
She now co-hosts BBC Two’s spin-off show, Strictly – It Takes Two, alongside former contestant Fleur East, a singer and presenter.
Manrara says she went on to host a Strictly live tour while pregnant and kept going to the gym, on her doctor’s advice, doing weight training until six months into her pregnancy, when she says she had to slow down.
Her advice for Buswell is to enjoy this “special time” doing “something that you love so much, knowing that you’ve got your little person there with you all the time”.
“Some days might be better than others, so just take them as they come and ride the waves as they flow.”
Ballet dancer Lucy Balfour says she experienced great “joy” performing the contemporary pieces Ghost Dances while pregnant with her first child.
“It’s about adapting, trusting and working with – and listening to – your changing body,” she says.
“I noticed throughout the pregnancy that there were some moves that became more challenging so intuitively I knew that I needed to adapt.
Balfour, who also teaches pre and postnatal classes for the Dance Mama group, says she believes her “positive endorphins” while performing spread to her children and “made them have a love for music and dance”.
Pierre Tappon
Getty Images
Precautions to be taken
Physio Ilana Marismari from Maternally Fit – an organisation that helps expectant mothers across London to “stay strong, active, and confident throughout pregnancy and beyond” – says dancing should be great for both Buswell and her baby.
“Some studies suggest that mums with better cardiovascular exercise during pregnancy can also transfer some of that health to the babies as well,” she says.
As well as the physical benefits, Marismari says exercising can potentially also “improve the neurological development of the baby”.
But she also says competing in this year’s contest will mean Buswell has to take some precautions – including avoiding any dance moves that could cause “aggressive or impactful trauma”.
“She would be really mindful about those more risky lifts and flips and things because of the risk of injury if it went wrong,” Marismari says.
“And then just physiologically, she is obviously going to be growing from her abdomen. So therefore being able to really easily achieve those hold positions that they need for the waltz and the foxtrot – that is going to put some strain on her from having to hold herself differently.”
Changing attitudes
On the whole, though, Marismari says she thinks it’s brilliant that “household names” like Strictly stars can help to update perceptions around what is possible during pregnancy.
“If you can start changing the attitudes of those who weren’t fortunate enough to have the research available to them when they were pregnant, then it’s just about that multi-generational mind shift in terms of what is safe during pregnancy.”
Pelvic floor muscle exercises are a vital part of exercise classes to help improve the quality of life of the woman after giving birth, the physio adds.
Buswell, 36, has reached the Strictly final three times – with McCausland last year, Bobby Brazier the year before and her partner Sugg in 2018. They have been together ever since.
Earlier this week, she was reported to have hit back at an online troll for branding her participation in this year’s Strictly as “not appropriate”.
“I can’t believe that in 2025 things like this are still being said,” Buswell posted on Instagram, alongside a screenshot of the comment.
“What I want to achieve here is to actually show that the woman’s body is absolutely incredible,” Buswell said alongside Sugg in a vlog he shared following their baby announcement.
“Strictly knew a while ago, and they’ve been so supportive of my decision, and obviously looking after me as well. I’m very well looked after on Strictly and loved, very, very loved.”
A 22-year-old nursery worker has been jailed for eight years for multiple counts of child cruelty after abusing 21 babies.
Roksana Lecka, from Hounslow, west London, admitted seven counts of cruelty to a person under the age of 16 and was convicted after a trial of another 14 counts over her “gratuitous” and “sadistic” actions at two nurseries.
Her crimes were discovered in June last year after she was sent home for pinching a number of children at Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London.
Parents of Lecka’s victims told of their feelings of heartbreak, guilt and distrust in victim impact statements at Kingston Crown Court.
Judge Sarah Plaschkes KC told the defendant: “You committed multiple acts of gratuitous violence.
“You pinched, slapped, punched, smacked and kicked them. You pulled their ears, hair and their toes. You toppled children headfirst into cots. You caused bruising and lingering red marks.
“When you committed these acts of cruelty you would look at the other members of staff to make sure that they were not watching you.
“Often the child would be quietly and happily minding their own business before you deliberately inflicted pain causing the child to cry, arch, try to get away or writhe around in distress.”
A 22-year-old nursery worker has been jailed for eight years for multiple counts of child cruelty after abusing 21 babies.
Roksana Lecka, from Hounslow, west London, admitted seven counts of cruelty to a person under the age of 16 and was convicted after a trial of another 14 counts over her “gratuitous” and “sadistic” actions at two nurseries.
Her crimes were discovered in June last year after she was sent home for pinching a number of children at Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London.
Parents of Lecka’s victims told of their feelings of heartbreak, guilt and distrust in victim impact statements at Kingston Crown Court.
Judge Sarah Plaschkes KC told the defendant: “You committed multiple acts of gratuitous violence.
“You pinched, slapped, punched, smacked and kicked them. You pulled their ears, hair and their toes. You toppled children headfirst into cots. You caused bruising and lingering red marks.
“When you committed these acts of cruelty you would look at the other members of staff to make sure that they were not watching you.
“Often the child would be quietly and happily minding their own business before you deliberately inflicted pain causing the child to cry, arch, try to get away or writhe around in distress.”
Boeing can sign off on some of its 737 Max and 787 Dreamliner planes before they’re handed over to customers, the FAA said Friday.
The FAA had restricted Boeing in 2019 from ticketing its own planes in the wake of two fatal crashes of the company’s best-selling 737 Max aircraft.
The change shows Boeing winning more confidence from its regulator after years of safety and manufacturing crises.
Boeing 737 Max planes sit at the airport in Renton, Washington.
Leslie Josephs | CNBC
Boeing can sign off on some of its 737 Max and 787 Dreamliner planes before they’re handed over to customers, the Federal Aviation Administration said Friday, the latest sign the manufacturer is regaining confidence from its regulator after years of safety crises.
The FAA stopped allowing Boeing to issue its own airworthiness certificates for 737 Max airplanes in 2019 after two fatal crashes. It made a similar decision for Boeing 787s in 2022 because of production defects.
Since the second Max crash, in March 2019, the FAA solely issued airworthiness certificates, which certify planes as safe to fly, for the Maxes. The FAA said that it and Boeing will issue the certificates on alternating weeks.
“Safety drives everything we do, and the FAA will only allow this step forward because we are confident it can be done safely,” the FAA said in a statement. “This decision follows a thorough review of Boeing’s ongoing production quality and will allow our inspectors to focus additional surveillance in the production process.”
Boeing didn’t immediately comment.
The company has been working for years to move past a series of safety and manufacturing issues. A midair blowout of a door panel from one of its new 737 Max 9s in January 2024 set those plans back further, with the FAA capping production of the Maxes and increasing scrutiny of Boeing, a top U.S. exporter.
“If Boeing requests a production rate increase, onsite FAA safety inspectors will conduct extensive planning and reviews with Boeing to determine if they can safely produce more airplanes,” the FAA said Friday.
Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg, who took the helm just over a year ago, has said the company is focused on stabilizing its production rate of its Maxes at 38 month, and he has expressed optimism about evaluating an increase beyond that with the FAA.
“I feel pretty confident that we’ll be in a position here pretty soon to sit down with the FAA and go through what we call a capstone review, which is the process we go through to not just go through these [key performance indicators], but to look at our entire supply chain readiness, our continued production readiness and move forward with that,” he said at a Morgan Stanley investor conference earlier this month.
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