Wednesday, 24 September 2008

Strictly Come Duran Duran

I would surmise that as I am 37 and my fame is limited to:

(1) having been on the front cover of the Ladybird Book of Guides in 1983 (yes, one of these people is me. And no, I'm not telling you which).




(2) writing this blog (readership: me) and I Miss 1985 (readership: 500 page views per month, but it is anonymous - durrr)

(3) having been interviewed for 2 seconds on Look North in 2008

(4) having given a dreadful radio interview in about 1998 about railway fencing for local radio, and

(5) being in the Brickhill and Bedford Gazette in 1976 for my virtuoso turn as the narrator of 'Norsey, the Elf from the North'

it is unlikely that I will ever be asked to participate in Strictly Come Dancing.

However should I ever appear this is my first wishlist of the dances that I would wish to do:

1. 'Save a Prayer' - a rhumba. For this I would wear white and khaki reminiscent Simon's turn as tortured (new) romantic with no shoes, as seen below.


2. 'Rio' - a tango. Clearly for this I would have to dress up as the green snake lady who writhes around on the deck of the yacht. http://www.duranasty.com/magic_pills/mp19.jpg
I am assuming such apparel would be a big hit with Bruno Tonioni.



3. 'Notorious' - a salsa. This requires a black bra top and cycling shorts. I don't know what Len Goodman will say, particularly about a slightly plump late 30s woman in such attire, but for the sake of Strictly Duran Duran it MUST BE DONE.



And yes, I still fancy them. So my choice of dancing partner would be Simon le Bon because he's meaty enough to lift me up. Nick Rhodes would like the outfits but I never dance with blokes wearing more eyeliner than me.

1 comment:

Nickie O'Hara said...

I am in complete awe at your brush with Fame. It was my childhood ambition to appear on the cover of a Ladybird book. For years, I wished that my little sister was a boy so that we could have been "Peter & Jane". The fact that I'm not called 'Jane', nor did we have a dog at the time didn't really register.

Now - the comment for the modern day disco. DJ's just do not have a clue, do they? Most of them are younger than my qualifications and think that the 80s were something that happened once upon a time. Little do they know that the fashion of today is actually a revival of the best era known to mankind.

I asked for "White Lines" once and the DJ said middle-aged rockers trying to rap was akin to 'dad dancing'. My husband had to hold me back!!!

People just don't "get" us, do they?