Amy Pigliacampo’s recent renovation of a 3,713-square-foot home in Durango, Colorado showcases her ability to blend client preferences with innovative design approaches. This four-bedroom, four-bathroom residence underwent a complete transformation, with Pigliacampo overseeing changes to nearly every aspect of the home while retaining key elements of its original structure. The client, who is originally from Venezuelan, sought a fresh aesthetic for the home – one that integrated vibrant color, particularly yellow, while maintaining as much of the existing cabinetry as possible.
The original house had a muted “50 shades of brown” color palette, which Pigliacampo dramatically altered. Her goal was to retain 70% of the millwork, reducing waste, while giving the space a bright and modern update. Nowhere was this transformation more evident than in the kitchen and mudroom, which became Pigliacampo’s favorite parts of the project. These spaces saw the inclusion of a dedicated bar area, a coffee station, and a family-friendly mudroom, all while infusing bold color choices that brought the rooms to life.
Yellow, requested by the client’s eldest child, Vincent, became a key inspiration throughout the design (check out the yellow bathtub below!). The challenge lay in using this vivid color without overpowering the overall palette, and Pigliacampo’s approach succeeded in bringing in warmth and energy, while keeping the design cohesive.
The project also embraced practical, cost-effective strategies, such as refinishing the original hardwood floors with a sheer white stain to neutralize their yellow tone and updating the carpeted bedrooms with matching wood flooring. Pigliacampo and her contractor repurposed cabinetry in the kitchen, playroom, mudroom, and primary bedroom, saving on material costs while preserving quality.
Despite Pigliacampo’s physical distance from the project, with her being up to 17 hours away at times, the renovation was completed with impressive craftsmanship thanks to a dedicated contractor and collaborative tradespeople. Some of the design elements were new to the team, including the use of tambour and concrete skim materials, but these were executed successfully, adding unique textures and finishes to the home.
One of the more unexpected challenges in the project came from updating the home’s outdated technology. The existing lighting and sound system, state-of-the-art when installed in 2007, required a substantial investment to integrate with the new fixtures and design changes. This experience left Pigliacampo with a cautionary lesson about the risks of embedding too much technology in a home’s infrastructure, which can quickly become obsolete.
The finished home now reflects a blend of the client’s love for bold colors and Pigliacampo’s clever design ideas. The use of Schoolhouse Electric and Dutton Brown lighting, Fireclay and Florida tiles, and custom furniture pieces like the striking Vitra chair in the living room, all contribute to the home’s modern yet personalized feel. Ultimately, this project exemplifies how thoughtful collaboration and creative reuse of materials can result in a home that feels both fresh and familiar.
Caroline Williamson is Editor-in-Chief of Design Milk. She has a BFA in photography from SCAD and can usually be found searching for vintage wares, doing New York Times crossword puzzles in pen, or reworking playlists on Spotify.
To pick up from last time after the retirement of Roberta Smith and the death of Peter Schjeldahl, “I think if I have any legacy,” Smith said in a kind of exit interview, “it’s teaching people how to look at art.” Now if only The Times agreed.
Even before her departure, it began to cut its art reviews almost to nothing. (While changes at The New Yorker are more modest and far less toxic, it has reduced its capsule reviews across the arts as well.) It still covers museum exhibitions, if not critically and often belatedly. That leaves a huge, glib monthly compendium of “what to see in the galleries.”
It has room for anything but teaching. This is not about expanding minds, but planning your weekend, just as the food section tells you what to cook “this minute”—morning, noon and night. It is about letting you know that you are in the know. It is no coincidence that any remaining longer review is now a “critic’s pick,” and the critics write accordingly. They hardly have time for the art of looking, even if they cared to try, and make up for it with superlatives. I hesitate to call it criticism.
I have left out a still more visible change, as reviews give way to feature articles with the emphasis on the artist. They purport to take you behind the scenes, because real people sell papers. They go far to turn the arts pages into a second style section, with role models and rankings, just as opinion articles more and more take on lifestyle changes, and news articles stress the human angle as well, beginning with anecdotes and ending with catchy quotes.
I started this Web site, then the only Web site devoted to contemporary art and art history, nearly thirty years ago to get away from superlatives, with reviews that tell stories about how to look. I was put off by magazines, with their word counts and the need to pitch articles before I could see the show. I hoped to integrate values, theories, and description into something worth reading. (I have explained what I had in mind here and here.) I could not begin to rival those I admire as much as Smith, Schjeldahl, and many others, but I like to think that they would balk at puff pieces, too. Critics have better things to do than huffing and puffing.
Does any of this matter? After all, mainstream media exist to bring news and features to the general public, and there are others worth heeding. Yet art magazines are changing in much the same way, and magazines everywhere are dying, along with alternative weeklies like the Voice (once a home for Schjeldahl and Smith’s husband, Jerry Saltz, as well). Art in America is now hard to tell from ArtNews, which merged with it in 2015, and the latest cover leads with rankings, for “five trailblazing artists.” Artforum is no longer the house organ for Minimalism of its founding in 1962, which is only right. Yet its Web site, too, leads with “news”—and a “spotlight on select summer advertisers.”
Why, though, does it matter except to curmudgeons young and old like me? I shall not repeat my notion of good criticism, but I still believe it, and I still value those, online and off, who get readers looking and thinking—and, sure, than includes our paper of record and my favorite magazine. Galleries, under enormous financial pressure since the pandemic, need lookers and thinkers more than ever as well. But the new model for journalism caters to the art business in a way that shapes art as well. Shallow writing encourages the dominance of shallow artists, and clickbait translates into attention getting. Maybe Smith knew that it was time to retire.
Read more, now in a feature-length article on this site.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.I agreePrivacy policy
Justseeds friend Vic Speedwell recently sent over these photos from the streets of Amman. It’s nice to see the diversity of pro-Palestine street art in various sites around the globe.
“Could the Hirshhorn be a major institution? These days, Director Melissa Chiu says it should assume its role as ‘the national museum of modern and contemporary art.’ The notion would have invited laughs in 1974.” – The Washington Post (MSN)
A swirl of concern and outright fear has long been following Robert Zemeckis’s unusual big bet Here, a 30-year reunion for his Forrest Gump co-stars Tom Hanks and Robin Wright. The film, based on Richard McGuire’s comic strip turned graphic novel, was heralded as the most ambitious use of digital de-aging yet, following the pair through the decades, from teenage years to final days, as part of an ensemble of characters who have lived in the same space over time. Early stills, and a trailer, had clued us into the film being plainly terrifying but nothing had quite prepared us for just how unforgivably dull it would also be. Here lies the year’s most eerie and embarrassing misfire.
Zemeckis was once a director who knew exactly how to manipulate a mass audience. He was the guy who made Back to the Future, Death Becomes Her, Romancing the Stone, Cast Away and What Lies Beneath, a conjurer of the kind of transcendent movie magic we just don’t get that much of anymore. We’re certainly not seeing it in his contemporary work, whether it be pointless sub-par remakes like The Witches or Pinocchio or misfiring tech experiments like The Walk or Welcome to Marwen (I will gladly be one of the few defenders of his perfectly fun 2016 second world war thriller Allied). Here exists in the latter category, another baffling folly that plays this time like a museum installation crossed with a 100-minute insurance advert. His latest gimmick traps us in the same fixed spot as he flits back and forth in time, from the dinosaurs all the way through to Covid, an ugly sitcom melange of surreal FX, painful overacting and pat Live Laugh Love lessons.
Zemeckis and his Oscar-winning Forrest Gump co-writer Eric Roth (here on less of a Killers of the Flower Moon day and more of an Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close one instead) guide us through history told in the briefest, and blandest, of snippets. We have multiple strands that follow a Native American courtship, Benjamin Franklin’s illegitimate son William during the war, an ambitious early pilot and his concerned family, the inventor of the La-Z-Boy chair and his pin-up wife (!), a second world war veteran starting a family, his son then starting his own and up-to-date with a Black family dealing with racial injustice and a pandemic. We shift from timeframe to timeframe with rectangles contrasting each iteration of the house or, way back when, lack thereof, an effect that briefly offers an interesting contrast in home decor before growing increasingly tiresome.
As a digitally altered 18-year-old, Hanks looks less like himself circa his 80s slasher debut He Knows You’re Alone and more like Ben Platt circa the equally cursed Dear Evan Hansen movie while in his 50s, he somehow looks even older than the real Hanks does in his late 60s. It’s not just that the FX work is unsettling, which it really really is, it’s also that it’s kind of shoddy, never even in a brief moment persuasive enough to justify such a bizarre concept. Without a successful gimmick (The Walk did at least boast one seat-edge sequence in top-of-the-range 3D, the only real reason it was made), we’re left with a hopelessly banal series of life events that are too quick and too anonymous to evoke any emotion or interest. When the film tries to tackle weightier, more recent events, it goes from inoffensively boring to uncomfortably questionable. There’s the thrill of seeing someone die of Covid in crisp HD, something many of us have surely been craving, and then there’s the utterly anonymous Black family’s longest scene in which the father explains to his son how to survive a police stop, an empty back-pat of a gesture that means nothing given that we don’t even know their names (for a far more thoughtful, and authentic, version of this scene watch The Hate U Give instead).
What little the film has to say about life can be summarised by a series of tacky fridge magnets – time flies, be true to yourself, if you never try you’ll never know – and maybe if Zemeckis was aiming to show us that the world is and always has been monotonous and empty then he has perhaps succeeded. His trick of staying in the exact same corner leaves the film feeling airless and always told at a cold distance, a disconnect for a film filled with such simple, overscored sentimentality. There’s not much that Hanks and Wright can do with the restrictions of the technology that creepily warps them through time but they’re at least as competent as they can be, especially compared to Paul Bettany and Kelly Reilly as Hanks’s parents, both shout-acting as if they’re in a small-town dinner theatre production of Death of a Salesman.
In what feels like double the time we’re sat for, Zemeckis tells us very little and makes us feel even less. For a film about living, Here is a remarkably lifeless endeavour.
Crop artists create painstaking mosaics and portraits that can take hundreds of hours of work. And there’s no bigger showcase for them than the Minnesota State Fair.
At first, it looks like a nature-themed Pinterest board, a constellation of neatly arranged, anodyne squares. Rinko Kawauchi’s photographs don’t pierce or punch, hers is a quieter gaze. As the 52-year-old Japanese photographer says “people often say that I have a child’s eye”.
Kawauchi is best known for photobooks, and this exhibition at the Arnolfini, At the Edge of the Everyday World, has the pacing of a book. The series AILA moves in clusters of jewel-like images, gently glinting, urging close study. Then the soft focus and natural light Kawauchi prefers gives way to surprises, such two images of birth – labour just after the second stage, the immense moment the head emerges into the world for the first time; another baby mere minutes after birth, umbilical cord still attached. Above the image, a newborn bird raises its neck out of a muddy nest; nearby there’s a confounding closeup of animals suckling – the connections are concise, if a little on-the-nose. Larger images swell and surge with the incomprehensible awe of nature, panning out, taking in waterfalls, waves crashing, night skies, baby reptiles held in the palm of the hand. With its rising and falling cadence, the rhythm also subtly nods to the Bristol photo festival’s overarching title for 2024, The World a Wave.
Kawauchi’s exhibition also includes works guided by the photographer’s interest in light, the essence of the medium, and her desire to visualise an inter-species solidarity. Upstairs, the dialectic between light and dark continues, with images printed on gauzy pongee cloth, rippling with the movement of viewers who pass. There are large-format photographs and a 14-minute film capturing the practice of noyaki, thecyclical, controlled burning of grassland on Mount Aso, for regenerative purposes. Shot from the foot of the volcano, Kawauchi gives the perspective of an alien, looking from outer space with detached wonder. And what strange creatures we earthlings are.
This is the second edition of the Bristol photo festival, a biennial event that started in 2021 and it is still finding its feet. At M Shed Museum, Dreamlines is an example of this – portraits of people on Bristol’s streets by 14 photographers with ties to the city. Presented in a confusing mass, and confined to a poorly signposted back room, it leaves you feeling that “community” is simply a euphemism for the marginalised and minorities – who arguably forge stronger community identities by necessity.
It’s a shame, because there are great images such as Jade Carr-Daley’s joyous portraits of smiling young Black mothers, a group who meet up on Stapleton Road, converging with Mohamed Hassan’s imposing, elegant portraits of individuals belonging to Stapleton Road’s West and north African diasporic communities.
Onwards through town, the festival steadies itself. At the Bristol Museum, Hashem Shakeri’s Staring into the Abyss is an engaging exploration of life in Afghanistan after the return of the Taliban in 2021. As international media moved on, Shakeri arrived to portray the contrasting realities of women and men, disenfranchised by Taliban’s chaotic mix of formal informal decrees and the pervasive atmosphere of fear. A machine gun lies on the floor surrounded by thepink flesh of cut watermelons. Personal items arranged in a makeshift roadside market stall create a gorgeous still life scene with warm tones of pink, red and blue – Shakeri’s trademark palette.
While Shakeri’s use of colour and composition is exquisite, he doesn’t let us forget the subject-matter. Shakeri shows men trapped by violence, shackled by weapons as they stand guard in public spaces – while women and girls are photographed in underground illegal schools or the concrete backyards of home. We get glimpses of them behind shuttered windows and shrouds; one young woman sits behind heavy drapes in a cafe designed to conceal her presence from the male customers.
Now Keep Quite Still is a remarkable tale of an archive by Herbert Shergold, who ran a tobacco and confectionery shop, took up photography after the second world war, and adopted the tricky technique of glass negatives, which allowed him to retouch imperfections painstakingly by hand. He ran his portrait studio on Cotham Hill, but left barely a trace after shutting up shop in 1967; when he died in 1982, with no known relatives, his negatives wound up on eBay. Their buyer returned them to Bristol for this exhibition at the Laundrette on Gloucester Road, five minutes down the road from Shergold’s former studio.
The portraits are astonishing – eerie emulations of Hollywood perfection, with hyper-staged poses, dramatic lighting and heavy makeup. Using stars of the time such as Moira Lister and Elizabeth Larner, alongside Bristolian glamour queens and androgynous beauties, Shergold presents a subversive kind of ideal, speaking of freedom and the desires he may have suppressed. When I visited, a woman arrived. Shergold had photographed her at his studio 62 years ago, and she now saw her portrait for the first time since it had been taken. Her picture had been part of a pageant for Bristol’s most beautiful betting-shop worker – her boss had paid Shergold 10 shillings. The small audience in the gallery applauded; tears were shed, too.
Equally emotive is Amak Mahmoodian’s One Hundred and Twenty Minutes, an installation over four floors of an austere residential building (which you can rent on Airbnb). The title refers to the average time a person spends dreaming every night – and this is the time Mahmoodian focuses on in video, photography, drawing and text. The Iranian-born, Bristol-based artist, living in exile from her homeland, collaborated with 16 other exiles now living in the UK.
Mahmoodian’s works evolve from lengthy discussions about dreams, often recurrent, which she represents in various delicate forms, from Polaroids to poems, to sublime choreographed black and white images. In the musty basement of the house is an eight-hour looped film of a person in a REM dream state. It is a heady, haunting journey into the subconscious visual realm, and a rumination on what connects us at our core, beyond invented states and imagined borders.
The dreams are sometimes edged with death and violence – one woman dreams of steam coming off of her sister’s body, another gives birth to a fist; a grandmother loses body parts. One Hundred and Twenty Minutes describes a buried visual state, a psychological retelling of exile. It’s an account of the irrepressible, restless motion of the shadows in the mind, moving like a wave.
‘America is ready for a new chapter,” Barack Obama declared to the Democratic National Convention in August, “America is ready for a better story.” Many would agree, but as commentators try to explain the bewildering reversals and bizarre dynamics of this long and unprecedented election campaign they have often instead reached for stories that are old and familiar.
Shakespeare has been a popular reference point: Joe Biden has frequently been compared to King Lear in his reluctance to relinquish power, Donald Trump to everyone from Richard III to Macbeth. Yet a rather different form of drama, ostensibly less realistic and less obviously relevant to contemporary politics, may in fact offer analogies that are more illuminating still.
Richard Wagner’s Ring of the Nibelung was first performed in its entirety in the Bavarian town of Bayreuth almost 150 years ago. As the cycle of dramas begins, the dwarf Alberich, the Nibelung from whom it takes its name, gropes the beautiful Rhinemaidens and lasciviously compares their charms. They carelessly reveal that their river contains gold that could make its owner master of the world, but only if he renounces love. Alberich accepts this condition and steals the gold, an act of despoliation whose consequences ripple out through the work’s four evenings. With his brother Mime as his apprentice, he makes a ring and a magic helmet that bring him supreme authority. Similarities with Donald Trump, his beauty contests and gameshows, his misogyny, his exhortations to “drill, baby, drill” and his amoral lust for power, are not hard to find.
Like Trump, Alberich holds on to power for much less time than he hopes. His enemies exploit his vanity to trick him out of the ring, effecting a transition whose legitimacy he will never accept. Alberich exhorts his followers to revolt, but without success, and regaining the ring is an obsession that endures for the rest of the story. In the final drama, Twilight of the Gods (Götterdämmerung), Alberich enlists the help of Hagen, the son he has fathered in a loveless union with a mortal woman. Trump, too, relies on younger family members to prosecute his interests: Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner were crucial figures in his presidency, Eric and his wife Lara have recently risen to prominence, Donald Jr is a constant presence.
Trump’s latest surrogate is his vice-presidential candidate, JD Vance, reputedly selected at Donald Jr’s behest. Like Hagen, Vance is a vociferous advocate of marriage: in Twilight of the Gods, Hagen seeks matches for his half-siblings Gunther and Gutrune, supposedly for their benefit but in fact as part of an elaborate strategy to trick Siegfried into giving up the ring. Both Vance and Hagen offer plausibility, engaging in social interactions and vice-presidential debates with a superficial courtesy of which Trump and Alberich are incapable.
But both are less interested in serving their promoters than in securing for themselves the ultimate prize, whether that is the ring or the 2028 Republican nomination.
The parallels between Biden and Wotan – the character who seizes the ring from Alberich – are equally striking. Like the 46th president, the king of the gods has accomplished much during his long career as a legislator, notably building the magnificent fortress of Valhalla.
But he is tormented by his waning abilities, and the reluctant realisation that the task he wants to accomplish himself – the recovery of the ring from the dragon, Fafner – can only be achieved by a younger proxy: stronger, fearless and less tarnished by a lifetime of compromise. Ultimately, it is a female authority figure, older even than himself, who persuades him to abandon his ambitions. Few people know what Nancy Pelosi said to Biden in July, but the agonised confrontation between Wotan and Erda in Act III of Siegfried gives some idea of the likely emotions involved.
Wotan’s daughter, the Valkyrie Brünnhilde, ends The Ring with an impassioned soliloquy. It is now impossible to predict whether Kamala Harris can emulate Brünnhilde by having the last word in this year’s election drama – but millions across the world cling to the hope that she will. Through most of Twilight of the Gods, Brünnhilde is exploited and humiliated by Siegfried, the hero she thought was her husband, and Hagen, the villain who uses her for his own ends. But in the drama’s final minutes, she emerges from her torment to convey a commanding message of love, laughter and joy. Harris’s willingness to embody these same values, conspicuously absent from recent political discourse, fuelled her swift transformation from patronised vice-president to plausible candidate. Journalists covering her campaign frequently comment on her personal warmth; her equally exuberant running-mate, Tim Walz, observes that “she brings the joy”.
Of course, as many have noted, joy is not a political programme, and despite Harris’s success in changing the campaign’s character, she has struggled to define what she would do differently from the unpopular administration she has served. Late in the day though it came, Harris’s incursion into the hostile territory of Fox News, where she insisted that her presidency would not be a continuation of Biden’s, was a notable effort to do just that. The interview’s equivalent in The Ring is Brünnhilde’s searing encounter with Waltraute in act I of Twilight of the Gods, when she resists her sister’s pleas to halt their father’s decline by returning the ring to the Rhine. By doing so, she condemns Wotan to irrelevance, but also articulates what is most important to her, establishing the moral authority that allows her to command the cycle’s ending as she does.
Needless to say, the parallels between Wagner’s story and that of the election only stretch so far. Incest and immolation, key motifs in The Ring, have not surfaced as themes even in the most surreal of Trump’s ramblings – though with a week to go, anything remains possible. Nor are there many swords and spears, dragons or talking birds in today’s American politics. Intrepid heroes, too, are notably absent, though perhaps there have been enough would-be Siegfrieds among Biden’s 45 predecessors. But if we take The Ring less literally, it offers extraordinary insights into how power passes from one generation to another, into the consequences of denuding the Earth of its resources, and into the transformative potential of love.
Wagner has often been appropriated by the political right, notoriously during the Third Reich, and there is plenty in his writing to encourage fascists and authoritarians, not least the disgustingly antisemitic tracts that disfigure his posthumous reputation. But at the time he conceived The Ring, Wagner was a leftwing revolutionary, working to overthrow the regime in Saxony that employed him as Kapellmeister. As his idealism curdled into resignation, he experimented with different endings, giving Brünnhilde words that echoed the philosophy of renunciation of his new intellectual hero, Arthur Schopenhauer. He ultimately decided not to set these words, giving the final say instead to music, and to an ecstatic melody that he told his wife Cosima represented the “glorification of Brünnhilde”.
The Ring is many things: a practical realisation of a revolutionary theory of musical theatre; a compendium of brilliant orchestral sounds; a monumental physical and psychological challenge for singers; for some, a philosophical meditation or political tract. But it is also, perhaps above all, a supreme piece of storytelling, one that only truly exists when played out in a theatre. This need for perpetual recreation makes The Ring inescapably not just a story of its own time but of ours too, one that absorbs and reflects its audience’s preoccupations. And by allowing music to take flight in his drama’s final moments, Wagner invites his listeners to fill the imaginative space he has opened up, connecting his concerns with our own.
Like The Ring, this election campaign still permits many possible endings, and like Wagner, the American electorate is leaving it uncomfortably late in the process to clarify which will prevail. The ultimate fate of Alberich is left ambiguous: almost uniquely among The Ring’s major characters, he is neither shown nor described as dying, though his world-view is discredited and his scheming thwarted, and he plays no part in the cycle’s final act. Perhaps the one certainty about this election is that whether defeated or victorious, Trump will not remain similarly silent. But whatever the outcome, old stories like Wagner’s can help us understand the newest chapters in our own.
Dr Punam Krishan is the fifth celebrity to depart the dancefloor in Strictly Come Dancing 2024
Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez, Shayne Ward and Nancy Xu ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Márquez have left Strictly Come Dancing, following a dance off against Shayne Ward and Nancy Xu during the fifth results show of the series.
Both couples performed their routines again; Punam and her partner Gorka performed their Tango to Sweet Dreams by Eurythmics. Then, Shayne and his dance partner Nancy performed their Paso Doble to In The Hall of The Mountain King by Edvard Grieg.
Tess Daly, Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
After both couples had danced a second time, the judges delivered their verdicts:
· Craig Revel Horwood chose to save Shayne and Nancy.
· Motsi Mabuse chose to save Shayne and Nancy.
· Anton Du Beke chose to save Shayne and Nancy.
With three votes in favour of Shayne and Nancy, they won the majority vote meaning that Punam and Gorka would be leaving the competition. Head Judge Shirley Ballas also agreed and said she would have decided to save Shayne and Nancy.
When asked by Tess about their time on the show, Punam said: “I am really proud of myself. You know I’ve taken on something that’s so out of my comfort zone. The one thing that I’ve very much learnt is to say yes more, and that there is no point in your life when you can stop learning new skills. I’ve learnt more than dancing, I’ve learnt so much from Gorka. Everyone’s been so incredible and it’s just memories that I’ll take home forever and I am very proud. I’ve made my family very proud, I’m just really grateful.”
Tess Daly, Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez ,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
When Tess asked whether Punam’s family are proud, she responded: “They really are. My kids are so proud, my parents, my husband, everyone. This is just one of those things that I have dreamt about for years and I think to have one of your dreams genuinely come true is just a surreal feeling. Week after week it’s been incredible, I’ve made friends for life and everyone’s just been so kind, so thank you.”
Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Gorka said: “It’s been incredible, it’s been a fantastic six weeks. I’m very proud of what she has achieved. She’s a GP and a Mum. She had never danced before and I think she improved week by week. I think she is truly what the show is about, someone who doesn’t have experience in the performance world came here and learnt to dance. She wanted to do so well and worked so hard. Also I feel very proud and very honoured that we got to do a Bollywood dance, to represent your culture, show your culture to the world and open doors for so many people in your culture.”
Punam added: “Thank you. Thank you for believing in me. Thank you for giving me the gift of dancing. I’ve never danced before, but you’ve definitely sparked so much dancing. I want to learn more, and I definitely don’t think this will be the end of my journey dancing.”
Lauren Oakley & Carlos Gu,,BBC Public Service,Guy LevyLady Blackbird, Lauren Oakley and Carlos Gu,BBC Public Service,Guy LevyLady Blackbird, Lauren Oakley and Carlos Gu,BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Sunday’s results show also features a spook-tastic routine from our fabulous professional dancers in a Beetlejuice-inspired routine led by Carlos Gu. Plus a show stopping musical performance from Lady Blackbird sure to leave viewers spellbound.
Due to unforeseen circumstances, Amy Dowden MBE was unable to be in tonight’s results show.
The remaining ten couples will take to the dancefloor next week for the brand-new icons themed week when Strictly Come Dancing returns on Saturday 2nd November at 1830 with the results show on Sunday 3rd November at 1920 on BBC One and BBC iPlayer. Both of this weekend’s episodes are available to watch now via BBC iPlayer.
Dr Punam Krishan and Gorka Marquez BBC Public Service,Guy Levy
Dr Punam and Gorka will be joining Fleur East for their first exclusive televised interview live on Strictly: It Takes Two on Monday 28th October at 1830 on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer.
Don’t miss a Strictly sequin by clicking on the image below