Anton Du Beke: ‘This one thing could have stopped me joining Strictly’

Anton Du Beke: ‘This one thing could have stopped me joining Strictly’
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Anton Du Beke: ‘This one thing could have stopped me joining Strictly’
Author: Josie Copson
Published: Feb, 24 2025 00:01

Anton Du Beke’s hips were swinging. His cheeky chappy smile was on full beam and his arms swooped up into the air in one gracefully smooth manner. The scene may have you thinking I was rewatching one of his Strictly Come Dancing routines on YouTube, perhaps his Paso Doble with Ruth Langsford or Viennese Waltz with Emma Barton, but actually, Anton, 58, was doing something else entirely.

 [For use in UK, Ireland or Benelux countries only Undated BBC handout photo of judges Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Shirley Ballas, Anton Du Beke giving the perfect score?during the live show for Saturday's Strictly Come Dancing show on BBC1. Issue date: Saturday December 7, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story SHOWBIZ Strictly. Photo credit should read: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: Not for use more than 21 days after issue. You may use this picture without charge only for the purpose of publicising or reporting on current BBC programming, personnel or other BBC output or activity within 21 days of issue. Any use after that time MUST be cleared through BBC Picture Publicity. Please credit the image to the BBC and any named photographer or independent programme maker, as described in the caption.]
Image Credit: Metro [For use in UK, Ireland or Benelux countries only Undated BBC handout photo of judges Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Shirley Ballas, Anton Du Beke giving the perfect score?during the live show for Saturday's Strictly Come Dancing show on BBC1. Issue date: Saturday December 7, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story SHOWBIZ Strictly. Photo credit should read: Guy Levy/BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: Not for use more than 21 days after issue. You may use this picture without charge only for the purpose of publicising or reporting on current BBC programming, personnel or other BBC output or activity within 21 days of issue. Any use after that time MUST be cleared through BBC Picture Publicity. Please credit the image to the BBC and any named photographer or independent programme maker, as described in the caption.]

While his love for dance is pretty obvious to anybody who’s ever turned into BBC on a Saturday evening in the autumn/winter since 2004, there is another sport that he’s equally fond of and he’s now letting the world know about it with a brand-new podcast Putt & Strut. If you haven’t yet got it from the title, it is golf.

 [Television Programmes: Strictly Come Dancing. DRESS REHEARSAL - Anton Du Beke, Judy Murray - (C) BBC - Photographer: Kieron McCarron]
Image Credit: Metro [Television Programmes: Strictly Come Dancing. DRESS REHEARSAL - Anton Du Beke, Judy Murray - (C) BBC - Photographer: Kieron McCarron]

To celebrate the launch, Anton and his co-host Sarah Stirk invited us to Pitch, a golf club in central London, to discuss their new project. In between taking swings at the virtual golfing game, Anton was just as enthusiastic and chatty as when he is sat behind the desk on Strictly.

 [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]
Image Credit: Metro [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]

After asking us what we want from life, and insisting I talk him through my vision board (yep, that happened), we made Anton the subject of questioning as he’s the person of interest after all. We asked if he’d be up for The Traitors. Only if he can be a Faithful.

 [National Television Awards 2024 -  Arrivals]
Image Credit: Metro [National Television Awards 2024 - Arrivals]

It’s just days after his episode of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? aired, in which Anton ended up paying £15,000 of his own money to The Sick Children’s Trust after getting a question on musicals wrong, so we couldn’t help enquiring about that too. Anton informed us he was getting the bank details that afternoon to make the transfer. He doesn’t think watching the episode back is something he’ll ever be able to do.

 [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]
Image Credit: Metro [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]

His fame on Strictly – first as a dancer, now as a judge – means that he’s become a household name, and popping up on these types of shows has become a regular occurrence. However, that may never have happened, or at least, he would have been famous for an entirely different reason if the timing had been different. If he’d step (bull changed) in an alternative direction perhaps.

 [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]
Image Credit: Metro [FOR FEB24 - Anton Du Beke may never have been a Strictly star if one thing was different]

‘I could have quite happily taken up golf if I’d stumbled into it before dance,’ Anton revealed to Metro and a small group of media. Instead, he started playing at age 16 after a man at his dance school in San Francisco suggested Anton join him at a golf course. This was a whole six years after he began dancing. By this point, he was already competing and so golf was a hobby, rather than a way to earn a living.

A world in which Anton doesn’t drag Ann Widdecombe across the Strictly dance floor is not one we want to live in, so we’re glad the cards fell this way. ‘Dance and golfing are not a thing of perfection so you’re always striving for the next level. You’re always trying to bring more to the role so I would have taken up golf with the same mentality and mindset as dancing,’ he said about his alternative life.

Although, he added with a smile: ‘But I’m not sure if I’d have made any money.’. The age a person begins a sport is often a factor in how successful they can become, Anton pointed out, so he was proud to tell us his seven-year-old twin children George and Henrietta with his wife Hannah Summer are starting to express interest in golf.

‘I do hope that they become massively successful so they can keep their father in his old age,’ he joked. ‘I love nothing more than playing golf with my wife, and I’m looking forward to the children getting a bit older, not rushing them mind you, so we can do golf days. I can’t think of anything more thrilling for me than that.

‘The first day we sit on a golf buggy and roll out the first tee will make my entire life.’. Although golf isn’t Anton’s primary source of income, it helps him in a different way. Playing a few rounds is what helps Anton take care of his mental health.

‘It’s the place I go to, to get away from it all is a bit sort of extreme, but it’s my happy place, which is a bit extreme as well,’ he said, debating with himself on the definition of its role. ‘I like to grab the clubs and go play golf on my own. It gives you time to mull things over, and most things are dealt with better by not doing anything, just thinking.

‘Somebody said to me, you’re better at dealing with a situation by thinking for half an hour and after that, you’ll find you can deal with it. It quietens the mind.’. The chatter about all things green has Anton feeling like a walk down memory lane, specifically, reminiscing about golf fan Sir Bruce Forsyth, who is his ‘great hero’. His impact on Anton’s life cannot be underestimated, it was Forsyth’s name being attached to Strictly that convinced him to sign up.

‘That was the real hook for me,’ he summarised. He first got to be in the same room as Forsyth, who died age 89 in 2017, for the Strictly press launch held at Claridge’s hotel. He claims that even members of the press were silent as what went on to become the BBC’s biggest show was introduced to the world.

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