Len Goodman

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Len Goodman
Len Goodman 1.JPG
Goodman in 2007
Born Leonard Gordon Goodman
(1944-04-25) 25 April 1944 (age 80)
Bromley, Kent, England
Occupation Television personality, dance teacher, dancer
Years active 1967–present
Spouse(s) Cherry Kingston (m. 1972; div. 1987)
Sue Barrett (m. 2012)
Children 1

Leonard Gordon Goodman (born 25 April 1944)[1] is an English professional ballroom dancer, dance judge, and coach. He appears on television dance programmes such as Strictly Come Dancing and Dancing with the Stars. He also runs a ballroom dance school in Dartford, Kent.[2]

Early life

Goodman was born in Bromley, Kent,[3][4] the son of Leonard Gordon Goodman, an electrician, and Louisa Adelaide (née Eldridge).[5][6] One of his maternal great-great-grandfathers was a Polish immigrant.[7]

Goodman moved to Blackfen when he was six years old and attended Westwood Secondary Modern School where he was a member of the cricket team.[8] Goodman started dancing at the age of nineteen after a short time as an apprentice welder for Harland and Wolff in Woolwich.

Goodman turned professional, won various competitions, and retired from dancing after winning the British Championships at Blackpool in his late twenties.[4] Goodman is a recipient of the Carl Alan Award, in recognition of outstanding contributions to dance and, in 2006 and 2007, was nominated for the Emmy Award in the Outstanding Reality/Competition Program category.[1]

Career

Strictly Come Dancing

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Since Strictly Come Dancing began in the UK in 2004, Goodman has appeared as head judge on the dance competition for BBC One, in all series of the show and as of the 2015 series, Goodman appears on the panel with Darcey Bussell, Bruno Tonioli and Craig Revel Horwood.

Dancing with the Stars

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Goodman was the head judge on Strictly Come Dancing's American adaptation, Dancing with the Stars, appearing in all series of the programme since 2005 with Carrie Ann Inaba, Bruno Tonioli, and since 2014, Julianne Hough. He left the show for season 21 only. He will be returning soon.

Documentaries

From 30 March to 9 April 2015 Goodman hosted a three-part BBC One documentary that was broadcast in the United States by PBS for the 100th anniversary of the voyage and sinking of the RMS Titanic. It capitalised on his experience as a welder at Harland and Wolff.[9] Goodman interviewed descendants of survivors and introduced viewers to memorials and significant sites in the United Kingdom.

Len Goodman on the cover of Dartford Living, October 2008

In 2013, Goodman presented the BBC Four programme Len Goodman's Dance Band Days. He also hosted Len Goodman's Perfect Christmas on Boxing Day on BBC One.

In August 2014, Goodman was one of a number of well known faces taking part in ITV's two-part documentary series Secrets from the Clink.[10][11]

In November and December 2013, Goodman and Lucy Worsley presented the BBC Four 3-part show Dancing Cheek to Cheek.[12]

From 20 October 2014, Goodman hosted BBC One show Holiday of My Lifetime.[13] On 17 November 2013, Goodman and Lucy Worsley presented the BBC Four show Dancing Cheek to Cheek.[14]

In November 2015, Len and chef Ainsley Harriott presented the BBC show Len and Ainsley's Big Food Adventure, a 10-part series exploring world cuisine in England and Wales.

Radio

In 2013 and 2014, Goodman presented a Sunday evening music show on BBC Radio 2 during Paul O'Grady's weeks off. Goodman played music that he grew up with mostly of an easy nature together with his spoken memories of his young life and family.

Other work

Goodman has featured in advertisements for food emporium Farm Foods with his catchphrase "It gets a ten from Len".

Personal life

Goodman married his dancing partner, Cherry Kingston,[15][16] but they were later divorced.[16] He then had a long term relationship with a woman named Lesley who, he wrote, "decided to give up nursing and live with me and help me run the dance school – which was great, because she was full of ideas. Things rolled along pretty nicely for a year until out of the blue Lesley dropped a bombshell. She was pregnant!"[16] Goodman was 36 at this time. Lesley, he wrote, was the ex-wife of "a bloke called Wilf Pine who had managed [the band] Black Sabbath. Lesley and Wilf got married in Connecticut...."[17]

Goodman and Lesley's son James William Goodman was born 26 January 1981, but at age 12 moved with his mother back to her native Isle of Wight after Lesley and Goodman broke up.[16] As of 2012, James teaches Latin and ballroom dancing at his father's Goodman Dance Centre.[18]

On 30 December 2012, Goodman married his companion of over ten years, Sue Barrett, a 47-year-old dance teacher, in a small ceremony at a London dining club Mosimann's.[19]

Goodman is a West Ham United fan and was featured on the BBC football show Football Focus on 26 September 2009.[20] He is also a keen cricket fan, and, in 2009, took part in a celebrity Ashes cricket game.[21]

Goodman was diagnosed with prostate cancer in March 2009,[22] which was treated surgically at a London hospital.

Family

In October 2011, Goodman appeared on the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are?,[23] in which he discovered that one of his maternal ancestors was a silk-weaver who died a pauper in the Bethnal Green workhouse. Goodman's great great grandfather Wincenty Sosnowski came from Poland,[24] where he fought in the anti-tsarist November Uprising[25] for which he was awarded Virtuti Militari, Poland's highest military decoration for heroism and courage.[26]

Publications

  • Smith, Rupert (2005) Strictly Come Dancing; dance consultant: Len Goodman. London: BBC Books ISBN 0-563-52293-3

References

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  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 Goodman, autobiography excerpt, part two, 29 August 2008. Retrieved 1 April 2009.
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  20. BBC SPORT | Football | Football Focus | It's strictly West Ham for Len Goodman. BBC News (26 September 2009). Retrieved on 23 October 2011.
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  26. Len Goodman at bbc.co.uk/iplayer. Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 October 2011.

External links