Craig Revel Horwood

Craig Revel Horwood
Revel Horwood at the 2008 Red Bull Flugtag
Born Craig Revel Horwood
(1965-01-04) 4 January 1965
Ballarat, Victoria, Australia
Residence London, United Kingdom
Occupation Television personality, choreographer, conductor, dancer, theatre director
Spouse(s)
Jane Horwood
(m. 1990; div. 1992)

Craig Revel Horwood (born 4 January 1965) is an Australian-British dancer, choreographer and theatre director in the United Kingdom. He is a patron of the National Osteoporosis Society. He published his autobiography in 2008.

He is best known as a judge on popular BBC dancing show Strictly Come Dancing, for which Revel Harwood earns an annual pay packet of between £150,000-199,999, according to official BBC reports.

Career

Theatre

West End and UK

Revel Horwood's West End credits include Spend Spend Spend and My One and Only, both of which gained Laurence Olivier Award nominations for Best Choreography. He was associate director and choreographer of West Side Story, assisted Bob Avian with Martin Guerre and was resident director of Miss Saigon. He choreographed Hard Times – The Musical, Calamity Jane, Tommy Cooper – Jus' Like That and the play Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks, starring Claire Bloom and Billy Zane at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket.[1] He also directed and choreographed Beautiful and Damned. He directed the Welsh Première Concert Production of My Land's Shore for the Gate Theatre in Cardiff.[2] During the summer of 2008, he directed a new production of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical Sunset Boulevard at the Watermill Theatre, which transferred to London's West End at the Comedy Theatre.[3]

Revel Horwood directed and choreographed the 2010–11 UK and Canadian tour of Chess, a revival of the 1986 musical conceived and written by Tim Rice, with music by Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus (of ABBA).[4] In 2012, he directed the UK Tour of Strictly Come Dancing for the second year running.[5] He starred as Miss Hanigan in the UK touring production of Annie in 2015 and 2017.

Regional theatre choreography credits include Pal Joey, Arcadia, On the Razzle and My One and Only at the Chichester Festival Theatre, Guys and Dolls in Sheffield, Anything Goes and South Pacific for Grange Park Opera and Hot Mikado at the Watermill Theatre in Newbury.

Special Events

Revel Horwood directed the opening ceremonies of the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester and staged Once Upon a Time – The Life of Hans Christian Andersen, a live concert in Copenhagen to mark the author's bicentenary.

Pantomime

In December 2009, Revel Horwood played the part of the Queen in Snow White and the 7 Dwarves at Theatr Cymru in Llandudno, North Wales,[6] a role he reprised in December 2010 at the Hawth in Crawley,[7] and at the Orchard Theatre in Dartford, Kent, alongside Ann Widdecombe in 2011.[8] In December 2012, he played the same role in the Swan Theatre in High Wycombe, again alongside Widdecombe. In late 2012, it was announced that he will be performing in Snow White at the Cliffs Pavilion, Southend. He is currently reprising the role at the Mayflower Theatre in Southampton in Dec 2017

Television

Strictly Come Dancing

Revel Horwood has been a member of the judging panel on the BBC's Strictly Come Dancing since its inception in 2004. He has a reputation for being the harshest of the Strictly Come Dancing judges and is often the recipient of booing from the studio audience. He received criticism for his apparent bias towards Emma Bunton in the fourth series of the competition.[9] He is known for stringently applying rules, as for example when marking down for an "illegal lift" in the Viennese Waltz if the lady's foot leaves the floor.

Revel Horwood has become known and imitated for his locutions, which often include exaggeratedly lengthened vowels, including: "It was a complete dahnce di-sah-ster, dahling" and "Chah-Chah-Chah". These are available as ringtones through Revel Horwood's website, with profits going to the National Osteoporosis Society.[10] Another common utterance is "Three words: Fab-u-lous!", with the syllables of the word articulated as three separate words. Revel Horwood similarly breaks up the syllables and throws the stress forward to the final syllable for "A-ma-zing!".[11] To appreciate erotically-charged routines, Revel Horwood will declaim, "absolute filth," often immediately followed by "...and I loved it!" Passing judgment on Kimberley Walsh in 2012, Revel Horwood said the dance was 'indecent, improper, absolute filth,' and added: ‘I loved it.’"[12] Of Claire King's rhumba with Brendan Cole in 2006, Revel Horwood declared, "That was absolute filth. I loved it."[13] Similarly, he lauded Harry Judd's performance in 2011 with "'It had authority, dominance, command, control. It was filth and I loved it!'[14]

Dancing with the Stars

He was a judge on Dancing with the Stars in New Zealand, along with Brendan Cole.

Comic Relief Does Fame Academy

Revel Horwood became a judge on Comic Relief Does Fame Academy in 2005, along with Lesley Garrett and Richard Park. He and Garrett replaced vocal coaches David Grant and Carrie Grant on the panel; however the pair still appeared as voice coaches on the show. He returned as a judge for the third series of the Comic Relief edition in 2007. The show was cancelled by the BBC after the third series had ended.

Other television appearances

Revel Horwood appeared in Episode 5 of Series 2 of Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends, during which Theroux investigates the trials and tribulations of struggling New York City actors. In May and June 2007, he appeared as a contestant on Celebrity MasterChef, reaching the final alongside Nadia Sawalha and Midge Ure.

On 15 April 2010, Revel Horwood was the celebrity guest judge on Daily Cooks Challenge. On 13 August 2010, he appeared on Would I Lie to You?. During 2011, he guested on Celebrity Juice (Episode 6, series 5; 17 March) and on Ask Rhod Gilbert (28 September). In January 2012, he appeared on BBC TV series The Magicians. For the week beginning 3 September 2012, he appeared as a panellist on The Wright Stuff on Channel 5. On 22 October 2012, he appeared on ITV's Loose Women. He also appeared on CBBC's television programme 12 Again in 2012, talking about his life when he was 12. On 22 February 2013, he appeared on Room 101.

Revel Horwood won the reworked version of the 2008 BBC series Maestro, called Maestro at the Opera. He competed against Josie Lawrence, Marcus du Sautoy and Trevor Nelson. Also appearing were Mark Elder, Danielle de Niese, Alfie Boe and Kiri te Kanawa. The series was partly filmed at London's Royal Opera House,[15] where Revel Horwood, as eventual winner, conducted Act II of La Bohème in late 2012.[16]

Revel Horwood lent his vocals to a single released by other celebrities under tutorage of choirmaster Gareth Malone for the Children In Need 2014 charity single. The choir performed a version of Avicii's Wake Me Up.

On 15 January 2016, he appeared as a panellist on a special episode of ITV's Loose Women (titled Loose Women and Men) alongside show regulars Andrea McLean and Nadia Sawalha and fellow special hosts Peter Andre and Chris Kamara. He also starred in an episode of Who Do You Think You Are? on 13 July 2017, in which he learned about his ancestry and family history.

Film

Revel Horwood choreographed the final scene in Paddington 2.[17]

Publications

In 2008, Michael O'Mara Books published Revel Horwood's autobiography, All Balls and Glitter: My Life.[18]

Personal life

Born in Ballarat, Australia in 1965, Revel Horwood started his career as a dancer in Melbourne, then moved to London to take advantage of the greater opportunities available there. In 1989, he moved to the UK from Australia, and on 20 August 2011,[19] he became a British citizen.[20]

In his autobiography, Revel Horwood reveals that at the age of 17, he made money by appearing as a drag queen in bars and clubs and that his relationship with an unnamed celebrity was akin to prostitution.[21]

He has twice undergone plastic surgery. The first occasion was a "nose job" at the age of 18. In 2011, Revel Horwood revealed that he had undergone a breast reduction during 2010 because his "C"-size cups rendered dancing painful.[22]

In December 2014, Revel Horwood informed a reporter from OK! magazine that "I was bisexual for a long time. I flitted between men and women quite a lot between the ages of 17 and 26. My wife Jane left me for another man. Then I fell in love with a bloke. I have been gay ever since."[23] His former partner; Damon Scott was known for coming runner up on Britain's Got Talent. Scott and Revel Horwood started dating since 2013.[24] In September 2014, they moved into a house in Hampshire together [23] but separated in early 2016.

Revel Horwood became a patron of the National Osteoporosis Society in 2009.[25] In this, he has found common ground with Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, the Society's Royal patron (whose mother, like his, had bone disease).[26] The two of them danced the cha-cha-cha together on a school visit to mark National Osteoporosis Day in 2009.[27]

In January 2015, Revel Horwood revealed on ITV's Loose Women that he suffered from anorexia and body dysmorphia as a teenager and young dancer, as a result of trying to make himself look like other young men, and other dancers in particular.[28]

The UK's 14th series of Who Do You Think You Are? featured Revel Horwood's ancestry in the second episode. His family history research takes him home to Australia where he discovered that his family tree traces back to Gloucestershire, Lancashire and Essex in England. Revel Horwood found out that he is not the first dancer in his family and that he is descended from gold prospectors that went bankrupt before becoming rich on finding a 250-ounce gold nugget. He learns further that his great-great grandfather, Moses Horwood, who is revealed in the programme to have been a petty criminal from England, was convicted at the Gloucestershire assizes and transported to Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) in 1841. Criminal records identified by TheGenealogist show an image of the actual record for Moses Horwood and shows that he departed England on 1 December 1841 on board the ship called the John Brewer.[29]

References

  1. Reviews from The Independent, dated 4 December 2006. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  2. Theatre Wales news. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  3. Interview with Craig Revel Horwood; it ran from 4 December 2008 to 18 April 2009 at the Comedy Theatre.
  4. "Chess – Mayflower Theatre, Southampton". The Public Reviews. Archived from the original on 4 April 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  5. Strictly Come Dancing website. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  6. "Craig Revel Horwood in Snow White panto at Venue Cymru – Mail Series". Theonlinemail.co.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  7. "Craig Revel Horwood launches 'strictly' wicked pantomime!". Thesussexnewspaper.com. 16 October 2010. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 27 June 2012.
  8. Daily Mail review. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  9. Craig Revel Horwood backs Emma Bunton
  10. Ringtones page from Craig Revel Horwood's website. Accessed 24 December 2012.
  11. Ringtones of Revel Horwood's catchphrases are available. Accessed 15 December 2010. Archived 3 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. "Louis Smith Wins Full Marks For Topless Showdance in Strictly Come Dancing Final," Metro, 22 December 2012. Accessed 24 December 2012.
  13. Alison Boshoff, "Strictly Come Dancing Heats Up On and Off the Dancefloor," Metro, 22 December 2012. Accessed 24 December 2012.
  14. Nadia Mendoza, "'It was Filth and I Loved It!'", Daily Mail, 14 November 2011. Accessed 24 December 2012.
  15. Royal Opera House website report, by Chris Shipman, 29 February 2012. Accessed 29 February 2012.
  16. ""Craig Revel Horwood swaps the ballroom for the baton for the chance to become a classical conductor for revived BBC show Maestro" by Liz Thomas, in the Daily Mail. Accessed 29 February 2012". Mail Online.
  17. Clair Woodward (September 17, 2017). "Strictly's Craig Revel Horwood takes over as Miss Hannigan in Annie". The Express. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  18. Amazon Product information page. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  19. Ask Rhod Gilbert, 28 September 2011
  20. 8 out of 10 Cats, 7 October 2011
  21. English, Paul (4 October 2008), "Strictly Come Dancing judge Craig Revel Horwood on being attacked in the street", Daily Record, retrieved 14 October 2008
  22. Daily Mail summation of Daily Mirror story. Accessed 19 December 2011.
  23. 1 2 Takyi, Stephanie (16 December 2014). "'We might adopt in the future': Craig Revel Horwood opens up about having children". Daily Express.
  24. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2481005/Craig-Revel-Horwood-steps-hip-surgery-new-boyfriend-BGT-star-Damon-Scott.html
  25. National Osteoporosis Society Press Archive article, 20 October 2009. Accessed 25 December 2012.
  26. Bryony Gordon, "The Queen, Camilla and Craig", Daily Telegraph, 28 October 2011. Accessed 25 December 2011.
  27. "Perfect 10 for rhythmic Camilla as she shows off her best "Strictly" steps, HELLO!, 21 October 2009. Accessed 25 December 2012.
  28. Loose Women, 15 January 2016
  29. "TheGenealogist featured article". TheGenealogist. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
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