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Wed. Oct 23rd, 2024

Strictly Come Dancing: Giovanni Pernice says he’s strict but not a bully after BBC investigation

Strictly Come Dancing: Giovanni Pernice says he’s strict but not a bully after BBC investigation

Pernice admitted to getting frustrated during rehearsals, but said that was common for everyone on the show.

“I get frustrated, the celebrity gets frustrated, and believe me when I say every person on Strictly Come Dancing and Dancing With The Stars in the world would get frustrated because you feel the pressure.

“You feel the pressure to perform perfectly on Saturday evening.

“So frustration, I think, is something that happens when you want to be good. And I care about my job.”

He described Abbington as “brilliant” and “incredible at dancing”, and said she did not discuss her complaints with him at the time.

“All I had was, ‘Giovanni, you’re a great teacher,’ ‘Giovanni, you’re great.’

He added: “We never had an argument. We always had discussions about steps.”

Abbington’s account of their time together differs considerably.

Following the BBC report’s conclusion, she told BBC Newsnight it was “an ongoing litany of verbal abuse”.

“There was a 35-minute tirade on me where he threw his hands in the air, called me names and told me all kinds of things that I was and that he couldn’t really deal with it anymore,” she said.

“And this went on for seven hours a day for seven weeks.”

About Lorraine, Pernice responded that “so much of this stuff isn’t true” and “I never cursed her out in that room.”

In a separate interview with the Daily Mail, Pernice admitted that the pair shared “very rude jokes” and that producers were concerned about some of the names they called each other. But he claimed she told them: “It’s absolutely fine, I started it.”

He said he had not spoken until now because the BBC had asked both sides not to do so until the investigation was over.

However, he was angry about an interview Abbington gave to Channel 4 News in July, he told the Mail.

During that interview, presenter Krishnan Guru-Murthy – who also took part in last year’s series – suggested she had been subjected to “degrading behavior of a sexual nature”.

She tearfully agreed that this was the case, but said it was not sexual harassment and that it was “one of many things” that happened.

In the Mail, Pernice said: “My Sicilian blood would rise and I would think: this is not the truth – but I had to remain silent.

“It was the first time anything sexual was talked about. Of course I was afraid it would destroy my career; the people who come to my shows are children and women.

“I was painted as a person that I am not. It seemed like the only point was to destroy me.”

By Sheisoe

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