CELEBRATING
SUCCESS
AT CDC
Roundup On Blackpool 2026!


Following the school’s entries to Blackpool last weekend (30 May), which were incredibly satisfying, the weather (and the results) were definitely with us.
We all met on Friday night opposite the Tower on the seafront, had a wander up to the pier, and enjoyed a few well-earned refreshments in a bar on the pier, followed by some wonderful fish and chips.
Saturday morning was an early start, and all of our competitors were on time, which was a wonderful thing! Everyone absolutely danced their socks off at what was, I believe, one of the highest standards I have ever seen at this event.
Many congratulations to our finalists (and there were plenty), including Emelia, Lucy, Seren, Stuart, Olivia, Lola, Megan, Caitlin, Phoebe, Amelie, Jake, Elise, Christine, and Renata. Given the standard of competition, this was an amazing haul of hardware.
A very special mention to our Blackpool first-timers who were Fran, Lucy, Millie and Lottie.
Very well done, everyone.
For those who have not yet experienced what the “Blackpool Experience” is really like, here goes…
Dancing at Blackpool is one of those experiences that lives in a dancer’s bones long after the music stops. It is not an opportunity that many dancers ever get, and for those who do, it is never “just another competition.” It is a privilege. It is a milestone. For many, it is the moment when all the practice sessions, blistered feet, and nerves finally add up to something unforgettable.
The Empress Ballroom: where history feels alive
To dance at Blackpool means dancing in the Empress Ballroom, inside the Winter Gardens in Blackpool, a place that has been the spiritual home of competitive Ballroom and Latin American dancing since the late 1800s. You can feel it the moment you walk in. It is not simply a venue, it is a cathedral for dancers. The lights, the scale of the room, the famous floor, and the sense of tradition all combine to make the Empress feel larger than real life.
And that is exactly why it matters so much. This is the room you have seen in photographs, in videos, and in the stories told by teachers and dancers who have been lucky enough to stand there before. When you finally step onto that floor yourself, it hits differently. You are no longer watching history. You are part of it.
Medallist grades, but not “easy”
Blackpool is split into the various medallist grades: pre-bronze, bronze, silver, gold, and so on. On paper, that sounds reassuring. It suggests a gentle ladder of progression, as though each grade is neatly separated and comfortably manageable.
But it should be remembered that you are dancing up against some of the best medallist competitors in the United Kingdom and beyond. Being in a medallist grade at Blackpool does not mean you are surrounded by beginners. It means you are surrounded by dancers who have worked hard, trained seriously, and arrived with the same dream you have. The standard can be breathtaking. That is why simply being there is an achievement.
“Three minutes of pure terror”
The reality of Blackpool is that it usually follows three months or more of preparation. Weeks of polishing technique, refining posture, chasing cleaner timing, improving fitness, rehearsing routines until you can dance them when you are exhausted, and learning how to keep smiling while your body is screaming.
Then comes the journey: the long drive up the M6, often around six hours, filled with a strange mix of excitement and dread. You arrive, you check in, you try to eat something even though your stomach is doing flips, and you start to realize that the thing you have imagined for months is now only minutes away.
And then it happens. You step into the arena and it can feel like a dance miracle, like your heart is trying to dance faster than your feet. The music starts, the floor is alive, the judges are watching, the audience is real, and suddenly it is three minutes of pure terror.
Not because you do not love it. Not because you are not ready. It is terror because it matters. Because you are standing in the Empress Ballroom, and you are asking your body to do what you trained it to do under the biggest spotlight you have ever felt.
The achievement is bigger than the result
Dancing at Blackpool is not only a privilege, but also a significant achievement. In a setting like this, success is not only about trophies.
Making a second round is an amazing achievement. To make a final is absolutely superb. Those milestones mean something at Blackpool because of who you are competing against and what it takes to hold your nerve in that environment.
But there is another kind of achievement too, the one that does not always show up on a results sheet. It is the moment you realize you actually did it. You went out there. You kept going. You danced to your best in the most iconic ballroom in competitive dance.
After the music: elation, pride, and “I was there”
When it is over, the feeling can be almost overwhelming. The terror dissolves and what replaces it is elation, and a massive feeling of pride and achievement. Whatever happens in the marks, you have earned something that cannot be taken away: the experience of dancing at Blackpool.
For many dancers, that is the reward. Not perfection, not even necessarily progression, but the deep satisfaction of knowing they met the moment with courage. They entered that arena and gave what they had.
A once-in-a-lifetime recommendation
This is a highly recommended experience for dancers of all ages and all grades, precisely because it is rare. It is not an opportunity people get very often, and that is why it carries such weight. Blackpool asks a lot of you: preparation, travel, nerves, and the willingness to be seen at your most vulnerable.
But it gives something back that is hard to describe unless you have felt it yourself. A sense of belonging to something bigger than your own routine. A connection to the history of Ballroom and Latin. A memory that will return every time you hear a competition track and remember the Empress Ballroom.
Blackpool is not just a competition. For many dancers, it is a moment they will be proud of for the rest of their lives.
