DAME Darcey Bussell is on a mission - to get kids dancing.
The Strictly star is today inviting schools across the country to take part in a live-streamed dance class next Monday, January 15.
And, as an added bonus, all those schools who sign up to take part will be in with a chance of winning a visit from the Dame herself.
Dame has been campaigning for the best part of a decade to get dance included on the school curriculum, as a regular part of PE lessons.
The 54-year-old is determined to show people of all ages that dance can boost your physical and mental health.
She tells Sun Health: “When I did physical education, it was just [repetitive] exercises. It didn’t stimulate me or activate my imagination.
Read more on exercise
“You have to start young to give kids a healthy attitude about being active, and all the benefits.
“Sports is brilliant but if only you’re good at it. For a lot of kids, it’s rather humiliating not being in the A-team- that’s not fun.
“The nice thing about dance fitness is that it is totally inclusive, it's there for every child, not just for the kids that are just into dance.
“It's about giving them variety, showing them different cultures, celebrating cultures around the world.”
Most read in Health
In 2014, she launched her charity and a few years later they expanded to focus on DDmix for Schools.
It provides programmes and pre-recorded lessons that teachers can deliver dance in schools as part of the PE curriculum.
And on a regular basis, Darcey and the team at DDmix host live-streamed events.
Sports is brilliant but if you’re good at it. For a lot of kids, it’s rather humiliating not being in the A team. That’s not fun.
Dame Darcey Bussell
Past sessions have seen 900 schools take part, and today the former Strictly Come Dancing judge is urging more headteachers to get in on the action.
For half an hour, the pro-ballerina will lead state-school classes through a series of routines designed to get kids sweating, laughing and enjoying the movement of dance.
While Darcey is famed for her professional flare, the class is suitable for all abilities and celebrates cultural diversity, with moves inspired by Bollywood, the Charleston and the Salsa.
Sea of smiling faces
One of the key goals is to keep the kids moving from “beginning to end” - given PE takes up no more than two hours of kids’ timetables each week.
While the kids can appear shy at first, Darcey says by the end of a DDmix class, their whole demeanour changes.
“Kids come in, they’re closed off and their eyes on the ground, they’re slumped,” Darcey says.
“When they leave the room, they’ve got a totally different feeling about their bodies, how they stand and look at you. They’ve got this attitude, they’ve got character. Suddenly their personalities shine.”
Darcey says teachers told her boys won’t join in, but she says: “The boys are the first up there.”
Dance awakens you and makes you feel better. We see that with all the kids that get involved.
Dame Darcey Bussell
Since formally retiring in 2007, Dame Darcey has worked to promote dance as something everyone should participate in as a sport.
We all know kids love to jump on a TikTok dance trend, and dancing has been shown in research to have both physical, mental and psychological benefits.
For example, it’s been suggested to improve the mental wellbeing ofto reduce the risk of and help treat .
In a Japanese of 16 forms of exercise, participation in dance was linked with a 73 per cent lower likelihood of disability affecting daily life.
The researchers noted that dance strengthens the body but also cognitive ability, as a result of concentrating on the moves - and remembering them.
One study found more than eight in 10 Brits agree that dancing is a good form of exercise, with 37 per cent saying it helps them forget their troubles.
READ MORE SUN STORIES
Darcey, who in December 2018 presented a BBC Two documentary on the mental health benefits of dance, titled Darcey Bussell: Dancing to Happiness, says: “It's just all of those components coming together - movement, music stimulation on the mind, using the imagination.
“It just awakens you and makes you feel better. We see that with all the kids that get involved.”