By Alice-azania Jarvis
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Big future: Reporter Alice-Azania Jarvis and dog Jake have taken part in a dog dancing training class following the success of Pudsey on Britain's Got Talent
A balmy evening in South-West London, and Iâm trying to convince a handsome chap called Jake to cha-cha-cha.
Iâm hoping that as a couple we have the potential to dance in perfect harmony, and to encourage him Iâve brought along his favourite food (cocktail sausages) and put on his favourite CD (Strictly Dance Classics).
But as I shuffle round the dance floor itâs clear pretty quickly that he isnât keen. The chemistry just isnât there.
But then perhaps I shouldnât be surprised: Jake is a dog â" a borrowed Blue Merle border collie to be precise â" and I am here with my reluctant dance partner in the hope that a little of the stardust of what you might call the Pudsey Effect will rub off on us.
Just in case youâve been living on Mars for the past couple of months, let me explain that Pudsey is the irrepressible border collie-bichon frise-Chinese crested cross who, along with his 17-year-old owner Ashleigh Butler, has become a national sensation after delighting both audiences and the judges on Britainâs Got Talent.
After winning the final in some style on Saturday night, theyâre now predicted to make £10âmillion through public appearances and endorsements.
Such has been the response to their unashamedly feelgood act that there is already something of a boom in the number of people hoping to discover a hitherto latent talent in their own mutts.
So just how easy is it to jive together, or encourage an animal to jump through a âhoopâ formed by your arms, just like the fabulous Pudsey?
There are several DVDs devoted to the subject, and classes can be found just about everywhere from Cornwall to County Durham. So I decided to pay a visit to one in Twickenham run by Kathleen Stubbings, whoâs been âdoggie dancingâ for the best part of a decade. Six years ago, she founded an academy to share her talents.

Winners: Ashleigh Buter and her dog Pudsey won this year's Britain's Got Talent

Impressive: Ashleigh and Pudsey wowed the viewers and the judges with their routine to the Mission: Impossible theme. But could your dog perform the same moves?
With me in the class are six other dog-lovers â" including 15-year-old Lucy Hankey (who has come with her border collie Sam) and 66-year-old retired occupational therapist Chris Young (with Tod, another border collie).
Kathleen, who sports rather risque jazzy pink lipstick and spiky blonde hair, is clearly used to keeping order among humans and canines.
âQuiet!â she yaps to a barking beagle, turning to its owner with a firm: âShhh!â
Doggie dancing â" or âHeelwork to Musicâ to use its official title â" has its own organisational body (yes really), the Paws ânâ Music Association. And you thought it was just a teenager having some fun on a reality show.
In 2008 it was even introduced at Crufts â" to howls of disapproval from the competitionâs more, shall we say, traditional participants.
Indeed, Britain boasts the world champion. In 2010, Kath Hardman and her seven-year-old border collie Amber stole the show at the inaugur al Heelwork to Music World Championships in Denmark. They danced to the Donna Summer and Barbra Streisand duet No More Tears. Thatâs right, Pudseyâs not even the best doggie dancer in Britain!
Example: Kath Hardman gives a heel work to music display with dog Ginnie at Crufts, Birmingham in 2007, before Alice attempts a similar trick during the training class
(You can almost hear Simon Cowellâs brain ticking over with plans for a nationwide tour boasting a whole cast of Pudsey-a-likes.)
âDancing with a dog is fantastic fun,â says Kennel Club secretary Caroline Kisko. âAnd Britainâs Got Talent raises its profile even more.â
It took root as a serious discipline in 1990 when a two-time Crufts obedience champion named Mary Ray introduced music to her heelwork (a kind of obedience training where the dog performs different moves following its ownerâs, ahem, lead).

Hi there! Dancing dog Missey appears to wave to the photographer at the training class
To Berlinâs 1980s classic Take My Breath Away, she and her Tervueren sheep dog, Roxy, performed the countryâs first human-canine dance routine at a demonstration in Bedford.
It was swiftly followed by another, this time to Survivorâs anthem Eye Of The Tiger with her collie, Red Hot Toddy.
In America, predictably, some dog owners took the idea one step further. They introduced flashy costumes and acrobatic canine leaps, and called their version âfreestyleâ.
Combine the two approaches, and you have the fun, frivolous but deeply impressive dance routines put on by Ashleigh and Pudsey on Britainâs Got Talent.
Something tells me I have a long way to go before Jake and I can master anything like those, however. And spangly costumes are definitely out of the question.
The good news is that Iâve managed to get Jake to stand on his hind legs. The secret: a small sausage held in between your thumb and finger and heâs a lot keener to strain up to reach it. Ashleigh prefers a bit of ham sandwich to keep Pudsey keen.
But despite a positive start, I know weâve got some way to go to reach Kathleenâs target of at least half a dozen tricks in a routine.
To compete â" even at local level â" in official heelwork to music competitions, beginners need to fill two-and-a-half minutes of music with choreographed moves.
At the more advanced level at which Ashleigh and Pudsey regularly compete, you need to fill five.
And there are no sausages â" or ham sandwiches â" allowed during a contest.
Our instructor Kathleen star ts us off slowly, gradually introducing one move after the next. And to help us see how we are shaping up, thereâs even a ballet-studio-style mirror running along one side of the hall.
So what are we attempting? Well, thereâs the twist, where the dog spins around as if chasing its tail. And thereâs the head-nod, where it bobs its head in time to the beat.
But the most fun is the weave, where you use your hand to lure the animal around you, first one way, then the next.

Popular: Alice was joined by six others and their pooches for the class
Then, with a quick flick of the wrist, you indicate that the dog should go through your legs and out the other side. Midway through, you press your legs gently together to trap the dog between them, and then you both turn in tandem. And hey presto! Youâre doing the weave.
One person whoâs not having any trouble with all this is young Lucy.
With her long, blonde hair and model looks, she appears more suited to the catwalk than doggie-dancing. But then sheâs no ingenue â" having twice won Crufts, though not with her collie Sam.
Lucy is especially thrilled by Ashleighâs new-found fame. The two are friends, even competing against one another from time to time.
âSheâs a couple of years older than me,â says Lucy. âSo usually she comes first and I come second.â
âItâs great to see the kids getting into it,â agrees trainer Kathleen. âAshleigh really is a leading light.â

Ideas: Simon Cowell's brain might be ticking over with plans for a nationwide tour boasting a whole cast of Pudsey-a-likes
It does all beg one question, though. Why, on a lovely spring evening when they could be doing any number of more normal activities, are these people so keen to get their dogs to dance? After all, itâs hardly the most natural thing in the world. Looking in the mirror, I realise just how silly I appear.
Well, for one thing, itâs good general training for the dog.
Teach a dog to dance, says Kathleen, and house-training becomes a piece of cake. âItâs the best discipline there is â" it focuses the dogâs mind.â
Itâs good exercise, too â" for the dogs at least: Lucy reckons that 20 minutes of dancing is the equivalent of at least an hourâs walkies.
But itâs also very good for us humans. So good, in fact, that the Kennel Club recently launched a keep-fit programme based around the concept.
Get Fit With Fido is such a success that weight-loss guru Rosemary Conley has endorsed it. âI know people who have lost over a stone exercising with their dog like that,â enthuses the Kennel Clubâs secretary Caroline.
Most of all, itâs fun. Faintly ridiculous, yes, and rather eccentric â" but utter fun. Even for those of us â" well, me â" who can barely get our dogs to sit when we tell them, the experience is rather uplifting.
Sue Hudson has been dancing with her collie Sapphire for only a few months, but already she proudly lists the moves theyâve mastered: the paw-lift, when the dog raises a paw to meet your upraised hand, the bow, when it touches it s nose to the floor, and the pivot, where the dog turns on top of a stool.
Chris Young, meanwhile, is here for only her second lesson with a collie named Tod. âYou canât worry about what you look like, itâs just about having fun,â says Chris.
Of course when the experts perform, itâs a different story. So precise and skilful are they that the dancing is almost a science. Choreographing a successful routine combines flair, accuracy and a even a bit of biological knowledge.
Kathleen says: âItâs crucial to take into account factors such as your dogâs age, breed, and build.â
Standing on his own two feet: Pudsey illustrates one of his many tricks that helped him win the talent contest and possibly land £10m
One reason Ashleigh and Pudseyâs cha-cha is so impressive is because of six-year-old Pudseyâs remarkably straight back when he stands up on his hind legs.
âIt means he can stand tall, and match Ashleighâs posture.â
But if Pudsey were a bit older, he wouldnât have the strength for the move. Too young, and heâd risk damaging his development.
Kathleen explains: âDogsâ bones donât stop growing until around 12 months, so forcing them to stand upright before then could be harmful.â
At Crufts, the stringent age restrictions take such factors into account. Dogs must be over 12 or 18 months, depending on their category.
When doggie dancing (sorry, heelwork to music) was introduced at Crufts, critics feared such antics would undermine the eventâs credibility. Indeed, the British and Irish Dog Breeds Preservation Trust snootily wrote off the new category as âall teeth and hairâ â" rather like Simon Cowell, in fact.
This unlikely feud in the doggie world lingers on, with Kathleen saying sheâs âsickâ of people trying to present the âsportâ in a negative light. Were she and her doggie dancing colleagues not so evidently hurt, it would all be rather comical.
But then I suspect they will get their revenge next year when â" thanks to Pudsey â" Crufts is overrun by hundreds of wannabe doggie dancers. Thatâll annoy the snobs.
So how did I fare with Jake? Letâs just say that after an hour of effort and cajoling, it wasnât Jake that was chasing his tail. Weâre certainly not ready to take on Ashleigh and Pudsey .â.â. but who knows what a little more practice (and a lot more sausages) can achieve?
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Circus clowns. How stupid does that Kath woman look.
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hah the irony, the most talented person in Britain, a dog. i heartily agree.
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Lets be clear, although the dog won, its the owners who will rake the money in. Fair play to them though, if my dog had any talent then i would do the same!
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If there is an opening for a dog that spends hours fast asleep on his back with his legs in the air my Staffy is worth a mint ! - Hagar , Blackpool, 15/5/2012 07:17 Mine does the SAME!!! We could get them doing it together and be synchronised sleeping staffies. This time next year, we'll be millionaires Rodney - Susannah, Surrey, 15/5/2012 10:26 Mine is also a world class sleeper, and also very very good at snoring.
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Notr dancing is it, a dog on its hind legs turning around effectivly begging...lets call a spade a spade
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Thatâs right, Pudseyâs not even the best doggie dancer in Britaian well why the hell did he win then? go suck on those bonios
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"Thatâs right, Pudseyâs not even the best doggie dancer in Britain..." ___ Perhaps so, but he doesn't need to be the best. Pudsey's got a great COMBINATION of factors that gives him star quality. He's got that lovable Benji thing going on. Ashleigh is very appealing. She's a hardworking teen who has dedicated her youth to raising this charming little dog. The two of them are magical innocence. You don't need perfection when you've got a load of something OTHER... charisma, enchanting, fun, heartwarming allurement... It just works. Be happy for her and stop trying to steal her thunder.
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Am I the only person in the world who hasn't seen pudsey?????? - David, England, 15/5/2012 07:52 No. I haven't either. Neither do I intend to.
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If there is an opening for a dog that spends hours fast asleep on his back with his legs in the air my Staffy is worth a mint ! - Hagar , Blackpool, 15/5/2012 07:17 Mine does the SAME!!! We could get them doing it together and be synchronised sleeping staffies. This time next year, we'll be millionaires Rodney
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I am so glad Ashleigh and Pudsey won. They deserved to win. Ashleigh is marvelous with Pudsey and Pudsay is not only clever but a really lovely looking dog too. They would be great on all sorts of T.V. I bet the queen will love them!
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