It is just a rumour – Rose Ayling-Ellis denies rumours about role in Doctor Who

Former EastEnders star and Strictly Come Dancing winner Rose-Ayling Ellis speaks to Sky News at the Edinburgh TV Festival about being recognized for her voice rather than her face, digging out old diaries full of her TV dreams, and dressing up as Barbie.

Strictly winner Rose Ayling-Ellis says there is “no truth” in rumours she is about to join Doctor Who as Ncuti Gatwa’s companion.

Speaking to Sky News at the Edinburgh TV Festival, the former EastEnders star said: “I think it was a rumour which started on Twitter, and it just got bigger and bigger and now it’s everywhere.”

However, if she were to be offered the role it sounds like she’d be up for it, admitting: “It sounds like a great job!”

If Ayling-Ellis were to become part of the sci-fi drama, she would be the first companion with a disability to appear in the show.

The 27-year-old, who recently quit long-running BBC soap EastEnders, made history last year on Strictly Come Dancing, initially as the first deaf participant – and then winner – of the show.

Speaking about her breathtaking silent performance on the show with dance partner Giovanni Pernice, she said she knew it was a “special dance”.

However, at the time she says her head was full, as she was “trying so hard to remember the steps and not mess up the routine”.

Ayling-Ellis, who will give the alternative MacTaggart lecture at the Edinburgh TV Festival today, said it was a “big honour” to be speaking to the audience of industry insiders as part of the three-day event.

She is set to speak about the prejudice she has faced as a deaf person working in television and offer up her thoughts on ways to change the collective mindset around the representation of the deaf community.

Rose Ayling-Ellis and Giovanni Pernice wowed with a silent element to one of their performances on Strictly Come Dancing. Pic: Ray Burmiston/ BBC
Image:Rose Ayling-Ellis and Giovanni Pernice wowed with a silent element in one of their performances on Strictly Come Dancing. Pic: Ray Burmiston/ BBC 

After recently finding some of her old diaries, she said: “I knew it would be a challenge, and difficult, whatever career I went into. I’d written in my old diary that I’d love to be on TV and work for the BBC, but because I was deaf, I knew it would be hard. But I knew even at 16, I wanted to be on TV.”

After finding fame in EastEnders, and then being taken to the nation’s heart after her Strictly win, she says she doesn’t always get recognized on sight – but people spot her another way.

“When I talk loudly – that’s when people realize it’s me!”