Cheryl Cole's Night In

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Cheryl Cole's Night In
Cheryl Cole's Night In title card
Presented byCheryl Cole
Holly Willoughby
StarringAlexandra Burke
will.i.am
Will Young
Rihanna
Snow Patrol
Theme music composerSteve Kipner
Wayne Wilkins
Andre Merritt
Opening theme"Fight for This Love" by Cheryl Cole
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Production
Executive producerMichael Kelpie
Production locationBBC Television Centre
Running time44 minutes (approx.)
60 minutes (inc. breaks)
Production companyITV Studios
Original release
NetworkITV
Release12 December 2009 (2009-12-12)
Related
ITV Specials
The Girls Aloud Party

Cheryl Cole's Night In was a one-off television special, starring English recording artist Cheryl Cole, produced for ITV, that aired on 12 December 2009 at 6:30 pm. The programme was hosted by Holly Willoughby, featured a host of other performers and acted as a lead-in to the final of the sixth series of The X Factor, in which Cole is a judge. Cole performed songs from her debut solo album, 3 Words, and the programme also featured performances from other musical acts as well as interviews conducted by Willoughby. The programme received mixed reviews from critics and was watched by 5 million people; this is substantially less than the viewing figures of other programmes airing at the same time.

Production[edit]

Tabloid newspaper The Sun published a report on 21 November 2009 claiming that Cole would receive £100,000 for appearing in a programme entitled Cheryl Cole's Night In; ITV confirmed the programme two days later, with Cole saying that she would be "working with some of [her] favourite artists".[1][2] The programme was recorded through the week beginning 7 December at the BBC Television Centre and images of Cole performing the song "Fight for This Love", whilst dressed as a ninja, were released.[3] Cole also debuted a song from her album, 3 Words, titled "Parachute", where she danced with Derek Hough, a professional champion of Dancing with the Stars.[citation needed]

Setlist[edit]

Song Artist Notes
"Fight for This Love" Cheryl Cole Preceded by a sketch between Cole and Simon Cowell backstage at The X Factor talking about the show; then followed by an interview between Cole and presenter Holly Willoughby
"Russian Roulette" Rihanna Followed by a further interview between Cole and Willoughby with a behind the scenes look at the sixth series of The X Factor
"Bad Boys" Alexandra Burke Followed by an interview between Cole, Burke and Willoughby
"3 Words" Cheryl Cole and will.i.am Followed by an interview between Cole, will.i.am and Willoughby
"Leave Right Now" Will Young Each followed by a further interview between Cole and Willoughby
"Run" Snow Patrol
"Parachute" Cheryl Cole Featured dancing accompaniment from Derek Hough

Reception[edit]

Anna Pickard of The Guardian described the programme as "an hour of commissioning genius", despite Stuart Heritage of the same publication arguing that "just the title is enough to put you off".[4][5] In a separate article, Heritage voiced his belief that the programme saw Cole "discussing her life in the blandest possible terms while wearing a variety of impractical dresses".[6] Rick Fulton of the Daily Record was complimentary of the programme as he compared the dance routine that accompanied "Parachute" to a routine from the programme Strictly Come Dancing.[7] Alexandra Burke, who featured in the programme, praised Cole by complimenting her hairstyle and by stating that her performance had "gone up another level".[8] Sian Brewis of the Leicester Mercury was critical of the programme; she claimed that it was an "hour-long plug for Chezza's [Cole’s nickname] album", branded Willoughby's questions "vacuous" and compared Cole's costumes to that worn by characters of Street Fighter II.[9] Rachel Holmes, writing in The Guardian, was also critical of Cole's choice of attire and argued that the programme was uninformative. Holmes also claimed that viewers "were suffering from Chezza overload" due to her appearances on The X Factor the same weekend.[10]

The programme attracted 5 million viewers, a 22% share of the viewing audience, on its first airing. However, an episode of Merlin and an installment of the seventh series of Strictly Come Dancing, which aired at the same time on BBC One, attracted 5.2 million (25% of the audience) and 8.1 million (33%) respectively.[11]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Routledge, Rebecca (21 November 2009). "Cheryl Cole 'given her own TV show'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
  2. ^ French, Dan (23 November 2009). "ITV1 confirms Cheryl Cole special". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 December 2009.
  3. ^ O’Boyle, Claire (17 December 2009). "Why do we all love Cheryl Cole - our Woman of the Year?". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  4. ^ Pickard, Anna (11 December 2009). "The X Factor liveblog - the final shows!". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  5. ^ Heritage, Stuart (24 November 2009). "Cheryl Cole's Night In? Just the title's enough to put you off". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  6. ^ Heritage, Stuart (16 December 2009). "Judge The X Factor, and you get a solo show. But what can Louis Walsh do?". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  7. ^ Fulton, Rick (12 December 2009). "TV queen Cheryl Cole's takes on the Beeb in ballroom blitz". Daily Record. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  8. ^ "Alexandra Burke cannot afford to buy her home". STV. 13 December 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  9. ^ Brewis, Sian (14 December 2009). "TV Review: Cheryl Cole's Night In and X-Factor". Leicester Mercury. Archived from the original on 13 September 2012. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  10. ^ Holmes, Rachel (17 December 2009). "Chanel's secret club of 'friends'". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 December 2009.
  11. ^ Tryhorn, Chris (14 December 2009). "TV ratings: More than 12m see Stacey eliminated from The X Factor". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 December 2009.