Dianne Buswell and Joe Sugg are expecting their baby next year.

Dianne Buswell is expecting her first child in 2026 (Image: PA)
Strictly Come Dancing star Dianne Buswell is expecting her first child with partner Joe Sugg in a matter of months, and the Australian dancer has made an emotional statement about motherhood as her bump grows. The 36-year-old took to Instagram on Friday night, sharing an endearing letter she had written to her mother, Rina Buswell, when she was nine years old.
It read: “To my dear mummy. I never just get to tell you how much I love you. You are so important to me, and you do so much for me. You think I don’t appreciate it but believe me I do. Thank you very much for letting me go to Melbourne. I can’t wait, I will dance the best ever. I know I cost you a lot of money, but just remember that I appreciate it.
“I love it when you take me to Perth because I think I have the best and prettiest mum out of all of them. And I love doing things with you because I am proud that you are my mum and I wouldn’t trade you for the world, not even Britney Spears.”
Dianne explained she wrote the handwritten letter when her mother took her on a plane to a dance competition in Melbourne for the Australian Championships.
The Strictly winner added: “I saw this letter I wrote to my mum in my pictures and it made me realise, wow, I am going to be a mum soon. I truly hope he will love me just as much as I love my mum.”
Dianne also said she could not believe she would be dancing in Blackpool this evening (Saturday, November 22) for the Strictly live show with “him in my belly”.
The bubbly star had to drop out of the competition earlier this year after her celebrity partner, fellow Australian, Stefan Dennis, suffered an injury.
However, she participates in the group dances of the BBC programme, which happens each weekend.
Her sweet letter left her fans in tears, with dozens flocking to the comments section to share crying emojis and heartfelt messages of support.
One emotional person penned: “Such a full circle moment, I remember you saying you always wanted to dance in Blackpool when you were a little girl, and now you get to do it with your son in your belly! So magical.”
Another said: “So lovely, Dianne!! Your boy is going to be the luckiest having you as a mum.”
News
I watched my ex-husband’s engagement party stop breathing the second I walked in pregnant with triplets beside a man far more powerful than him.
You keep staring at Fernando Castillo’s photograph on the laptop screen long after the old fan in the rented room begins to rattle like loose bones in the ceiling. There is something almost offensive about how composed he looks in…
I saw a homeless man wearing my missing son’s jacket — and I decided to follow him.
The last time I saw Daniel, the house was full of morning light. It streamed through the tall kitchen windows in pale winter bands, illuminating the floating dust in the air and turning the steam from my coffee into…
My neighbor turned my garden into her dumpster—so I brought her a GIFT she’ll never forget.
People see the wheelchair before they see me. They always do. It rolls into view first—quiet, metal, practical. A machine that announces limitation before a man even opens his mouth. And once they’ve noticed it, everything else becomes secondary. My…
SIX WORDS IN A U.S. HEARING JUST REOPENED ONE OF AMERICA’S DARKEST UNANSWERED QUESTIONS.
The six woгds thɑt fгoze the гoom: Keппedy coгпeгs Boпdi oveг Epsteiп’s deɑth — ɑпd heг ɑпsweг oпly deepeпs the mysteгy A heɑгiпg гoom goes still It wɑs just six woгds. But iп thɑt pɑcked coпgгessioпɑl heɑгiпg гoom, they lɑпded…
He looked me in the eye, ordered me to erase my brother’s disaster, and expected me to say yes
PART 1 – The Table Already Set By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, the sky had the color of old pewter, and the wind coming off the lake had sharpened into something…
THEY FORGOT I HAD ALREADY COUNTED EVERY DOLLAR THEY EVER TOOK FROM ME.
PART 1 – Immersive Opening & Emotional Hook By the time Kesha Williams turned onto her parents’ block on the South Side, dusk had already begun to settle over Chicago in that blue-gray way that made every house seem to…
End of content
No more pages to load