Len Goodman discovers how the impact of the Titanic disaster is still felt a century later.

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Episode 3

3/3 Len Goodman explores Titanic's lasting legacy and her continuing allure.

Sat 5 May 2012 02:05 BBC One

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  • Len at the Harland and Wolff drawing offices

    Len at the Harland and Wolff drawing offices

    In the new three part series, Titanic With Len Goodman, Strictly Come Dancing judge Len discovers how the impact of the Titanic disaster is still felt a century after the ship sank.

    Len has his own connection to the Titanic. Before he was a dancer, he was a welder for Harland and Woolf, the company that, from 1909 -1912, built Titanic, in Belfast. Len worked for Harland and Wolff 50 years later at their yard in East London.

    To mark the centenary of the Titanic tragedy, Len explores the ship’s 100 year legacy in the three-part series Titanic With Len Goodman, on BBC One starting Friday, March 30. In the series, Len learns how for the victims’ families - and for the survivors themselves - the sinking of the ship was just the beginning of the story. Generations later, those stories linked to the Titanic are still unfolding as Len meets the modern-day descendants to learn how, a century on, Titanic’s legacy lives on.

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