Britain’s Got Talent, Week 4: The best auditions, featuring a metal Frozen cover, body-popping oldies, and an ‘avant-garde hair show’

The best, funniest, and weirdest auditions from this year’s TV talent contest
Surprise: Judge Amanda Holden reacts to Aaron Marshall's rendition of Let It Go (Picture: YouTube/Britain's Got Talent)
Ben Travis2 May 2015

Britain’s Got Talent, the nation's favourite guilty pleasure Saturday night viewing, has returned to our screens for 2015, bringing the good, the bad and the downright bizarre to the box.

After last week gave us a dog that apparently hypnotised Simon Cowell into being nice, week four toned the strangeness down a little and gave us plenty of top talent.

Here’s our round-up of the best, funniest and weirdest acts to stand before the judges.

1) The metal version of Let It Go

Aaron Marshall looked set to make Amanda Holden’s day with a rendition of Frozen behemoth Let It Go – but when he opened his mouth, things didn’t quite go how she expected. The rest of the judges’ reactions are priceless as horror dawns on Amanda’s face.

2) The juggler who proved his talent

Everyone loves an underdog, and when eccentric 32-year-old performer Peter Lambert runs on-stage whooping and tells everyone he still lives with his parents, everyone held their breath to laugh at him – until he started juggling meat cleavers with impressive skill. Bravo, Peter.

3) The lord of the dance

It’s practically impossible for a dance act to stand out on Britain’s Got Talent, but Jonathan Lutwyche’s mesmerising display managed it. At points he looked like he was floating in water, the control over his body and the emotion of his movements proving truly powerful. All that, and he’s only 15.

4) The ‘avant-garde hair show’

Filed firmly under the ‘weird’ category, Anna Romanenkova’s fashion-show-slash-performance-art piece was genuinely quite impressive, but just a bit too strange to be an entertainment piece for the queen. She’d be hard-pressed to say she’s ever seen anything like it, though.

Britain's Got Talent London Auditions

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5) The body-popping oldies

The funniest acts are always those that defy every expectation, and when this group of five men aged between 40 and 60 rocked up on-stage in cardigans and began dancing, it seemed like things might have taken a turn for the cringeworthy. But then – a medley of dance and hip-hop classics kicked in, and the group body-popped their way into the next round. Amazing.

Britain's Got Talent, ITV

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