Cheryl Burke RETIRES as DWTS Pro & Spills What’s Next
Cheryl Burke is hanging up her dancing shoes.
On Nov. 20, the 38-year-old announced on Instagram that she is leaving her job as a pro dancer on Dancing With the Stars after almost 17 years, which means the current season 31, in which she recently competed with TV meteorologist Sam Champion, will be her last. She will dance on the show for the final time on the season finale Nov. 21.
“This has been one of the absolute hardest decisions of my life & I am also confident that it is the right one,” she wrote in her post. “This has truly been the experience of a lifetime. I’m looking forward to this next chapter of my career, but man will this one be hard to beat! Until next time…Love you all, always & forever xx.”
Cheryl spoke to E! News exclusively about her DWTS exit, which comes more than a month after she and Sam were eliminated from the competition.
“It’s the end of an era, my time as a dancer on Dancing with the Stars,” she said. “It has changed my life. I have not stopped crying and I’m not one to really cry.”
Cheryl made her debut on DWTS in season two in 2006. She and partner Drew Lachey won the Mirror Ball Trophy. The following season, Cheryl reached first place again, this time with retired NFL star Emmitt Smith. It marked the final Mirror Ball Trophy win for Cheryl, who went on to compete on the show again from seasons four through 19, then again in seasons 23, 25, and 27 to the present.
Cheryl noted several reasons for her departure. “There is wear and tear,” she said, noting the physical toll of rehearsing for and dancing on a weekly show. “But also, my heart is telling me to see what else is out there. We are human and we evolve. I do. At least I would like to say that I am a work in progress forever.”
She continued, “I do know, though, that this is not the end of my career and I want to be able to see what else is out there. And Dancing with the Stars, the schedule is so intense. I’ve got so many projects that I’ve been working on.”
In recent months, Cheryl has also been keeping busy with her iHeartRadio podcast, Burke In The Game. It was there, in October, that she first declared that “this is my last season as a dancer” on DWTS.
The podcast launched in May, while she was in the midst of a divorce from Matthew Lawrence. Cheryl discusses her personal struggles and also consults experts on her program. “Because of this platform that I’ve been blessed to be given,” Cheryl told E! News, “I’m able to use my voice and to hopefully help people along the way.”
In her Instagram post, she wrote, “I am excited about the idea of evolving, about being challenged in new ways, having the ability to expand my commitment to mental health advocacy, focusing on my new found love for podcasting, & I’m ready to face the uncertainty (though it’s scary as sh**) of what the future holds – I do have a few things up my sleeves though, so don’t worry.”
Speaking with E! News, Cheryl called her exit from DWTS an “amicable divorce,” adding, “Am I going to miss every single person? Absolutely. I can’t even tell you. I grew up on this show and the first thing I saw was this family, coming straight from Harlem as a competitive dancer.”
Cheryl is not the first DWTS veteran to depart the series after the current season. Her exit announcement comes days after Len Goodman announced he is leaving the show after serving as its head judge for almost all its seasons since its 2005 debut.
While Cheryl is leaving DWTS as a pro dancer, she isn’t leaving the door to the ballroom closed. Asked if she was interested in becoming a judge—following in the footsteps of fellow pros Derek Hough and Julianne Hough, or a host, Cheryl told E! News, “Oh, my God. I would in a second.”
She also said, “I have a lot to contribute. If anybody knows ballroom, it’s me.”
See photos of Cheryl with all her DWTS partners over the years:
Adam Larkey/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 2 (Debut): Drew Lachey, 1st Place
Adam Larkey/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 3: Emmitt Smith, 1st Place
Carol Kaelson/ABC via Getty Images
Season 4: Ian Ziering, 4th Place
Carol Kaelson/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 5: Wayne Newton, 10th Place
Michael Desmond/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 6: Cristián de la Fuente, 3rd Place
Craig Sjodin/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 7: Maurice Green, 5th Place
Kelsey McNeal/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 8: Gilles Marini, 2nd Place
Adam Larkey/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 9: Tom DeLay, 13th Place
Adam Larkey/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 10: Chad Johnson (then Ochocinco), 4th Place
Bob D’Amico/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 11: Rick Fox, 6th Place
Adam Taylor/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 12: Chris Jericho, 7th Place
Adam Taylor/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 13: Rob Kardashian, 2nd Place
ABC/CRAIG SJODIN
Season 14: William Levy, 3rd Place
Adam Taylor / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 15 (All-Stars): Emmitt Smith, 4th Place
ABC/Adam Taylor
Season 16: D.L. Hughley, 9th Place
Adam Taylor / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 17: Jack Osbourne, 3rd Place
Adam Taylor / Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 18: Drew Carey, 8th Place
ABC/Craig Sjodin
Season 19: Antonio Sabàto Jr., 8th Place
ABC/Eric McCandless
Season 23: Ryan Lochte, 7th Place
Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images
Season 25: Terrell Owens, 6th Place
Craig Sjodin/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images
Season 27: Juan Pablo Di Pace, 5th Place
Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images
Season 28: Ray Lewis, 11th Place
ABC/Kelsey McNeal
Season 29: AJ McLean, 7th Place
ABC/Christopher Willard
Season 30: Cody Rigsby, 3rd Place
ABC/Andrew Eccles
Season 31: Sam Champion, 13th Place
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App