Morris dancing mayor takes on 200-mile world record

Curtis Lancasterand
Seb Sargent,South of England
News imageDuncan Bhaskaran Brown Duncan Bhaskaran Brown wearing Morris dancing attire, including a white shirt and a cross of green and yellow fabric over his shirt, a red tie around his neck, a black top hat with flowers on it.Duncan Bhaskaran Brown
Duncan Bhaskaran Brown said he started Morris dancing 19 years ago

A former mayor is attempting to break a Guinness World Record by Morris dancing 200 miles (322km) along the Thames Path.

Duncan Bhaskaran Brown will make his way from London, through Windsor, Maidenhead and Reading in Berkshire, on to Henley and Abingdon in Oxfordshire and back to the capital again in just under a week.

He will start on Sunday at Hampton Court Palace and will dance more than a marathon a day, until he finishes at Bankside in London on 16 May.

Bhaskaran Brown, who was once the mayor of his hometown Abingdon, hopes to raise money for several local charities in the Thames Valley region.

News imageDuncan Bhaskaran Brown Duncan Bhaskaran Brown wearing Morris dancing attire, including a white shirt and black trousers, with bells tied around his shins. He has cross of green and yellow fabric over his shirt, a red tie around his neck, a black top hat and white handkerchiefs in each hand. He is dancing alongside the River Thames.Duncan Bhaskaran Brown
He hopes to dance from London to Abingdon and back

According to the Guinness World Records, the longest distance Morris danced in seven days is just more than 146 miles (235km).

Bhaskaran Brown said he started Morris dancing 19 years ago and has "enjoyed every minute of it".

He said it had been a "privilege and a responsibility" to be a part of "a living tradition".

In 2025, he broke the record for the longest continuous Morris dance, spanning 11 hours and two minutes, performing more than 100,000 steps to 186 tunes.

He said he feels confident that he can break the distance record, adding that he would be supported by a team of people, including local Morris groups along the route.

'Alive and vibrant'

"What I noticed when I started training along the Thames path in full kit is you get a lot of smiles and that really, really helps," Bhaskaran Brown said.

"You forget about the blisters when people are smiling at you and encouraging you and supporting the wonderful charities."

He added that part of the reason he wanted to take on the challenge was to show people that the historic tradition of Morris dancing is still "alive and very vibrant".