When TV WEEK chatted to Dylan Alcott last year, the gold-medal-winning Paralympian was all over our screens. Hosting Invictus Games Today alongside Chris Bath and Anthony โLehmoโ Lehmann โ and buzzing with excitement over his latest project, ABCโs live music show The Set โ Dylan joked that his budding television career surely warranted a TV WEEK Logie Award.
โItโs all happening for me! Can you get me nominated for a Logie?โ the 28-year-old athlete asked with a laugh.
What he never imagined, however, was that a few months later, he would take home the coveted statuette for the Graham Kennedy Award For Most Popular New Talent.
โEven on the night [of the awards], I thought, โIโm not going to win โ itโs going to be someone from Home And Away,โโ Dylan recalls. โI still laugh when I see it on my table because I still canโt believe it.โ
Show Stopper

Dylan presented at the 2019 TV WEEK Logies alongside Grant Denyer.
It may have come as a shock to the wheelchair basketball and tennis champion, but as he took the stage to receive the honour, he proved once again just how deserving he was with an impassioned acceptance speech.
โIโve been in a wheelchair my whole life and I used to absolutely hate it,โ Dylan said to a rapt audience. โOne of the reasons I hated it was because when I turned on the TV, I never saw anybody like me.โ
Taking the opportunity to advocate for greater diversity and normalisation of disability on Australian television, Dylanโs shining moment was a standout of the evening and a talking point for days to come.
โI got a bit emotional up there,โ Dylan says now. โI loved the opportunity to say what I said, and that speech was shared a million times online.โ
The New Normal

โI still canโt believe itโ Dylan says of his Logie win.
Dylan โ for whom an operation to remove a tumour around his spinal cord, performed days after he was born, left him a paraplegic โ made it his mission at a young age to break down the barriers and stereotypes associated with disability, particularly on television.
โI might have been five years old when I started watching TV, and I asked my mum, โWhere are people like me?'โ Dylan says.
โIt became my goal to get on TV โ not only because I enjoy sharing stories,โ he explains, โbut to really shake it up and say, โLook how talented, normal and funny people with a disability can be.'โ
At just 18, Dylan won gold at the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games for wheelchair basketball before making the switch to tennis. Since then, heโs won the Australian Open five times, Wimbledon and the French and US Opens.
It was his successful tennis career that introduced him to the world of TV presenting, but it wasnโt without a few hiccups. Dylan explains theyโre typical of the โinvisible barriersโ often placed in front of people with disabilities.
โWhen I first started working on TV at the tennis, they said to me, โIf youโre going to interview Rafael Nadal, how will you do it?โ he recalls. โI said, โIโm going to put a microphone to his mouth, the same way anyone else would.โ And everyone realised it wasnโt that hard.โ
All Aces
Itโs been (tennis) balls to the wall ever since for Dylan, who just days after winning his Logie headed to England to take out the first Wimbledon wheelchair title in both the doubles and singles divisions.
Amid it all, heโs also found the time for his other passion โ live music โ and the show that earnt Dylan his Logie nod, The Set.
Carrying on from ABC music shows such as Countdown and Recovery, The Set brings Australian talent and live performances to a new generation.
โThe show really touches places that, apart from the local rock band, might not get live music very often or big names coming to town,โ Dylan says.
Buzzing over the return of the show, Dylan explains itโs not just the positive response from fans that has contributed to its success, but also the feedback from the music industry and from the artists themselves.
โAmy Shark [the Australian indie singer] doesnโt need to do our show โ she could sell out Margaret Court Arena [the 7500-seat stadium in Melbourne],โ he says, adding with pride, โBut she wants to, and thatโs because she didnโt have a show like this.โ
The Next Step

Dylan with co-host, Linda, on The Set.
Despite a hectic schedule preparing for the 2020 Paralympics, to be held in Tokyo in August and September next year, and running his own charity โ the Dylan Alcott Foundation โ Dylan hasnโt ruled out making the leap from presenting into a scripted television series.
โIโve definitely considered it,โ Dylan reveals. โThere needs to be examples of people with disabilities just being normal. That breaks down barriers.
โWhy canโt Brad Pitt be in a wheelchair? Thatโs the example I give people.โ Then, with his trademark humour, he waits a beat before adding, โNot that I think Iโm Brad Pitt!โ
The Set airs Wednesday, 9:55pm on ABC and ABC iview.