Davina McCall

Davina McCall

McCall at the BAFTA Awards in April 2009
Born Davina Lucy Pascale McCall
16 October 1967 (1967-10-16) (age 48)
Wimbledon, London, England
Residence London, England
Occupation Broadcaster, actress
Years active 1992–present
Employer Sky, ITV, Channel 4
Height 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Television Big Brother (2000–10)
Got to Dance (2010–14)
The Million Pound Drop (2010–15)
The Biggest Loser (2011–12)
Long Lost Family (2011—)
The Jump (2014—)
Spouse(s) Andrew Leggett (m. 1997–1999,
divorced)

Matthew Robertson (m. 2000)
Children 3
Parent(s) Andrew McCall
Florence Koch (née Hennion, deceased)
Relatives Célestin Hennion (great-grandfather)
Website Official website

Davina Lucy Pascale McCall[1] (born 16 October 1967)[2] is an English television presenter. She has hosted Channel 4's The Million Pound Drop Live, Five Minutes to a Fortune and The Jump, Sky1's Got to Dance, as well as ITV's Long Lost Family and Stepping Out.

McCall was the presenter of Big Brother during its run on Channel 4 between 2000 and 2010. Having fronted the weekly live eviction shows every year since the beginning, she decided not to return as host after it was dropped by Channel 4 in 2010 and relaunched by Channel 5 the following year.

After a difficult childhood, in her early twenties McCall had pursued various jobs, including becoming a solo singer, but later embarked on a career shouting on television with a first job presenting for satellite music channel MTV in 1992. After further work on terrestrial channels she became a household name thanks to Big Brother, while also continuing to work with other hosting vehicles on various channels, from game shows to talent shows. She has also been a regular co-presenter of the Comic Relief annual telethons since 2005.

Departures from presenting into other television roles, through a sitcom, a documentary series and fronting her own chat show, have all proven to be unsuccessful, and beyond Big Brother she has continued in the mainstream as a presenter on Channel 4, ITV and Sky1.

Early life

McCall was born on 16 October 1967 in Wimbledon, London[1][2][3] to a French mother, Florence (née Hennion) and an English father, Andrew McCall.[4][5] At the age of three went to live with her paternal grandparents in Surrey after the break-up of her parents' marriage.[6] Her mother Florence – whom McCall has described as something of a "wild child" and later, specifically as "an alcoholic" – returned to Paris, and McCall saw her only when on holidays.

Her relationship with her mother was a difficult one and she has said that her mother "should never have had kids" describing how she once left her, at the age of 12, in a nightclub on her own. She continued to see her father Andrew, a graphic designer, at weekends before moving in with him and his new wife Gaby when she was 13 years old.[7]

McCall attended the St Catherine's School, Bramley near Guildford, Surrey and Godolphin and Latymer Girls School,[8] an independent school in Hammersmith, West London. At secondary level, McCall studied for nine O levels and two A levels.

McCall is fluent in French, due to her French mother.[9]

Early career

McCall's first career was as a singer. McCall had been performing in a band while still at school. The band went under the name Foghorn, referring to her raucous, shouting voice. By age 19, she had decided to pursue a professional career as a solo artist, assisted by her then boyfriend Eric Clapton, who produced her demo music disc.[10][11]

Dissatisfied with near misses in the music industry, McCall gave up singing and took a job at Models 1 on the men's desk as a booker. Later she ran a restaurant for two years before a brief spell in Paris as a Moulin Rouge style cabaret performer. On her return to London she worked on the nightclub scene as a hostess.[12] Work in this period also included an appearance as a dancer in the video for the 1991 Kylie Minogue single "Word Is Out", wearing a striped sweater and beret in a nod to her French ancestry.

Presenting

In 1992, McCall was hired as a presenter on Ray Cokes' Most Wanted on MTV Europe. In 1995, she went on to host the ITV late night game show God's Gift and in 1998 to present the cult Channel 4 dating show Streetmate. From 1998, she co-hosted the Sky TV show Prickly Heat with Julian Clary and presented the ITV game show Don't Try This at Home!.

McCall continued to present other shows during the Big Brother period. When ITV's game show Don't Try This at Home! ended in 2001, she continued with the channel, presenting series such as Popstars: The Rivals and The Vault (1st series) in 2002, Reborn in the USA in 2003 and Love on a Saturday Night in 2004. She also hosted the British Academy Television Awards 2004 for ITV and again in 2006.

Channel 4

McCall was chosen as the presenter of the inaugural series of Big Brother, in which 10 housemates entered a sealed house for up to nine weeks and their every move would be filmed and then broadcast as a daily highlights show. McCall hosted the weekly live eviction show, where one contestant would be removed from the house, until the last housemate became the winner. McCall also hosted the celebrity version Celebrity Big Brother, whose first series ran for eight days in March 2001.

McCall's performance on the final night of the sixth series in 2005 attracted press attention and some complaints for her treatment of housemate Makosi Musambasi.[13][14] In December 2007, McCall presented a New Year's edition of The Friday Night Project, entitled The Friday Night New Year Project 2007.

By the ninth series of Big Brother in 2008, McCall was earning a reported £85,000 per episode.[15] Responding to tabloid claims before the series that she was about to quit Big Brother she said, "I'm not leaving ... They would have to kill me before I'd stop doing it".[16][17] The ninth series proved to be a low point however, becoming the least watched summer series in the show's history.

McCall became the regular presenter of the live Big Brother companion show Big Brother's Big Mouth for the tenth and eleventh series, after it was re-formatted into an hour-long show after the weekly live eviction show, having previously occupied the slot after each daily highlights show.

With audience figures falling, Channel 4 decided that the eleventh series in Summer 2010 would be the last Big Brother broadcast on their channel, although the show's future was in the hands of the rights holder Endemol. After presenting the seventh and final series of Celebrity Big Brother in January 2010, she fronted her eleventh and final regular edition over the summer. As a finale to the series on Channel 4, McCall also presented the Ultimate Big Brother show, which started immediately after the main series, and featured selected past celebrity and non-celebrity housemates.

Having made the decision to leave the show after Ultimate Big Brother, McCall confirmed she would not be returning as host when Channel 5 announced in April 2011 that they had secured the rights to relaunch Big Brother in Summer 2011. She gave her backing to Emma Willis as her replacement, stating she still believed the show had potential.[18] Big Brother 2 and Ultimate Big Brother winner Brian Dowling was ultimately chosen to take over McCall's role as presenter of the Channel 5 version, though in 2013 Emma Willis became his successor as the new presenter.

In between the final celebrity and regular editions of Big Brother on Channel 4, McCall began presenting a new game show, The Million Pound Drop.

In 2012 and 2014, McCall co-hosted charity telethon Stand Up to Cancer with Alan Carr. As part of the 2014 telethon, McCall and Carr also hosted a companion series Stars at Your Service.

In April 2013, McCall presented one series of Five Minutes to a Fortune.[19]

Since 2014, McCall has presented reality competition The Jump which is broadcast live over ten nights from a mountainside in Austria.[20][21]

Sky

On 20 December 2009, McCall began hosting reality programme Got to Dance. On 24 October 2014, It was confirmed that the show had been axed after five series.[22] Beginning in September 2015, McCall has presented One Hundred and Eighty, a darts-based game show for Sky1.[23]

ITV

In 2011, McCall began hosting The Biggest Loser and Long Lost Family. After just two series, it was announced that The Biggest Loser had been axed by ITV in September 2012. Long Lost Family, however, is still being broadcast on the channel, with McCall and Nicky Campbell as hosts.[24][25]

In 2013, McCall presented Stepping Out which was seen as a rival to BBC One's Strictly Come Dancing.[26][27]

In 2016, Davina presented a 4-part series for ITV called Davina McCall: Life at the Extreme. She will also host This Time Next Year for the channel.[28]

BBC

During 2005, McCall presented He's Having a Baby, where she followed and advised eight young men who were to become first-time fathers at various stages during the show's ten-week run. It received poor ratings.

McCall has been one of the co-presenters of the annual British charity telethons that are organised by Comic Relief on BBC One. Organised on an alternating comedy/sport theme and televised live in March, Red Nose Day has been co-hosted by McCall since 2005. She had previously presented or appeared on various related Comic Relief shows, including: The Record Breaker (1999), Naked Red Nose Ground Force in Practice and Say Pants to Poverty (2001), The Big Hair Do (2003) and Comic Relief Does Fame Academy (2005).

From early 2006, McCall fronted her own prime-time chat show, Davina. Receiving scathing reviews and with viewing figures falling to below half of the six million watching The Bill on ITV at the same time, the show was axed in April for not reaching expectations.

Other work

In 2001, McCall appeared with Ed Byrne, Tristan Gemmill and Tameka Empson as the title character in Sam's Game, a Friends-style sitcom. Slammed by the critics, it aired just once . McCall has voiced the android Davina McCall in the 2005 Doctor Who episode "Bad Wolf", and in 2008 she played herself as both a human and a zombie in Dead Set, a five-part horror parody of Big Brother set in the house.

In documentary television, McCall has fronted Let's Talk Sex about sex education and how it's taught in the United Kingdom (one of the countries of Europe with the highest teenage pregnancy levels). She also published a companion book to the series. McCall has also appeared in a video for schools called "Watch Over Me," talking about her drug addiction and peer pressure.

McCall is also the face of cosmetics brand Garnier in the United Kingdom.

In August 2014, McCall was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue.[29]

Charity

In February 2014, McCall undertook a BT Sport Relief challenge called 'Davina – Beyond Breaking Point', seven days of either running, swimming or cycling across the UK to raise money for the UK charity Sport Relief. This challenge was filmed by the BBC for a one-off 60-minute documentary called Davina: Beyond Breaking Point which aired on 20 March 2014 at 21:00 on BBC One.[30] During the live telethon, it was announced that McCall had raised over £2,239,931 for Sport Relief 2014.[31]

Personal life

Family

McCall is married to Matthew Robertson, presenter of Pet Rescue, with whom she has three children – two daughters and a son. Robertson is McCall's second husband; they were married in June 2000 at Eastnor Castle, Herefordshire.[32] Her first marriage was to Andrew Leggett in 1997.[33] McCall's previous relationships included old family friend Eric Clapton.[10][11][34] He also helped her when in her early 20s she developed a drug problem; it was only after overcoming this that she gained her own television show on MTV.[35] She quit smoking when she was 24.[36]

Ancestry

McCall's ancestry was examined for a 2009 episode of Who Do You Think You Are?. With the help of historians Jean-Marc Berliere and Simon Kitson, McCall learned that she is the great-granddaughter of onetime Prefect of Police Célestin Hennion (1862–1915), and the great-great-great-granddaughter, on her father's side, of James Thomas Bedborough (1787–1860), a stonemason, councillor, Mayor, property developer and entrepreneur, who worked on Windsor Castle and Upton Park in Slough. Bedborough was said to be an illegitimate son of George IV according to a story told by McCall's grandmother, but this was neither proved or disproved on the show.

Participants in the show included Françoise Hennion (Hennion's granddaughter and McCall's mother's cousin) and Pierre, Hennion's son and McCall's grandfather. Pierre gave McCall his father's Royal Victorian Order medal. McCall met Alfred Dreyfus's great-granddaughter, Yael Ruiz, after learning of the part her ancestor [Célestin Hennion] played in the Dreyfus affair.[37]

Filmography

Television
Year Title Role Notes
1992 MTV Europe Presenter
1993 Eurotrash Presenter Female Voice Dubber for the first series on Channel 4
1995 God's Gift Presenter
1998 The Drop Dead Show Presenter
Prickly Heat Presenter With Julian Clary
1998–2001 Don't Try This at Home! Presenter
1998–2001 Streetmate Presenter
1999 A Day in the life of the Shepherds Presenter
1999– Comic Relief Co-Presenter
2000, 2003 BRIT Awards Presenter
2000–2010 Big Brother Presenter Series 1 to Series 11
2001 Sam's Game Sam
2001–2010 Celebrity Big Brother Presenter Series 1 to Series 7
2001 Oblivious Presenter
2002 The Vault Presenter
Popstars: The Rivals Presenter
2003 Reborn in the USA Presenter
2004 Love on a Saturday Night Presenter
2004, 2006 BAFTA Presenter
2004– Sport Relief Co-Presenter
2005 Doctor Who Voice Voice of Davinadroid in the episode Bad Wolf
A Bear's Tail Dave Ian McCall
He's Having a Baby Presenter
2006 Davina Presenter
2007 Let's Talk Sex Presenter
Big Brother: On The Couch Presenter
The Friday Night New Year Project
2008 Dead Set[38] Herself Plays fictionalised version of herself as Big Brother host (also as a zombie)
4Music's Davina & Steve's 20 Big Ones
2008, 2009–2010 Big Brother's Big Mouth Presenter Guest presenter for one week (2008). Main presenter from Big Brother 10 to Ultimate Big Brother.
2010–2014 Got to Dance Presenter
2010— The Million Pound Drop Presenter
2010 Ultimate Big Brother Presenter
2011–2012 The Biggest Loser Presenter
2011— Long Lost Family Co-Presenter With Nicky Campbell
2012, 2014 Stand Up to Cancer UK Co-Presenter With Alan Carr and Christian Jessen
2013 Five Minutes to a Fortune Presenter 1 series
Stepping Out Presenter 1 series
2014— The Jump Presenter 3 series; with Alex Brooker in 2014 only
2014 Stars at Your Service Co-Presenter 3-part series; with Alan Carr
2015 The Secret Life of Your House Narrator One-off programme
One Hundred and Eighty Presenter Sky1 darts-based game show
2016 Davina McCall: Life at the Extreme[28] Presenter 1 series (4 episodes)
This Time Next Year[39] Presenter Upcoming ITV series
Guest appearances

Fitness

DVDs

References

  1. 1 2 Husband, Stuart (12 June 2005). "The Real McCall". London: The Guardian/Observer. Retrieved 26 June 2007.
  2. 1 2 "McCALL, Davina". British Film Institute.
  3. Debrett's People of Today 2005 (18th ed.). Debrett's. p. 1034. ISBN 1-870520-10-6.
  4. "Who Do You Think You Are?, Series 7, Davina McCall". Who Do You Think You Are?. 15 July 2009. BBC. BBC Two.
  5. Goodall, Nigel (2007). Being Davina. John Blake. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  6. Hilton, Beth (5 June 2008). "Ten Things You Never Knew About Davina McCall". Digital Spy. Retrieved 20 September 2008.
  7. Jones, David (23 June 2007). "Found: Davina McCall's tragic mum". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 20 September 2008.
  8. Byrne, Ciar (7 December 2005). "Davina McCall's £1m deal makes her BBC's first female chat-show host". London: Independent. Retrieved 20 September 2008.
  9. "Long Lost Family on ITV: Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell return with more emotional tales 'of loss, of love, of wonder'". Hull Daily Mail. 13 July 2014. Retrieved 28 July 2014.
  10. 1 2 Davina McCall Profile Biogs.com. URL accessed 3 September 2006
  11. 1 2 Meet the Team – Davina McCall BBC Parenting. URL accessed 3 September 2006.
  12. Davina McCall Profile Hello!. URL accessed 3 September 2006
  13. "Big Brother 6: Ofcom to investigate over Makosi's treatment"Manchester Evening News, 16 August 2006. URL accessed 3 September 2006 Archived 3 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine.
  14. "Complaints Over Davina’s Treatment Of Makosi" UnrealityTV 17 August 2005 Retrieved 3 September 2010
  15. "Davina McCall has confidence crisis at 40". Now magazine. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
  16. "Davina: 'I'm not leaving Big Brother'". Digital Spy. 13 May 2008. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
  17. "Davina McCall 'quits Big Brother'". Digital Spy. 6 May 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
  18. "McCall rules out Big Brother return". Entertainment.stv.tv. 8 April 2011. Archived from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  19. "Davina McCall to host new Channel 4 gameshow Five Minutes to a Fortune – TV News". Digital Spy. 10 January 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
  20. Drewett, Meg. "Davina McCall to host "nerve-shattering" new Channel 4 show 'The Jump'". Digital Spy.
  21. "Channel 4 recommissions The Jump for a second series". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  22. "Got to Dance axed by Sky1 after five series". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  23. Nissim, Mayer (2015-08-12). "The spirit of Bullseye has been revived in Sky's new gameshow One Hundred and Eighty – TV News". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  24. "'Long Lost Family' renewed for fourth series by ITV – TV News". Digital Spy. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  25. "Davina's a winner on Loser". The Sun (London). 9 October 2010.
  26. "Davina McCall to host ITV 'Strictly' rival: Lineup revealed – TV News". Digital Spy. 16 August 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  27. "Davina McCall: 'Stepping Out is different to other dance shows' – TV News". Digital Spy. 25 August 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  28. 1 2 "ITV commissions Life At The Extreme. Presented by Davina McCall | "ITV Press Centre"". Itv.com. 2015-04-27. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  29. "Celebrities' open letter to Scotland – full text and list of signatories | Politics". theguardian.com. 2014-08-07. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  30. "Strictly, Davina McCall among BBC One's Sport Relief lineup – TV News". Digital Spy. 2014-01-21. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  31. "Davina – Beyond Breaking Point". Sport Relief. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
  32. "Eastnor Castle News Archive – Eastnor to Host GMTV Wedding of the Year". Eastnorcastle.com. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  33. TV and Radio. "Davina McCall gets physical". Telegraph. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  34. Rich Pelley. "One last thing... Davina McCall". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  35. Interview by Cole Moreton (9 March 2008). "Davina McCall: 'I'm fine. Really. It just hurts so much'". The Independent. Retrieved 8 October 2013.
  36. "Davina McCall interview for Stand Up to Cancer – Channel 4 – Info – Press". channel4.com. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  37. "Who Do You Think You Are? – Davina McCall". The National Archives. Archived from the original on 26 July 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2009.
  38. "Dead Set". E4.com. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  39. http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/tv/news/a664867/davina-mccall-to-host-life-makeover-show-with-time-travel-twist.html#~pmgRjyaNCimaxf
  40. Graham Norton and Davina McCall, retrieved 12 September 2014
  41. Wightman, Catriona (30 September 2010). "Davina McCall to appear on 'Comedy Roast'". London: Digital Spy. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
  42. "Mel & Sue". RadioTimes. Retrieved 21 March 2015.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Davina McCall.
Preceded by
N/A
Big Brother UK Presenter
2000–10
Succeeded by
Brian Dowling
Preceded by
Kate Garraway
The Biggest Loser UK Presenter
2011–2012
Succeeded by
Programme ended
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