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Dale Winton

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Dale Winton
Born
Dale Jonathan Winton

(1955-05-22) 22 May 1955 (age 69)[1]
Marylebone, London, England
NationalityBritish
OccupationRadio DJ/Broadcaster
Years active1987–present
TelevisionDale's Supermarket Sweep (1993–2000, 2007)
In It to Win It (2002—)
Hole in the Wall (2008)
Parents

Dale Jonathan Winton (born 22 May 1955)[2] is an English radio DJ and television presenter, best known for presenting the shows including Dale's Supermarket Sweep from 1993 until 2000 and again in 2007, the National Lottery game show In It to Win It since 2002 and the 2008 series of Hole in the Wall.

Early life

Winton was born on 22 May 1955. His father, Gary, was Jewish and his mother, actress Sheree Winton, converted to Judaism. Winton's father died on the day of his bar mitzvah.[3] Winton was brought up by his mother.

Early career

Winton started DJ'ing in clubs in Richmond in 1972, where he met Steve Allen. The two have remained best friends since.[4] From there he had a selection of menial jobs including selling time shares abroad.[4] In 1982, Winton moved to London and began his entertainment career on the London club circuit, where he DJ'd at weekends. This led him to United Biscuits Industrial Radio where he did a variety of jobs, before getting his own morning show. From here he joined Radio Trent in Nottingham, where he presented a weekend show, moving to the weekday mid-morning show, before leaving in 1985, and going on to work at a number of other local radio stations.[5]

Career

Television

Winton began his television career in 1987, working for Channel 4, Lifestyle Channel and ITV.[2] From 1993 to 2000, Winton hosted Dale's Supermarket Sweep during the daytime TV period on ITV. In 2007, Supermarket Sweep was revived after a 5+12-year absence. Winton portrayed himself as an irritating game show presenter in Danny Boyle's 1996 film of Irvine Welsh's 1993 novel Trainspotting.[6] In 1995 and 1996, Winton presented the Saturday night game show Pets Win Prizes.

In 1997, he presented the final of The Great British Song Contest, the UK's national pre-selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, due to a tie-in with the lottery programme.[7] Between that year and 2002, he also presented a dating show called The Other Half. In 1999, he appeared on the sitcom Gimme Gimme Gimme with Kathy Burke in the episode Do They Take Sugar?.[8]

In 2001, he presented Channel 5's endurance show Touch the Truck.[9] In 2002, Dale began presenting the National Lottery game show In It to Win It. As of 2015, the show is into its seventeenth series.

In 2003 he appeared in the BBC Three mock documentary, Dale's Wedding, in which he supposedly married the UK celebrity Nell McAndrew.[10] From 2003 until 2004, he hosted two series of Stars Reunited where the casts of popular British television series were reunited after many years.[11]

Between 2004 and 2006, he presented three series of the celebrity weight loss "boot camp" programme, Celebrity Fit Club on ITV.[12] In April 2006, he guest presented an episode of BBC Two's pop quiz Never Mind the Buzzcocks.[13] In August 2006, he was chosen to host the pilot of Endemol's new show, Show Me What You've Got; however, the show did not receive a full series.[14]

In February 2008, he completed a pilot show for BBC One called You've Got The Answer, a game show that surprised the public using hidden cameras.[15] Winton presented BBC One's Saturday night entertainment programme Hole In The Wall in 2008, based on the Japanese original, where contestants in skin-tight Lycra costumes contort themselves to fit through oddly-shaped holes in a moving wall.[16] The show returned for a second series in 2009, but Anton du Beke replaced Winton as host.

Winton began appearing in television advertisements for cashmygold.co.uk.[17] Winton appeared on Matt Lucas and David Walliams' BBC comedy series Come Fly With Me. He appeared in the last episode of the series, playing himself.

In 2012, he hosted one-off ITV game show Dale's Great Getaway. The show has not returned to the schedules since.

Radio

In 2000, Dale took over from Alan Freeman to present Pick of the Pops on BBC Radio 2, and hosted the show until 30 October 2010; after that date Tony Blackburn replaced him.

Winton has also sat in for Steve Wright on BBC Radio 2. Dale was on BBC Radio 2 covering for Liza Tarbuck's Saturday show in September 2013 and November/December 2016.

Personal life

In 2002, he released his autobiography in which he wrote about his rise to fame, his actress mother's suicide and came out about his homosexuality.[18]

References

  1. ^ Dale Winton - Biography
  2. ^ a b "Kings Of Camp. Dale Winton". Astabgay.com. Retrieved 21 January 2010.
  3. ^ Winton, Dale. My Story. Arrow Books. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  4. ^ a b 5's Company - Dale Winton interview on YouTube
  5. ^ Radio Rewind - BBC Radio 1 People - Dale Winton's Winning Ways
  6. ^ Trainspotting (1996) - Full Cast And Crew IMDB.com
  7. ^ Great British Song Contest 1997 IMDB.com
  8. ^ "Gimme, Gimme, Gimme" Do They Take Sugar (1999) IMDB.com
  9. ^ "Touch The Truck" Archived 1 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ UKTV People: Programmes: Dale's Wedding UKTV.co.uk
  11. ^ "Stars Reunited (2003–2004)" IMDB.com
  12. ^ "Celebrity Fit Club" IMDB.com
  13. ^ "Never Mind The Buzzcocks" Episode #18.7 IMDB.com
  14. ^ Show Me What You've Got UKGameShows.com
  15. ^ BBC working on new Jeremy Beadle-style show fronted by Dale Winton Mirror.co.uk Archived 4 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Hole In The Wall commissioned for BBC One BBC Press Office
  17. ^ Freeman, Hadley (6 January 2010). "Awful ads, crass jingles and Dale Winton – daytime TV fodder is now primetime: In a recession we're assumed to be sitting ducks for any money-saving tip". The Observer.
  18. ^ Dale Winton: I never told my mum I was gay | Celebrity News | Now Magazine