Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Keith Chegwin

One of the biggest stars of children’s TV, who stamped his personalit­y on morning shows

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KEITH Chegwin, the television presenter, who died last Monday aged 60 after a long illness, began his career as a straight actor, including playing Fleance in Roman Polanski’s Macbeth (1971), but he became better known as “Cheggers”, the chirpy chappie who co-presented such children’s television favourites as Multi-Coloured Swap Shop, Saturday Superstore and Cheggers Plays Pop in the late 1970s and 1980s.

“Say the words ‘Keith Chegwin’ and people either snigger, wince, or go misty-eyed for the late 1970s and early 1980s,” one critic observed. Parents hated his lurid velour jumpers, his manic energy and the “Cheggers chuckle” that was likened to a gurgling drain. But children loved his spontaneou­s ad-libbing style.

His career waned in the late 1980s after he drifted into alcoholism. But he recovered to present the Down Your Doorstep outside broadcast segment on Channel 4’s The Big Breakfast, which he introduced with “Wake up you beggars, it’s Cheggers!”

He subsequent­ly hosted the show and, in 1999, presided over a revival of the 1970s game show It’s a Knockout on Channel 5. In 2000 he put in a stint fronting Channel 5’s controvers­ial nudist game show The Naked Jungle, wearing nothing but a pith helmet — an outing which many viewers, Chegwin included (he described the show as “the worst career move” of his life), preferred to forget.

Throughout his career in showbusine­ss, Chegwin regularly appeared in pantomimes. In later life, he became active on the celebrity competitio­n and reality television circuit, including taking part in Celebrity Big Brother on Channel 5 in 2015 (he finished fourth) and on Celebrity MasterChef.

Keith Chegwin, who has a twin brother, Jeff and an older sister, Janice, was born in Bootle, Liverpool, on January 17 ,1957. His father, Colin, worked in the timber trade, while his mother, Margaret, was a former dinner lady. Starstruck from an early age, Keith horrified his parents at an end-of-the-pier show in Rhyl when, aged 10, he rushed up on stage to take part in a talent competitio­n. His rendition of a Des O’Connor number won him the prize and he went on to perform on Junior Showtime, the ITV children’s variety show.

He was talent-spotted by Phil Collins’s mother June, who was an agent for the Barbara Speake Stage School, which he attended, and who invited him down to London to audition for the stage show Mame: “I got the job and ended up tap dancing with Ginger

Rogers at the Drury Lane Theatre.” While still at school he won a small role in the film drama The Optimists of Nine

Elms (1973) and appeared in a number of television series

including Open All Hours, The Liver Birds, The Adventures of Black Beauty and Z Cars. He performed in West End shows, including Tom Brown’s School Days, with Russell Grant and Simon Le Bon, and The Good Old Bad Old Days with Anthony Newley.

His last major acting role before becoming a television star was in the film Robin Hood Junior (1975) in which he took the title role. In the same year he formed a boy band called Kenny, which had a No.3 hit with The Bump.

Chegwin got his big break at the age of 17 when he landed a job as a presenter, alongside Noel Edmonds and (later) Maggie Philbin, on Multi-Coloured Swap Shop (BBC One, 1976-82), a programme he described as “the prototype to eBay, where kids could swap stolen goods on telly”. The show, in which he toured outdoor venues around Britain, made him a household name.

He went on to work as a presenter on the very similar Saturday Superstore (BBC One 1982-87), and won his own show, Cheggers Plays Pop, a frenetic children’s game show featuring school teams and contempora­ry pop acts, also on BBC One (1978-86).

In 1982 he married his Swap Shop co-presenter Maggie Philbin and together, as Brown Sauce, they released the pop single I Wanna Be a Winner, which reached No.15 in the charts. He also appeared regularly in television advertisem­ents.

By the late 1980s, however, he was downing, by his own account, two bottles of whiskey a day. As a result his career began to nosedive and his marriage to Maggie Philbin collapsed.

But he bounced back in the early 1990s after confessing tearfully to Richard and Judy on ITV’s This Morning show in 1992 that he was an alcoholic but that he had stopped drinking.

Chegwin soon reestablis­hed himself as an ubiquitous presence on television. Among other appearance­s, he presented the Horse of the Year Show at Olympia, performed in Dancing on Ice, made self-mocking guest appearance­s in the Ricky Gervais comedies, Extras and Life’s Too Short, and on panel shows such as Never Mind The Buzzcocks and Pointless Celebritie­s.

In 2011 he returned to the big screen in Kill Keith ,a slapstick horror film.

He published a memoir, Shaken But Not Stirred , in 1995.

In 2000 Chegwin married, secondly, Maria Fielden, who survives him with their son, and a daughter from his first marriage to Maggie Philbin.

 ??  ?? CELEBRITY FAMILY: Maggie Philbin and Keith Chegwin with their newborn daughter Rose Elizabeth in 1988
CELEBRITY FAMILY: Maggie Philbin and Keith Chegwin with their newborn daughter Rose Elizabeth in 1988

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