Television 1991–2000 In 1992, Winkleman began appearing frequently in the long-running
BBC series
Holiday, and this continued throughout the mid-1990s. This culminated in a special documentary in which she travelled around the world for 34 days, reporting from Japan, India, Costa Rica and Dubai. Throughout this period, she appeared as a reporter on other shows, particularly
This Morning, interviewing various celebrities. During the late 1990s, Winkleman presented a number of programmes on smaller
digital channels. She had a stint on the cable channel
L!VE TV, but soon left to pursue other projects. In 1996, Winkleman hosted
Granada programmes ''
God's Gift (taking over from Davina McCall) and Pyjama Party'' (co-hosted with
Katie Puckrik and Michelle Kelly). Winkleman also presented a number of
gameshows, including the dating show ''Three's a Crowd
, LWT show Talking Telephone Numbers, the second series of Granada TV show God's Gift
, and Fanorama''. In 1997 she was the co-host of children's Saturday morning TV show
Tricky. She was also an occasional team captain on a gameshow called
HeadJam, hosted by
Vernon Kay.
2001–2006 Winkleman's first major television job was in 2001, on the regional discussion programme
Central Weekend. Between 2002 and 2004, Winkleman began her first daily television role when she hosted the
BBC Three Entertainment update show
Liquid News, taking over from
Christopher Price on the now defunct
BBC Choice. She shared the presenting duties with
Colin Paterson, and later
Paddy O'Connell. The show featured celebrity interviews. In 2003,
Fame Academy appointed Winkleman to present a daily update show on
BBC Three, in conjunction with its second series. She repeated the show in 2005 for the much shorter celebrity version
Comic Relief Does Fame Academy. Also in 2005, Winkleman co-hosted
The House of Tiny Tearaways, a BBC Three reality TV show. She also began hosting
Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two, a supplementary programme to
Strictly Come Dancing. Winkleman then presented several more
reality shows, including
End of Story and
Art School.
2007–2012 Winkleman narrated the 2008
BBC Three show
Glamour Girls, a documentary series about
glamour modelling in Britain. In March 2009, Winkleman was announced as the host of the new series of ''
Hell's Kitchen on ITV1. She fronted the nightly show live from the restaurant in East London in its fourth series in the spring. On 14 November 2009, she appeared on the main show of Strictly Come Dancing'' to present backstage, due to main presenter
Bruce Forsyth being on sick leave. She co-hosted the show with
Tess Daly and guest presenter
Ronnie Corbett. On 29 March 2010, she was named as one of the new co-presenters of
the Film programme, replacing
Jonathan Ross.
The Guardian stated, through her recent hosting of Sky Television's coverage of
The Oscars, Winkleman had "proved both a passionate and engaging advocate of cinema", while her husband Kris Thykier is a film producer with credits on several mainstream releases.
2013–present On 2 April 2013, Winkleman began presenting the
BBC Two sewing competition
The Great British Sewing Bee, until 2016. The show went off air for 2017, but was brought back in 2018, with
Joe Lycett replacing Winkleman as presenter. In 2015, she appeared on
The Big Fat Anniversary Quiz. In May 2015, she appeared on an episode of
Watchdog on
BBC One in which she discussed, during a segment on dangerous Halloween costumes, that the previous year her daughter had been badly burned when the costume she was wearing caught fire. In November 2016, Winkleman presented the one-off BBC special
Bublé at the BBC with
Michael Bublé. From 2018, she presented ''
Britain's Best Home Cook and The Makeover Show
for BBC One. In May 2018, Winkleman co-presented The Biggest Weekend'' on
BBC Two and
BBC Radio 2. In 2022, she began hosting the BBC reality gameshow
The Traitors, in which contestants navigate challenges testing loyalty and deception. A second series was announced in February 2023, with Winkleman returning as host, premiering on 3 January 2024. Winkleman returned to host the third series, premiering on 1 January 2025, followed by a Celebrity Traitors series in October 2025. On 1 January 2026, Winkleman hosted the fourth series. In 2023, Winkleman hosted a five-part
Channel 4 competition show
The Piano, which gave amateur pianists the chance to perform at London's
Royal Festival Hall. It was announced that the show had been renewed for a second and third series, a Christmas special, and a documentary focusing on the winner of the first series, Lucy Illingworth. On 29 December 2025, it was announced that Winkleman would host her own celebrity chat show on BBC One from spring 2026 named
The Claudia Winkleman Show.
Strictly Come Dancing Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two was devised as a companion show to run alongside the
second series of
Strictly Come Dancing, and continues to run. It follows a similar format to the one Winkleman hosted on
Fame Academy, and sees the presenter deliberating and dissecting the ins and outs of the main competition, accompanied by dance experts, assorted guests and the competitors themselves. The show is aired every weekday at 6:30 pm on BBC Two throughout the course of the series.
Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two was hosted by Winkleman from its inception. In 2011, former contestant
Zoe Ball took over as host from Winkleman. In 2010, Winkleman became co-host of the Sunday night results show of
Strictly Come Dancing, presenting alongside
Tess Daly. Following
Bruce Forsyth's departure in 2014, her role expanded to include presenting the main show.
Writing Winkleman started her journalism career as a
travel writer, writing columns about her various worldwide excursions in
The Sunday Times and
The Independent, and the free daily paper
Metro. She began to write more general work, opinion-led lifestyle journalism about womanhood, sex and relationships. She wrote for
Cosmopolitan and
Tatler amongst others. Between 2005 and 2008, she wrote a regular weekly column for
The Independent called
Take It From Me.
Radio In April and May 2008, Winkleman hosted a six-part comedy quiz series taking a humorous look into the week's celebrity gossip, called
Hot Gossip. The show was broadcast on a Saturday afternoon on
BBC Radio 2; points were awarded to those who dished out dirt. The show featured pundits including
Will Smith,
Phil Nichol,
Jo Caulfield,
Rufus Hound and
Jonathan Ross' brother,
Paul. She hosted a weekly show on
BBC Radio 2 every Friday night between 10pm and midnight called ''Claudia Winkleman's Arts Show'', consisting of interviews with people from the arts world, as well as reviews and debate. In July 2010, Winkleman sat in for
Dermot O'Leary. She covered for
Ken Bruce on several occasions from 2012 until 2014. In April 2016, she began presenting her own Sunday night show on
BBC Radio 2 called
Claudia on Sunday from 7 to 9pm. In June 2017, Winkleman covered for
Steve Wright in the Afternoon from 2 to 5pm. In 2020,
Claudia on Sunday was displaced from the schedules and subsequently ended due to the
COVID pandemic. It was announced on 23 November 2020 that Winkleman had taken over the Saturday mid-morning slot on
BBC Radio 2 from
Graham Norton. Winkleman's last Saturday morning show was broadcast on 23 March 2024, with
Romesh Ranganathan taking over. ==Charity==