Hendy was born in
Dawley on 22 July 1966. Hendy's career started as a member of The
National Youth Theatre of Great Britain, playing the part of Billy Casper in
Kes in 1980. His first break into television came when he hosted ITV's Sunday morning flagship show
The Disney Club. After leaving
The Disney Club, Hendy went to the
BBC and hosted the Saturday morning show
Parallel 9 which was broadcast live from
Pinewood Studios. He has also presented
Disney Summer Holidays (ITV),
For Amusement Only (BBC),
Highly Sprung (BBC),
Travel Bug (an Action Time Production for BBC) and three series of the BAFTA-nominated
Dear Mr Barker (BBC). In 2001, he took over from
John Leslie as host of ITV1's game show
Wheel of Fortune with
Terri Seymour and ITV1's prime time Saturday night show
''Don't Try This at Home with
Davina McCall, which ran for four series (1998–2001). He hosted the un-aired pilot of the UK version of the game show
The Chair'' (BBC1), which was eventually hosted by No. 1 tennis player
John McEnroe in 2002. Hendy was a regular reporter for ITV's
This Morning and a guest presenter on
GMTV. He hosted
Talking TV (BBC1),
Walk Over History (
Meridian) and
The Dog Listener (
Channel 5). He has also hosted
Kicked Into Touch (Meridian) and
Stash (ITV). He also hosted a cinema review show called
The Box Office Boys (
BFBS), and featured on an episode of
Surprising Stars with
Kate Thornton. == Film ==