When Tess Daly first stepped onto the set of a brand-new BBC show called Strictly Come Dancing back in 2004, few could have imagined that sheâd still be front and centre more than two decades later.

It was a remarkable run â a record few female presenters have achieved. Tessâs warmth, her natural chemistry with the late Sir Bruce Forsyth, and her signature poise helped define Strictlyâs golden era.
So when whispers first began that her co-host Claudia Winkleman might soon depart â following the phenomenal success of The Traitors â the reaction was immediate and emotional. Fans were shocked. But behind closed doors, BBC insiders had already started murmuring: âThereâs no Tess without Claudia.â
And as one insider puts it bluntly â those whispers âdidnât stay whispers for long.â
 âShe knew if Claudia went, sheâd have to go too.â
According to those close to the star, Tess learned the uncomfortable truth early: Strictly wanted a fresh start.
âBasically, Tess knew the BBC didnât want her without Claudia,â says one source. âItâs harsh, but thatâs the reality. Sheâs given twenty-one years to that show â but if Claudia walked, they were ready to move on.â
It was that realisation that sparked the pairâs pact to leave together â a decision made privately nearly a year ago.
âThey had some long, emotional conversations,â the insider continues. âTess decided that if Claudia was going, she wasnât going to wait around to be replaced.â
While the two hosts may not have been inseparable off-screen, those who know them say the bond they share is one of quiet loyalty and respect.
âClaudia is fiercely loyal,â says a friend. âSheâd never let Tess be humiliated or sidelined. If one went, both would go. Thatâs just who she is.â
So, together, they recorded their farewell video â a two-minute clip that blindsided the BBC and left millions of viewers in disbelief.
âHi, itâs Claud and Tess,â Claudia began in the video, smiling through tears. âThere have been some rumblings, and we want you to hear it from usâŠâ
Tess then added softly: âAfter twenty-one wonderfully joyful years, weâve decided itâs time to step aside and pass over the baton.â
Simple words. But behind them was a message the BBC couldnât ignore â they were leaving on their own terms.
Claudia Winkleman, the daughter of publisher Barry Winkleman and journalist Eve Pollard, attended the elite City of London School for Girls before heading to Cambridge. Her career soared through high-profile shows like Fame Academy and Holiday.
Tessâs story was different. Raised in Derbyshire by working-class parents in a textiles factory, her life changed when she was spotted outside a McDonaldâs by a modelling scout. At 21, she appeared nÏ Ée in The Belovedâs 1993 hit Sweet Harmony â something she now laughs off.
âI cringe when I think about that video,â Tess once admitted.
Their upbringings couldnât have been more different â but somehow, on Strictly, the chemistry worked. Claudia, the Cambridge wit; Tess, the grounded northern heart. Together, they became an institution.

Claudia married Kris Thykier, a BAFTA-nominated film producer and self-proclaimed feminist. Tess, meanwhile, found love with Vernon Kay, a Bolton-born model turned BBC Radio 2 presenter.
Both couples built successful careers, raised families, and weathered fameâs storms. Yet, when Claudiaâs star began to rise again through The Traitors, insiders say it left Tess quietly feeling overshadowed.
âClaudiaâs career exploded,â one TV insider reveals. âShe became the BBCâs golden girl â The Traitors, The Piano, The Sewing Bee. Everyone wanted her.â
ITV was even rumoured to be circling her for a major primetime project â one that could rival Graham Norton.
And now, sources confirm that Claudia has indeed begun work on a brand-new chat show produced by Nortonâs own company â a project so secret, even Tess wasnât told until late in the process.
âShe didnât want it to look like sheâd left Tess behind,â says one source. âBut sheâs earned her moment â and she knows it.â
Friends insist that Tess is âthrilledâ for Claudia â but that doesnât make the farewell any easier.
âSheâs a fighter,â says a Strictly insider. âBut sheâs not naĂŻve. When you hear people say youâre being replaced, you start to prepare yourself.â
Itâs understood that Tess already has new offers from the BBC and several lifestyle brands. Between her swimwear line Naia Beach, her work with Marks & Spencer, and endorsements with Vitabiotics, sheâs far from stepping out of the spotlight.
âShe never thought Strictly would last this long,â another source says. âSo if youâre told the end is coming â you bow out with grace.â
And thatâs exactly what sheâs done.
For twenty-one years, Tess Daly stood at the heart of British Saturday nights â through glitter, tears, triumphs and eliminations.
Now, as she steps away from the dancefloor, even those who once criticised her online have admitted admiration.
âItâs incredible to host a show that long,â one insider says. âSheâs made history. Not many women in TV get to say that.â
And while her partnership with Claudia Winkleman has come to an end, their story â of loyalty, resilience, and friendship â will be remembered as one of Strictlyâs most human moments.
Because, in the end, Tess Daly didnât just leave a show.
She left a legacy.



