logo
Cat Deeley's forgotten first boyfriend she was rumoured to have secretly married

Cat Deeley's forgotten first boyfriend she was rumoured to have secretly married

Daily Mirror3 days ago
Cat Deeley and Patrick Kielty have split after 19 years together, but Cat was previously in a relationship with a PR expert Mark Whelan and was even linked to Leonardo DiCaprio
TV stars Cat Deeley and Patrick Kielty have shocked fans by announcing their split after more than a decade of marriage.

The couple met while hosting BBC 's Fame Academy together in 2002, but only made their first public appearance as a couple nine years later in 2011. They wed a year later in September 2012 at a ceremony in Rome and have two children together

Before Patrick came on the scene, This Morning star Cat was in a long-term relationship with public relations expert Mark Whelan. There were even rumours that the pair had tied the knot - but Cat's reps denied these claims. Sadly, things didn't work out and they parted ways in 2006. Cat's latest break-up comes after Helen Skelton and Gethin Jones' sad split - and now he's joined a notorious dating app on a lads' holiday.

Speaking about her then-partner, Cat said Mark "used to be a bad boy, but these days is a lot more mellow." In a previous interview, she said: "He's ten years older than me and very smart and he's introduced me to things that weren't in my realm."
READ MORE: Cat Deeley found moving back to the UK 'really hard' before split from Patrick Kielty
However, after five years together, the pair went their separate ways. "Mark has been reassessing his life and decided his future wasn't with Cat," a friend told the Daily Star at the time. "He still loves her but knew they wouldn't spend the rest of their lives together."

Cat - who was also once linked to Leonardo DiCaprio - confirmed: "We've split up - but I've never talked about my private life and I don't intend to now."
After their break-up, she spent two years in a relationship with Jack Huston, a scion of the legendary Huston acting dynasty who starred in the film Twilight: Eclipse, but the relationship reportedly ended as the pair wanted to focus on their careers.
While single in Hollywood, Cat also dated actor Michael McMillian after first meeting the True Blood star at a party. The pair were regularly photographed around the movie capital, with Cat telling friends she thought he was 'The One'.

But a source told The Mail on Sunday: "It's all over. Cat's disappointed but moving on with her life. She is happy in all aspects of her life apart from her lack of a stable relationship."
She went on to tie the knot with The Late Late Show host Patrick in 2012 after a whirlwind nine-month romance.

In a candid interview with Tommy Tiernan in January 2023, Patrick revealed that he first met his wife back in 2002 during their time on hit reality TV show, Fame Academy.
Patrick explained: "We each had partners at the time and nothing went on, but there was a wee vibe there." That subtle connection lingered, and the two stayed in touch purely as friends, linked by a sweet ritual of exchanging birthday wishes twice a year.
Cat shared her side of the love story on The Late Late Show with Ryan Tubridy in 2020, recalling a particular phonecall that changed everything.

"There was a night before my birthday - I can't even remember which one, it was thirty-something - Patrick called me just to wish me happy birthday," she said. "He asked what I was doing, and I told him we were having a late brunch at the Beverly Hills Hotel. I said, 'It's a shame you're not here - you could come along.'"
At the time, Patrick was in a pub at home in Co Down, Northern Ireland. But after the call, he rushed home and booked a 7am flight to Los Angeles. The next day, he strolled into her birthday brunch, leaving Cat in total shock. She later admitted it was then she began to fall for his charm.
Reflecting on the bold move, Patrick said: "I've always been a born romantic… If I had a quid for every rom-com I've cried at. I followed my heart all the way to Los Angeles to surprise my now-wife for lunch. Twelve years and two kids later, I think it worked out."
However, the TV duo revealed on Tuesday that they are no longer a couple in a bombshell statement. They said: "We have taken the decision to end our marriage and are now separated. There is no other party involved.
"We will continue to be united as loving parents to our children and would therefore kindly ask for our family privacy to be respected. There will be no further comment."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EastEnders star confirms more trouble for Oscar as he gets set to flee
EastEnders star confirms more trouble for Oscar as he gets set to flee

Metro

time7 minutes ago

  • Metro

EastEnders star confirms more trouble for Oscar as he gets set to flee

There may be trouble ahead… (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron) EastEnders favourite Pierre Moullier has revealed there's more drama ahead for Oscar Branning as the character gets set to flee Albert Square. Viewers of the BBC One soap have seen Oscar experience a number of run-ins with thuggish associate Fat Mike (Tai Hilferink) over recent weeks, from threatening text messages to being beaten up and threatened with a knife. The situation has made Oscar increasingly more paranoid, so much so that he launched an attack on his sister Lauren's (Jacqueline Jossa) fiancé Peter Beale (Thomas Law). Desperate to find a resolution, he has to act fast next week when Mike demands £5k in exchange for the Branning family's protection. 'To me, this situation with Mike is like a multi-choice game, and Oscar always chooses the worst option,' actor Pierre told us. 'He should be going for option A and asking Jack [Branning, (Scott Maslen)] for help, but instead, he thinks he can make Option B work and find the money himself. 'Oscar seems to believe that all he needs is the time to get his hands on the money.' Mike demands 5k out of Oscar (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron) He steals the money from Patrick (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron) After discovering that Patrick Trueman (Rudolph Walker) has struck lucky at the betting shop – bagging himself a whopping £6k – it seems to be the answer to his prayers. Pierre continued: 'This is the last thing he wants to do, but he's deeply concerned by Mike and feeling quite alone in this. 'In his head, he thinks that Patrick wasn't expecting to have this money, so it won't hurt him if Oscar takes it. In the heat of the moment, Patrick is sent tumbling to the floor (Picture: BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron) Follow Metro Soaps on WhatsApp and get all the latest spoilers first! Want to be the first to hear shocking EastEnders spoilers? Who's leaving Coronation Street? The latest gossip from Emmerdale? Join 10,000 soaps fans on Metro's WhatsApp Soaps community and get access to spoiler galleries, must-watch videos, and exclusive interviews. Simply click on this link, select 'Join Chat' and you're in! Don't forget to turn on notifications so you can see when we've just dropped the latest spoilers! 'He thinks he can get in, take the money and get out with nobody being any the wiser.' Unfortunately, after being caught red-handed, Oscar pushes Patrick to the floor and knocks him unconscious. This was not on his bingo card! Despite everything, Pierre reckons there could be some redemption for Oscar. '[He's] done some bad things, but he's not a bad person.' Arrow MORE: All 44 EastEnders pictures for next week as Ross makes shocking discovery Arrow MORE: EastEnders legend rushed to hospital unconscious after being pushed Arrow MORE: All EastEnders spoilers for next week as Vicki reaches breaking point

The Chase's Anne Hegerty's huge career change as she stars in horror movie
The Chase's Anne Hegerty's huge career change as she stars in horror movie

Daily Mirror

time8 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

The Chase's Anne Hegerty's huge career change as she stars in horror movie

Anne Hegerty has conquered the quiz world - now she's dipping her toe into the world of horror movies as she reveals her cameo as a UFO spotter in new indie flick Anne Hegerty, quiz queen extraordinaire on The Chase for the past fifteen years, has revealed that one of her burning ambitions would be to do more acting, as she reveals she has recently filmed a very entertaining cameo in a low-budget horror movie. ‌ The 67-year-old, who is also known as 'The Governmess' on the quizshow that made her a household name and was diagnosed with autism in her mid-40s – told OK! as she opened up on her role: "I recently filmed a cameo in a very low-budget horror movie. I mean, it's so low budget I've been offered a share in the profits." ‌ ‌ She added of the recent project: "It's called Deadcast, and it's about a couple of guys who do a podcast about the supernatural. They head off to Lincolnshire to interview people who've had spooky experiences, and end up getting more than they bargained for." As for her quirkly role in the film, she explains: "I play a woman who saw a UFO, put it on the internet and got massively trolled and ended up becoming a recluse. There's a scene where they interview me in my garden and I'm showing them where I saw the UFO. ‌ "I say, 'They've been with me my whole life. It doesn't matter where I go, they follow me.' And just at that precise moment, an ice cream van passes playing Teddy Bears' Picnic. It was a lot of fun." The witty TV star confesses she would like to do more acting in future, especially if the role is humorous. "I would love to do a bit of acting. I'd love a chance to do a comedy role. I do love being funny." Anne, who appeared in the I'm A Celebrity jungle in 2018 alongside the likes of Nick Knowles, Emily Atac and Harry Redknapp, says that when it comes to any other reality TV ambitions, she has absolutely no desire to get on her sparkly dress and hit the Strictly dance floor, as fans prepare for the BBC show to return to our screens. Laughing, the straight-talking star, who hails from London but has a flat in Manchester, admits, "God no! My agent tried to get me to do it ages ago, but I couldn't even formulate the words to say, 'I think this is a bloody terrible idea.' I can't dance to save my life. When I'm in panto, you can make me sing a bit but, whatever you do, don't make me dance. Have everyone dance around me, like a maypole.

Review, Leanne, Netflix - old school comedy, new attitude
Review, Leanne, Netflix - old school comedy, new attitude

The Herald Scotland

time20 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Review, Leanne, Netflix - old school comedy, new attitude

These fabulous creatures used to be everywhere in television, often with their names in the title - The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Rhoda, Grace Under Fire, Roseanne, Cybill - and then just like that they disappeared. Invisible at home, work, and in film and television too. That has changed recently with Hacks, the much garlanded tale of a veteran stand-up on the comeback trail. With the arrival of Leanne, I'm now officially declaring this 'a thing'. Produced by Chuck Lorre, whose CV includes The Big Bang Theory and Two and a Half Men, Leanne Morgan stars as a Tennessee belle whose husband has left her after 33 years. It's not the hippest comedy you will ever see, and the larger than life performances take a bit of getting used to, but Morgan is immensely likeable and there are some genuinely funny lines. Eight episodes in, I could easily have watched the same number again. Destination X (BBC1, Wednesday) has been called the new Traitors, but what hasn't? The BBC hit has generated so many wannabes, I half expect Songs of Praise to be next for a Traitors makeover. Hosted by Rob Brydon, the game is simple enough. Players are given clues about their location, and at the end of each episode have to guess where they are. Whoever is left at the end of the ten weeks scoops a very nice £100,000. Take that, Race Across the World with your measly 20 grand. There was a catch, of course. Producers controlled what the players saw via goggles that could be switched on and off, and coach windows that went from clear to opaque. Added to this was some faffing in a big box and a dash of Traitors-like skulduggery. The most exciting moment was the arrival of two luxury coaches: one for travelling, one for sleeping. Though kitted out nicely enough, a coach is still a coach (complete with a predictably small, shared toilet). Compared to Traitors HQ at Ardross Castle, this was roughing it. Every reality show relies on a few 'characters' emerging from the mix. Among the contenders here were a London cabbie who had climbed Kilimanjaro and rowed the Atlantic but who took 14 years to do The Knowledge; a nuclear engineer; a pilot; a historian; and a multiple-marathon runner. Deborah the crime writer, 62, looked like a possible winner till it emerged she doesn't like lying. Once the friendliness of the first week is over, that could prove a drawback. Dawn, a 34-year-old care assistant from Northern Ireland, whose prep for the series was buying a children's atlas from TK Maxx for a fiver, was another to watch. It wasn't much of a vote of confidence in the show when one of the younger contestants quit because he missed his mum's cooking. Will there be others? Not if Brydon has anything to do with it. Though sporting a navy blazer, Uncle Bryn went full Butlins Redcoat early doors and did not let up. If there was a Bafta for wanting to be liked, it would be his, no question. In the meantime, I don't think The Traitors has much to worry about. If there is one thing television doesn't need, it is more celebrities going on holiday. But in the case of presenters Helen Skelton, Jules Hudson and JB Gill, so often up at horrible o'clock in all weathers, we can make an exception. Coastal Adventures with Helen, Jules and JB (Channel 5, Tuesday) found the trio scattered to the winds. Skelton started the ball rolling with a video selfie on the beach. 'Have a look at this,' she said. 'It looks almost tropical, but I'm not in the southern hemisphere, I'm just north of the Scottish border in Dumfries and Galloway.' The coastline was close to where she had lived and worked for years in Cumbria, yet she never thought of it as a holiday area because it was on her doorstep. Not any more. 'This is landscape that rivals the kind of thing you would go to New Zealand for.' While she headed for Bainloch Deer Park and JB was dispatched to the Suffolk coast, Hudson was shown around HMP Peterhead by someone who had worked there for 27 years. The former guard could still remember the smell of the chamber pots waiting to be emptied when he arrived to start his shift. The scene was described so vividly I could almost smell them myself, and I fear Hudson was the same. The prison was defunct, and had been since 2013, but not defunked. Banners from the 1980s riots hung on the walls, telling their own story, and the guide filled in the rest. It was a fascinating if grim tour, with the prison, dubbed 'Scotland's toughest jail', not changed much since it was built in the Victorian era. If misery has a smell that must have been evident too. Skelton took an tour of the 860-acre deer park. All the animals, some 600 of them, were brought to the park, some after road accidents. 'I've never been close to a deer,' said Helen. 'I don't know why but it makes me quite emotional.' She was sent to look for an antler to take home as a souvenir, a task she thought akin to being asked for a tin of tartan paint, but one was found, no bother. In Johnshaven in Aberdeenshire, home to The Lobster Shop, Hudson was trying lobster for the first time. 'Delicious,' he said, demolishing the stuffed roll in a handful of bites. Skelton had the last word. 'The most perfect landscape,' she said, looking out to sea. 'I can try to think of something profound to say but I don't think words do this justice.' If only more presenters showed such restraint. With the Sunday politics shows off on holiday the way was clear for Sunday Brunch (Channel 4) to clean up. A mix of celebrity chat, cooking, and anything else the producers could throw in the pot to fill three hours of live television - including a competition to guess the age of expired food - this was the old 'zoo' format revived. In short, too many guests talking over each other. When not gabbing they stuffed their faces with whatever came out of the kitchen from a procession of chefs. Not an appetising sight at the best of times, never mind 10am on a Sunday. Irvine Welsh was there to flog his new book, Men in Love, and accompanying album. All was well until he referred in less than flattering terms to the vocal styles of some singers today. It was enough that the presenter, Tim Lovejoy, felt he had to apologise. The joys of live television. Contrast this with Katie Razzall's Irvine Welsh: The Next Chapter (BBC2, Monday). This was an old-school, pre-recorded sit-down, largely consisting of Razzall lining up a subject and allowing Welsh to talk at length. It didn't always work. On Scottish independence, for instance, Razzall asked if he thought 'the steam had gone out of the fight'. 'The steam's gone out of every fight now,' said Welsh. 'People are very despondent about the mainstream political institutions and their ability to change and adapt. Whether it's supporters of Scottish independence or supporters of anything, whether it's any kind of radical or revolutionary change or any kind of political change, people are just waiting for the system to fall apart rather than push it.' What did he think about the current political landscape in Scotland, or the swell in support for Reform UK? Detailed follow-ups might have produced tighter, more interesting answers. The chat occasionally wandered, at one point ending up in Alan Partridge territory. After footage of Welsh in a boxing gym, Razzall asked if the sport was useful to his writing. 'Boxing keeps me thin,' he said. 'Does that make you a good writer? 'Yeah, being thin does make you a good writer, because you have to be comfortable in a chair. If you're sitting down and you're overweight, it must be quite uncomfortable.' Was he being serious? It was hard to tell. Irvine Welsh discusses his new novel, Men in Love (Image: BBC) Never mind, Razzall was on a roll. Should Trainspotting have won the Booker prize? 'Emphatically no, it would have been the kiss of death. Because I would just have been another writer, another writer who won the Booker prize. Because I became the anti-Booker prize writer, I was pushed into a different category, and it gave me a radical, anti-establishment cachet that I maybe didn't deserve even, but I'll take it anyway.' Nor will he be accepting a knighthood any time soon, or ever. 'I've no interest in that kind of thing. They've got nothing I want,' he said. I expect the Palace will be crushed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store