Dale Winton dead at 62: Gay Supermarket Sweep host dies in his home

Gay British TV presenter Dale Winton has died aged 62.

The popular television host was best known for long-running daytime game showĀ Supermarket Sweep.

Winton’sĀ agent Jan Kennedy confirmed his death to the BBC on Wednesday.

“It is with great sadness that we can confirm the passing of Dale Winton who died at home earlier today,” said Kennedy.

“While we know many will share this terrible loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy at this time of grief.”

Winton was a staple on television sets in the 1990s with Supermarket SweepĀ from 1993 to 2001, as well as a reboot in 2007.

He recently appeared on Dale Wintonā€™s Florida Fly Drive on Channel 5 earlier this year.

Davina McCall paid tribute to Winton, writing on Twitter that he was “a lovely, warm, kind, sensitive, generous soul with a touch of naughty.”

(Twitter)

Good Morning Britain host Piers Morgan hailed Winton as aĀ “superb TV presenter.”

(Twitter)


Jack Whitehall wrote on Twitter: “Desperately sad news about Dale Winton. A really funny and kind person gone too soon, RIP.”

Take Me Out host Paddy McGuinness declared his love forĀ Supermarket Sweep, the show Winton hosted on ITV.

“Sad news. Back in the day Supermarket Sweep was the programme to watch. Dale Winton was the perfect host, he made it all look effortless. RIP,” wrote McGuinness.

Les Dennis, the former host of game showĀ Family Fortunes, was “shocked” to hear about Winton’s death.

“So sad and shocked to hear that Dale Winton has died. He was a lovely,warm man who posed charm. RIP,” wrote Dennis.

Winton emotionally opened up about never having officially come out as gay to his mother in his 2002 autobiography.

He said she had hinted that she might have known about his sexual orientation.

ā€œShe heard me on the phone to my then boyfriend, who was very obviously gay, very camp. She said to me: ā€˜I never want you to feel thereā€™s something you canā€™t tell me, and I will never judge or discriminate,’ā€ he wrote.

He added: ā€œThat was the point I should have gone: ā€˜Mum, Iā€™ll tell you: Iā€™m gay.’ā€

In another interview in 2008, Winton said he never officially came out because nobody ever asked about his sexual orientation.

ā€œThe truth ā€“ itā€™s absolutely the truth ā€“ is that no one ever asked me. I did countless interviews over the years and I was always waiting for the question. It never came. It became a game, the ambiguity of it all.

ā€œAnd Iā€™m not a banner-waving gay guy, because I actually donā€™t believe itā€™s important. People never say ā€˜vehement heterosexual Michael Parkinson,ā€™ but it will say ā€˜camp gay entertainer Graham Nortonā€™ or ā€˜Dale Wintonā€™ since Iā€™ve officially come out.ā€

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Winton more recently opened up about battles with depression, triggered by events like breakups and the death of his mother, Sheree Winton.

He told Loose Women: ā€œThere are worse things in the world, but I had the health issues and the depression. My mum died.

“I did not want to put one foot in front of the other outside the house. I would not leave the house. Five years I went through it. I wanted to withdrawā€¦If youā€™ve never had it, youā€™ll never understand it.ā€