The longest-serving member of BBC Breakfast’s presenting team, Carol Kirkwood has helped the nation decide whether it’s “cardigan weather” for 25 years, presenting alongside the likes of Louise Minchin, Naga Munchetty and the much-missed Bill Turnbull.
Part of the Wimbledon fabric and a 2015 Strictly alumnus, Carol launched her novel-writing career in 2020, and recently saw the publication of her third book, Secrets Of The Villa Amore. It follows an (initially) stop-start career that encompassed secretarial work for the BBC, recruitment and management consultancy before Carol trained with the Met Office and rejoined the BBC in 1998.
“Life is good,” says Carol, who announced her engagement to partner Steve Randall on screen last year. “As you get older, you really do appreciate it more – from what you have, to what you can do and what you can see around you. When I was younger, I used to love shopping but now I’m not interested – I'd far rather go for a walk and appreciate nature and the simpler things.”
We asked Carol about some of the exceptional things in her life, and here’s what she told us:
There’s no pressure, there’s no rush and we just love being together. That doesn’t sound very exceptional – but that’s what it is. It’s liberating to have no pressure – we don’t have to think about having children or getting married. We can just sit back and enjoy it.
The date for our wedding is still a work in progress. We both have such busy work schedules that it’s not likely to be this year. But we’re not going to stay engaged forever – we're definitely going to get married.
I don’t get to watch the tennis but I’ve made good friends there over the years with women like Sue Barker and Judy Murray. I feel jealous of everyone with their strawberries and Pimm’s while I’m working, but it’s a real privilege. I get to go to lots of special places with work – from Buckingham Palace to Stonehenge – and I never take it for granted.
All my friends talk so much – I'm the listener of the group. I try not to butt in halfway through or assume that I know what they’re going to say.
I appreciate the simple things now – like going for a walk in the four seasons and appreciating the beauty that each season has to give. There’s an awareness that comes with age, and you worry less about what people think.
“Everyone’s entitled to their opinion, so if someone doesn’t agree with you or you don’t agree with them, you realise that it really doesn’t matter. Especially with the advent of social media, where you can get some really nasty personal comments – as you get older, you just think: ‘That’s your opinion and I don’t agree with it, but you’re entitled to it.’”
It’s liberating to have no pressure – we don’t have to think about having children or getting married.
My life is full of deadlines. It’s a collapsing timeframe, from the minute I get up until virtually the minute I go to bed. I’ve always got deadlines, be it getting into work on time, my broadcasts on television, the lengths of my broadcasts, deadlines for writing my book... And I will never miss a deadline either – even if I have to stay up all night. I’m very disciplined in that respect. So, to think I could wake up with a blank day ahead where I can do whatever I want? That’s special.
But nothing fancy-pants – it's Cadbury Dairy Milk for me, I love it. I think it’s because we rarely had chocolate when we were growing up – it was always an orange or an apple from the fruit bowl. The easiest thing for me is not to buy it so it isn’t in the house.
And it’s true that my default position is happy. I’m no saint, but I do see the positives rather than the negatives. That’s always been in my nature. I think it’s because I had a happy childhood. I come from a big family [in Inverness-shire] – I've got seven brothers and sisters – and we were just a happy gang with our parents, and our aunties and uncles.
If they’re chirping away, you know it’s sunny outside and it’s going to be a good day. I wake up every morning at 2.45am. On Fridays, when I don’t work, I’ll maybe sleep until 3.30am, then on a Saturday until 5am and Sunday until 6am – then it’s back to the beginning, but I’m used to it! At the weekends, I’ll read and doze, but I rarely sleep past 6am.”
Perfect for browsing at home or on the go, the Saga Magazine app is packed with exclusive digital only content including interactive puzzles and games. You can even listen to some articles with our new audio feature.
The Bafta-winning actor had been so successful at losing weight, he had to fatten up with a strap-on false belly for his latest role.
The presenter on inspiring the next generation and how daughter Zoe is bouncing back after leaving Radio 2.
The Scottish actor on how he’s still asked to repeat Logan Roy’s most famous catchphrase.
The presenter reveals his surprise contestant and how Richard Osman ‘bullied’ him into writing his debut novel.
The TV adaptation of Rivals has has been judged a rip-roaring success. We caught up with the book's author.
The BBC Radio 4 Today presenter reveals the responsibility and privilege that goes with her job.
The presenter on being sacked by the BBC and why her views are 'career suicide'.
The best-selling author says Pilates has changed her relationship with her body.
Stop smoking, go for a walk and do puzzles, says the veteran newsreader.