Thanks to Neil Simpson for his help with writing the book. Thanks also to Lesley Duff and Charlie Cox at Diamond Management.
F ive men and five women face the cameras at the lavish Versace Hotel on Australias Gold Coast. After just one day of luxury, they are divided into two groups, put in helicopters and boats, then led off into the jungle. Its November 2007, time for the latest series of Im A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! and these ten faces will soon be the most talked-about people in Britain.
I wasnt one of them.
I didnt even know who any of them were.
When Malcolm McLaren got cold feet and Janice Dickinson and Lynne Franks had their first fabulous row I was locked away in a sky-high suite in another, slightly less glitzy Australian hotel. I was in seclusion. No television. No internet. No newspapers and no phone calls home.
A charming assistant or was she my jailer? seemed to be outside my room at all times. She even vetted the room-service staff, so I didnt get any clues about events in the jungle. I was going to be the surprise late arrival in that years Im A Celebrity. And I was absolutely terrified. In little over a years time I would be 60. Why on earth had I agreed to spend up to three weeks sleeping in a hammock, showering in a stream and eating food from a bonfire? This was not the Biggins way.
Shame about that no-telephone rule. Good job Id smuggled in a spare mobile. So for a few glorious moments I thought I might get some vital information from the UK. I rang my partner, Neil. Has it started? Is it on? Who are the celebrities? I asked, desperate for an idea of what might lie ahead of me.
Theres a real monster of an American woman, Neil told me. Who could that be?
And then theres the girl from
There was a loud, angry knock on my door. My assistant had heard my whispered conversation. The mobile was confiscated, my knuckles were rapped and my last link to the outside world was removed. The girl from where? I asked myself. And it would be a while before I found out the monsters name.
I gazed out over the golf course from my hotel suite for two long days and nights. By now I imagined that the other celebrities would all have bonded and be living happily in their camp. I wasnt sure they would want a late arrival. Would I be welcome? Would I know who anyone was?
The more I thought about the show the more I worried. And the more I was told about the jungle the worse it got. Dr Bob and his team certainly didnt sugar-coat the pill when they came round to tell me about the hazards I might face. It was all poison this, bite that, danger the other. Looking back, I think I can see why Malcolm headed home. Its suddenly made very clear that this is no sanitised television studio. Serious things can happen.
Are you ready? my minder asks.
Im smiling. As Ill ever be.
And off we go for my one, very brief spell at the Versace. I do some photos, give some final interviews, then its back into a blacked-out van for an hour and a halfs drive to a grimy little motel in the middle of nowhere. As instructed, Ive got my regulation three pairs of underwear and two pairs of swimming trunks, and Im given the pack of other clothes that Ill have to wear from now on.
Its very, very early in the morning, though I dont know the exact time. My watch has been taken from me, and the crew who lead me into the jungle have theirs covered with masking tape. The mind games have begun. No words are spoken. I follow when the crew indicate that I should. I stop when they hold up their hands. All I know is that its prime time back in Britain and that Im doing a live trial. The crew leave me behind a tree and after a few moments I hear familiar voices. Ant and Dec.
Then I hear something else.
The dulcet tones of one Ms Janice Dickinson.
When Im told to, I leave the safety of my tree and walk in front of the cameras.
This is it. But what have I done? In the next few moments everything is hysterical and fabulous and terrifying in equal measure. I realise, in one moment of absolute clarity, that I have given up all control of my life for the duration of the show.
I was on the Im A Celebrity rollercoaster, the public could chuck me off at any moment and there was nothing I could do except be myself.
I hugged Janice, shook hands with Ant and Dec and took a very deep breath.
Would I be able to cope? What would the public think? Was I making the biggest mistake of my life?
I t is fair to say that my earliest reviews werent good. He wont make old bones, pronounced my grandmother, looking down on the little lad in his mothers arms. There was none of the traditional Oh, what a beautiful baby messing around for good old Grannie Biggins. Ive always been a straight talker. No prizes for guessing who I get it from.
And Grannie B wasnt the only critic to think I was in for a very short run.
Hes so tiny hell be blown away in the wind when you take him home, the maternity nurses told my mother, perhaps a little too cheerfully for her liking. Then came the worst review of all. If you dont get your son out of Oldham, hell die, said the doctor. Its hard to ignore a closure notice like that.
Like all bad reviews, it seemed a little unfair. Despite the nurses comments, I was actually a pretty healthy weight a decent 9lb, thank you very much. The problem was my constitution. I wasnt strong. I had bronchitis, gastric problems and the staff seemed to think I was at risk of pneumonia.
Its all the smoke in the air, the doctor explained after another examination. His lungs are too weak to cope with it and he wont ever be able to breathe around here. Isnt there somewhere else you could go, at least for a while?
That was all the encouragement my mother needed. She had been up north for less than a year. On balance she felt it had been a year too long. We made the move in January 1949, when I was just three weeks old. I was wrapped up in a big, soft nest of cotton wool and set down on the passenger seat of a huge Pickfords lorry.
Were going south, said my mother with a very broad smile. South was her idea of civilisation. Oldham, its fair to say, was not. She had been happy enough to give it a go. But the initial signs hadnt been good. The first time my father came home from work on his motorbike, his face had been so covered in black soot from all the cotton mills, the coal mines and the factories that she hadnt recognised him. She likes to call herself a Hampshire hog. The Lowry lifestyle simply didnt suit her.
She tells me she sang all the way down the old A6 when we left town that cold January day. All except for the bit of the journey where we knocked over a water hydrant and left a brand-new fountain in our wake. As an actor Ive always known the value of making a big entrance. At three weeks old it was nice to have made such a spectacular exit.
Fortunately, my dad was more than happy to give up his job and start a new life down south. He was Oldham born and bred but hed seen the world in the Royal Air Force, where hed met my mum before being posted out in Africa. So he was prepared to see a bit more of England now he had a sickly little lad to consider as well.
Our removal van dropped us off in the gloriously beautiful town of Salisbury. I always joked that I didnt need to be in a Merchant Ivory film (though it might have been nice to be asked). Instead I got to grow up in one. The buildings are picture-postcard perfect. We had the river, the cathedral, the parks, the half-timbered houses, you name it. Trouble was, beautiful surroundings dont pay the bills a lesson I would need to learn and relearn many times in the years ahead. Nor did the fresh southern air solve all my medical issues overnight.