Charlotte Hawkins has opened up concerning the time she burst into tears while engaged on the favored ITV morning present Good Morning Britain. The morning broadcaster admitted in a joint interview with Susanna Reid and Kate Garraway with Girl & Residence that she as soon as cried at work after being voted out of Strictly Come Dancing. Again in 2017, the 50-year-old presenter was the third celeb to be eradicated from the star-studded collection alongside her skilled dance associate, Brendan Cole.
Sadly, the mum-of-one was unable to cover her disappointment when she returned to work and lined the collection. Kate informed the outlet: “I bear in mind coming into work and asking how Charlotte was, and she or he mentioned high quality.
“Then I went to make some tea, got here again, and she or he simply burst into tears. We completely knew what she was going by.” Charlotte added: “It’s all coming again now… It was extremely exhausting once I received voted out.”
Charlotte’s colleagues had been all too acquainted with the frustration after Kate appeared within the fifth collection of the BBC present alongside Anton du Beke and completed in seventh place.
Susanna, in the meantime, had higher success. The mum-of-two reached the ultimate together with her associate Kevin Clifton in 2013, dropping out on the glitterball to Abby Clancy and Aljaz Skorjanec.
It comes after Charlotte opened up concerning the passing of her late dad, Frank, who handed away in 2015 on the age of 78 after a three-year battle with motor neurone illness.
Following his loss of life, Charlotte grew to become a patron of the MND Affiliation and has vowed to maintain combating for victims till scientists uncover a treatment. She informed the press on the time: “When individuals get that analysis, it’s a loss of life sentence.
“It’s horrific that at the present time, there aren’t remedies that may assist individuals. I converse to the consultants, and they’re making progress. It is going to hopefully simply take a ultimate push to convey every little thing collectively, to discover a treatment, which can give individuals who have MND one thing which they don’t presently have – hope.”
Charlotte needs to proceed the legacy of rugby participant Doddie Weir, who died in 2022, and Rob Burrow, who died in June. She added: “They actually helped with individuals’s understanding.
“I used to be at Rob’s memorial and the speaker mentioned, ‘It’s over to you now, to select up that baton, to ensure that his work is just not forgotten’.” Rob helped increase hundreds of thousands to construct his eponymous centre for MND, which is ready to open in Leeds subsequent summer season.



