The engaging host of “Wish You Were Here…?”
When Judith Chalmers was a child in the 1940s, her family holidays were spent in the UK. “One of my most vivid memories was setting off in my father’s Morris Minor and going along the high-hedged roads to Cornwall and Devon and north Wales,” she recalled. There were no motorways then. Even after she became a successful broadcaster, she went no further than France, said The Times. Yet in 1974, she was asked to present a new travel show, capitalising on the growing appetite for holidays in the sun. Over the next three decades, Chalmers, who has died aged 90, presented more than 500 episodes of “Wish You Were Here…?”, which took her all over the world.
Each 30-minute show usually consisted of three parts, said The Telegraph: one featuring a young female presenter, sent somewhere hot to justify her wearing a swimsuit; one with a male presenter, who’d become embroiled in a comic incident, “often involving a camel”; and the third, in which Chalmers tended to fly “somewhere expensive to sink piña coladas, be garlanded with orchids and top up her year-round tan”. A warm and engaging presence, she became a household name. With her bouffant hair and “tennis-club manner”, she also provided material for comedians. Victoria Wood used to say that she was so old, she could remember Chalmers before she turned brown. One critic claimed, “somewhat uncharitably”, that the secret of her longevity was her ability to keep a straight face as she read out the show’s script. On “WYWH…?”, markets were always “bustling”, developing world countries were “exotic”, and hotels were “oases of peace and tranquillity”. At the Great Wall of China, Chalmers declared to camera: “Here I am, by a rather special stretch of masonry.” But the show was not intended to appeal to sophisticates, said Alexander Larman in The Telegraph. It was escapism, designed to make “abroad” look appealing to people who were not accustomed to overseas travel. In all her years on the show, Chalmers “never lost her poise”, said The Guardian, and in that era, long before people could scan Tripadvisor and easily book their own trips, the “industry hung on her judgements”, which were “invariably considered and fair-minded”.
Born in 1935, Judith Chalmers was brought up in Cheadle, the daughter of an architect and a medical secretary. When she was 13, and at Withington Girls’ School, she auditioned for the northern edition of BBC radio’s “Children’s Hour”. She made her TV debut on a regional magazine show in 1956, then moved to London, where she worked as a BBC announcer before moving into reporting. She was soon hosting a range of programmes, including “Come Dancing” and Radio 4’s “Woman’s Hour” (which her sister Sandra edited; they were, it was said, “a pair of Chalmers”). Later, “Jude the Dude”, as she was affectionately known, hosted Miss World for ITV, and covered the 1981 royal wedding. Married for more than 60 years to the sports commentator Neil Durden-Smith, who survives her with their two children, she had latterly been living with Alzheimer’s.