Kim Woodburn, the forthright television personality who turned household grime into prime-time entertainment on Channel 4’s How Clean Is Your House?, has died aged 83 following a short illness, her management confirmed on 17 June.
Born Patricia Mary McKenzie in Eastney, Hampshire, on 25 March 1942, she left an abusive home at 16 to work as a live-in cleaner, later adopting the stage name Kim after screen star Kim Novak. The hardships she described in her 2006 memoir Unbeaten shaped a public image that mixed stern admonition with open talk about resilience.
Woodburn’s big break came when Channel 4 paired her with Aggie MacKenzie for a 2003 pilot that drew more than four million viewers and quickly expanded to six series broadcast in dozens of territories. MacKenzie on Tuesday called her former colleague a “tormented soul” who channelled pain into showmanship yet “never lost compassion for the people behind the dirt”.
Woodburn embraced reality TV after the cleaning format ended in 2009, finishing third on Celebrity Big Brother in 2017, where confrontations with fellow contestants became one of the franchise’s most replayed moments and even spilled over to a fiery daytime-TV reunion a year later.
Away from cameras she spoke candidly about long-running eye problems, alopecia and an under-active thyroid, telling fans in a February video that she hoped to return once “this blasted health trouble” eased. Her manager’s statement praised an “incredibly kind, caring, charismatic and strong person,” adding that husband Peter Woodburn “is heartbroken at the loss of his soulmate” and asking for privacy while he grieves.
Tributes poured in from broadcasters and viewers who credited the self-styled “Queen of Clean” with making basic hygiene feel like a moral crusade, punctuated by her trademark scolding of “scrub, dear—don’t tickle”. Funeral arrangements have not been released, and the family said no further details of her final illness will be provided.