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Dave Myers, right, with Si King in The Hairy Bikers Go West
Dave Myers, right, with Si King in The Hairy Bikers Go West. Photograph: BBC/South Shore Productions/PA
Dave Myers, right, with Si King in The Hairy Bikers Go West. Photograph: BBC/South Shore Productions/PA

Hairy Bikers chef Dave Myers dies at 66

This article is more than 2 months old

TV star announced in May 2022 that he was receiving treatment for cancer

The TV chef Dave Myers, best known as one half of the Hairy Bikers, has died from cancer at the age of 66, his co-star, Si King, has announced.

Myers found fame alongside King, his friend of 30 years, as part of the motorcycle-riding cooking duo. He reached new fans in 2013 when he took part in Strictly Come Dancing, partnered with Karen Hauer and reaching week seven of the BBC competition.

The statement from King said: “I’m afraid I bear some sad news. Most of you will know Dave has been fighting cancer for the past couple of years. Last night, on 28 February 2024, with Lili, Dave’s wife, his family, close friend David and myself by his side, he passed away peacefully at home.

Dave Myers: the TV chef who rose to fame as one half of the Hairy Bikers – video obituary

“All who knew Dave are devastated at his passing. His beloved wife brought him such happiness as did her children, Iza and Sergiu, who Dave loved like his own.

“Personally, I am not sure I can put into words how I feel at the moment. My best friend is on a journey that for now I can’t follow. I will miss him every day and the bond and friendship we shared over half a lifetime. I wish you god’s speed brother; you are and will remain a beacon in this world. See you on the other side. Love ya.”

Myers, born in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, announced in May 2022 that he was receiving treatment for cancer. He did not specify what type he had been diagnosed with, telling the Guardian that this was “because everybody then goes Googling, everybody becomes an amateur doctor … And I don’t want to be judged.”

Dave Myers and Karen Hauer in rehearsals for Strictly Come Dancing in 2013. Photograph: Guy Levy/BBC/PA

The presenter’s latest BBC Two series, The Hairy Bikers Go West, started airing this month. The show, in which they travel down the west coast of Britain from Scotland to Devon, is the first since Myers’ cancer diagnosis and has been described as “magical”.

Alongside a festive special, The Hairy Bikers: Coming Home for Christmas, it was seen as marking a more moving, touching direction to Myers and King’s shows, characterised by a growing openness and increasingly poignant meditations on the importance of celebrating life’s joys.

During the first episode, Myers said it was “a dream come true” to be back on his motorbike because he “wasn’t sure I’d ever get back in the saddle again”.

“There was a time I couldn’t balance, I couldn’t walk, I didn’t think I’d be getting on a bike,” he said.

The Guardian’s Grace Dent paid tribute to the presenter, saying: “He came to my house to do Comfort Eating and it was just one of the highlights of my life. He was just such a lovely man, and a kind man. He was just a really normal person with no pretention and the industry – the food world, the TV world were just so devastated to hear that he was ill. It just feels like a really dark day for the food world.”

Other tributes included Saturday Kitchen host Matt Tebbutt, who posted on Instagram that Myers was: “One of the good guys, seriously funny, genuinely nice and always a joy to have him and Si on the show.” BBC Morning Live presenter Gethin Jones commented on air that: “We’ve met the guy so many times. It’s so sad – he was so lovely and smiley.” His co-host Kym Marsh added: “He was such a gorgeous human being.”

Myers started his working life as a makeup artist and met King in 1995 while working on a TV drama called The Gambling Man. Their first TV appearance together was in The Hairy Bikers’ Cookbook in 2004, which was part cooking show and part travel programme. In the first episode the duo rode the length of Portugal. They created numerous follow-up series and have published more than 25 cookery books – including their weight-loss guide Hairy Dieters: How To Love Food and Lose Weight, and accompanying lifestyle plan the Hairy Bikers Diet Club.

King thanked the fans who had shared messages of support in recent times and asked that Myers’ family and close friends be given time to process the loss.

“I know Dave and his family would want me to thank all of you who sent messages of support in recent times. It meant the world to him, his family and all the Hairy Bikers team. I am sending you all much love and gratitude for those simple acts of kindness, generosity and spirit. We are eternally grateful for them,” he wrote.

“May I ask you all for one further kindness and allow Lili, his wife, his family, close friends and I some time and some peace to process our huge loss. I am sure I will see you all soon.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘He would have loved it’: Hairy Bikers star thanks riders for Dave Myers tribute

  • Dave Myers obituary

  • ‘Genuinely groundbreaking’: how the Hairy Bikers’ Dave Myers redefined masculinity on British TV

  • Dave Myers: the TV chef who rose to fame as one half of the Hairy Bikers – video obituary

  • The Hairy Bikers Go West review – an absolutely magical return to the open road

  • The Hairy Bikers: Coming Home for Christmas review – more moving than any other festive cookery show

  • TV tonight: the Hairy Bikers are finally on the road again

  • ‘We’ve brought each other a lot of happiness’: the Hairy Bikers on love, food, stardom and chemo

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