đŹÂ THE MOMENT THAT BROKE HIM
After more than two decades of silence, Les Dennis has finally opened up about the heartbreak that changed his life forever â and the brutal words from Amanda Holden that left him shattered.
âNo woman cheats without a reason,â Amanda once told him. âI want children⊠but not with you. I donât want them to look like you.â
Les admits he ânearly faintedâ when she said it â a moment that marked the emotional collapse of their marriage and one of the most talked-about scandals in British showbiz history.
âIt was like the air left the room,â Les confessed. âYou think youâre prepared for heartbreak â but nothing prepares you for hearing something like that from someone you love.â
â€ïžâđ„ A LOVE STORY THAT STARTED LIKE A FAIRYTALE
In the beginning, it was pure magic. Les Dennis, the much-loved Family Fortunes host and comedian, met Amanda Holden â a rising TV actress 17 years his junior â in the early 1990s during a stage production of The Sound of Music. Their chemistry was undeniable.
They married in 1995, when Les was 40 and Amanda was just 23. The age gap didnât seem to matter â Britainâs tabloids dubbed them âthe golden couple of comedy and glamour.â
Les recalls, âShe was beautiful, full of energy, and I felt lucky. People told me it wouldnât last, but I didnât listen. I thought love could beat the odds.â
But fame, age, and pressure began to chip away at their fairy tale. While Amandaâs career soared, Les was struggling privately â emotionally and professionally.
By 2000, the cracks were no longer invisible.
đ„ THE AFFAIR THAT SHOOK BRITAIN
In 2000, the Mirror broke the story that Amanda had been having an affair with actor Neil Morrissey, star of Men Behaving Badly and later Line of Duty. The revelation caused a national frenzy.
Amanda, then 29, later admitted the affair was âa mistakeâ but not one without cause.
âWomen donât seek sex â we seek love and affirmation,â she said years later. âNo woman has an affair for no reason.â
The betrayal hit Les like a freight train. Still, in an act of grace and confusion, he tried to forgive her. The couple briefly reconciled and even appeared together on Richard & Judy, insisting they were âworking through it.â
But privately, the wounds were too deep to heal.
đ âMAYBE I SHOULD HAVE KNOWN THENâŠâ
Looking back, Les now says there were signs their relationship was doomed long before the headlines.
He recounted one story that has become almost symbolic of their marriage:
âIt was Grand National Day,â Les said. âA plumber was fixing the washing machine at our house in Highgate. Amanda came running in, saying, âWe need to put a bet on!â
I gave her ten quid. She said, âThatâs not enough!â
So I said, âTwenty?â And the plumber went, âKids, eh?ââ
Les chuckled, âMaybe I should have known then that something wasnât right. She wasnât a kid â she was my wife. But that moment stuck with me.â
When the affair finally came to light, he says, it felt like the world turned against him.
âEveryone was waiting for us to fail,â Les admitted. âBut nobody told me.â
đ°Â THE DIANA ROSS RUMOUR THAT MADE THEM BOTH LAUGH
As if the scandal wasnât dramatic enough, tabloids added fuel to the fire with one of the strangest rumours of the decade â that Les Dennis had found comfort in the arms of Diana Ross.
The story, which spread across British newspapers, claimed the heartbroken host had âsought solaceâ from the legendary soul singer after Amandaâs affair.
Amanda recently revealed on the Tea at Four podcast that the rumour came from a hilarious misunderstanding.
âMy friend Jane Wall â a mixed-race actress â was staying at my house during the divorce,â Amanda explained. âWhen she left, photographers chased her down the street.
The next day, the papers said Les was being comforted by Diana Ross! It was so ridiculous â but to this day, it still makes me laugh.â
Les later confirmed it was completely false.
âIt was one of the most absurd things Iâve ever read,â he said. âJane was a friend â not Diana Ross! But I guess thatâs what happens when the press smells drama.â
đ AMANDAâS âHORRIBLY BRUTALâ CONFESSION
Years later, Amanda Holden herself acknowledged that she was the one who wanted out.
âI desperately wanted children, but I didnât want them with Les,â she told The Sun. âThatâs a horribly brutal thing to say â but when you feel that, you know itâs time to move on.â
She added that the fallout from the affair was âthe hardest thing Iâve ever faced.â
âI found the fall from grace incredibly difficult. Overnight, I went from being loved to being hated. I was the villain â and I deserved some of it.â
Amanda has since rebuilt her image, becoming a national TV favourite and a household name as a judge on Britainâs Got Talent. But she admits she still carries the lessons â and regrets â from that time.
âThere are no hard feelings with Les,â she said. âI wish him happiness. We both moved on. I just made a mistake.â
đżÂ MOVING ON, WITH GRACE
After separating in 2002 and divorcing in 2003, both stars eventually found peace â and love again.
Les married Claire Nicholson in 2009, and the couple have two children, Eleanor and Thomas. Amanda married Chris Hughes, a record producer, in 2008; they have two daughters, Lexi and Hollie.
In a recent interview, Les reflected on how time had softened the pain.
âAmanda said some lovely things about me recently,â he told The Times. âMaybe time helps you see things differently. Weâre not in touch, but Iâm happy sheâs happy.â
He even admitted he can now watch her on TV without bitterness.
âItâs like watching a different person,â he said. âAll the hurt that once existed⊠itâs gone. The wounds healed.â
đŻïžÂ TWO LIVES, ONE STORY
Though their marriage ended in heartbreak, both Les and Amanda have found their own happy endings â and a surprising ability to look back with humor and compassion.
From a plumberâs innocent comment that foreshadowed their troubles, to the bizarre Diana Ross headline that became a running joke, their story has all the elements of a British love tragedy â passion, fame, pain, and redemption.
And yet, through it all, Les Dennis remains the picture of grace.
âYou can forgive,â he said softly. âYou can move on. But some words⊠you never forget.â