
Credit: Loose Women
Some people, like Beverley Callard, slow down when things get tough. The Coronation Street icon revealed her breast cancer diagnosis to the audience on Ireland’s RTE Late Late Show in February 2026. The fact that she received that diagnosis just twenty minutes before entering a movie set to film her first scenes for the Irish soap opera Fair City is something she mentioned almost as a footnote, and it has stuck with people ever since. Twenty minutes. Then the camera, lights, and action. It’s the kind of information that interrupts you in the middle of a sentence.
For more than 40 years, Callard, 69, has been a mainstay on British television. Before leaving the soap opera in 2020, she spent more than thirty years as Liz McDonald, a kind and straightforward barmaid on Coronation Street. Her exit and her appearance on I’m A Celebrity that same year, which was filmed in a Welsh castle instead of the Australian jungle due to Covid restrictions, gave her a second surge of popularity. She was lighthearted, playful, and completely unimpressed with the theatrical aspect of it all. She quickly gained popularity among viewers. It is easy to understand why.
Beverley Callard — Key Information
| Full name | Beverley Anne Callard |
| Born | 2 June 1956, Morley, Leeds, England |
| Age | 69 |
| Occupation | Actress, fitness instructor |
| Known for | Liz McDonald in Coronation Street (1989–2020), I’m A Celebrity 2020 |
| Marriages | Paul Atkinson (1974–1977), David Sowden (1980–1988), Steve Callard (1989–2001), Jon McEwan (2010–present) |
| Children | Rebecca Callard (with Paul Atkinson), Joshua Callard (with Steve Callard) |
| Health disclosures | Breast cancer diagnosis (February 2026), surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy |
| Recent TV | I’m A Celebrity… South Africa All Stars (filmed Sept 2025, airing April 2026) |
| Upcoming work | Irish soap Fair City (announced early 2026) |
| Reference | The Mirror — Beverley Callard profile, April 2026 |
The cancer diagnosis came at a time when things were already hectic. She was just weeks away from viewers witnessing her compete on I’m A Celebrity, and she had just announced the Fair City job, a new chapter in her career. The All Stars spin-off, South Africa All Stars, was shot in September of 2025. Fans who watched her face horrific trials on screen in April 2026 struggled to reconcile the timeline because they knew she had shared a cancer update just days before the episodes aired.
One online commenter said they believed she was sick and receiving treatment, and they asked when the show had been filmed. It makes sense to wonder. The woman hurling herself at ITV’s most extreme challenges on screen was doing so before any of this had happened off-screen because the show was pre-recorded months before the diagnosis became public.
Since that February revelation, the Bev Callard illness story has advanced swiftly. She had surgery following the initial diagnosis of early-stage breast cancer. When residual cancer cells were discovered after the procedure, the NHS started her on radiation therapy for six weeks, followed by multiple chemotherapy cycles. That is a substantial course of treatment that is still in progress. In updates to her fans, she has been candid about it, which seems in line with her personality—direct, pragmatic, and not inclined to soften things needlessly. There’s a feeling that Callard would find it more draining to be overly delicate about this topic than to simply state the facts.
If you look at it honestly, the fact that this is not the first time she has dealt with significant disruption gives her story a unique texture. A personal life marked by real turbulence has been charted by four marriages, the longest lasting more than ten years and resulting in a son. Before meeting her current husband, Jon McEwan, in Spain while retraining as a fitness instructor, she once claimed to have given up on all men.
This career change demonstrates her willingness to start over. She calls McEwan, whom she married in 2010 at the West Yorkshire Hazlewood Castle Hotel, “her rock.” When he passed out in a grocery store a few years ago, that phrase took on a more acute meaning, and she talked about feeling numb with fear at the prospect of losing him. She declared, “I see him as indestructible,” at the time. From someone who exudes such a great deal of toughness, the vulnerability in that statement is startling.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that Callard takes the same basic approach to dealing with health scares, both her own and her husband’s: she admits them, keeps going, and discusses them openly when the moment is appropriate. Even though it doesn’t appear dramatic from the outside, that is its own form of resilience. It might be related to years of portraying a character as grounded as Liz McDonald. Or maybe it was just who she was all along, and the character represented something genuine.
Viewers will undoubtedly view the I’m A Celebrity All Stars series, which currently stars Mo Farah, Gemma Collins, Harry Redknapp, and others, through the prism of what they now know about her health. That cannot be avoided. However, watching her compete—which was captured on camera months before any of this was made public—takes on a different significance when one is aware of what happened next. Unaware of what February would bring, she was out there doing the trials. It’s unclear how she’s currently handling her treatment or what her medical prognosis is for the upcoming months. She doesn’t seem to be the type of person who quietly goes away when things are difficult. Quiet has never been Beverley Callard’s strong suit.

