Partner David Halls
Queer Places:
103 Brighton Road, Parnell, Auckland 1052, New Zealand
60 Jermyn St, St. James's, London SW1Y 6LX, UK
Peter John Hudson (8 November 1930 – September 1992)[1] and David Halls were a television chef duo, whose cookery show, Hudson & Halls, ran on New Zealand television from 1976 to 1986. They gained a cult following when the pair moved to produce their show on the BBC in the United Kingdom in 1987. The duo were noted for bringing a camp humour, together with an element of slapstick, to the usually staid television cookery genre.
Peter John Hudson was born in Toorak, Melbourne, Australia, on 8 November 1930. He was adopted and did not know his parents. Hudson's adopted mother, Mary Ethel Hudson, was a trained midwife who ran an adoption agency and arranged abortions. At the time, abortions were illegal in New Zealand, and she was charged and tried for murder, along with the doctor she employed at her clinic to treat the clients who wanted a termination.[2] Peter's mother died when he was 10 years old, and her daughter, Biddy, took over the maternity business. Hudson referred to Biddy, 21 years his senior, as his mother in later years. At 17 years old, Hudson left school and got his first job at George's department store, in the soft furnishings department. He was then sent to England, before returning to Melbourne to work as a shipping agent.[3] In 1962, Hudson and Halls met at a party in Parnell, Auckland, New Zealand where Halls, by then a shoe designer, was living. Hudson, considering a move to England, had flown in from Melbourne to visit a friend. Hudson moved to Auckland, and they were soon living together, initially in Halls' flat in St Stephens Avenue, before they bought a small one bedroom cottage (with two single beds) with a swimming pool at 103 Brighton Road, Parnell.[5][6] The pair held parties at their home and became known for their hospitality and cooking.[3]
Hudson and Halls opened a women's shoe shop, Julius Garfinkle's, in 1971 in the Strand Arcade, Queen Street, Auckland. Later, in the same stretch of shops, they opened one of Auckland's first ice-cream parlours, Quagg's.[4] By 1975, the pair had sold their businesses and they auditioned for the cookery slot on the TVNZ afternoon magazine programme Speakeasy by cooking a beef wellington. The audition, and the beef wellington, were successful, and they were offered six 10 minute segments at $20 per programme.[3][7] In 1976, Hudson and Halls debuted on South Pacific Television (SPTV), in New Zealand, with a 30 minute cookery show, Hudson & Halls, featuring cooking and a celebrity guest interview. The programme, which was popular in its original afternoon slot, was soon extended to an hour and moved to prime-time evening viewing. The show was consistently ranked in the weekly top five programmes, and the duo were awarded a Feltex Best Entertainer of the Year Award in 1981.[7] Unlike other entertainers, Hudson and Halls did not use a script, and their volatile temperaments were part of the act. The publicity material introducing the programme explained that the pair were unmarried and shared a house but their relationship was never specified. When asked about their sexuality, the network said "We don't know if they are gay, but they certainly are merry".[3][8] The programme took a break between 1978 and 1980. During this period, the duo opened The Hudson & Halls Oyster and Fish Restaurant in Ponsonby, Auckland. The restaurant, known for its outside garden area, was only open at lunchtime and not in the evening.[3][7] As their popularity grew, they demanded more money from TVNZ. Hudson and Halls bought a 17 acre farm in Leigh, Auckland (where they filmed their 1984 series) and a 1962 Bentley, despite neither of them having a valid driving licence.[3][4] Hudson and Halls appeared on TV telethons, endorsed products, and were cover subjects for women's magazines. They hosted a morning radio show on Radio Pacific and Halls also briefly presented the television gameshow Blankety Blank.[3][4] The pair published cookbooks in 1977 (Hudson & Halls Cookbook), 1978 (Hudson & Halls Gourmet Cookbook), 1985 (Favourite Recipes from Hudson & Halls) and 1988 (Hudson & Halls: Beginnings, Middles And Ends). Their TVNZ television series, Hudson & Halls, ran until 1986 when, after more than 300 programmes, it was abruptly cancelled.[5] In 1987, they took Hudson & Halls to the BBC in England, while continuing to live in New Zealand. However, reviews of their first series were universally hostile, with one critic commenting "if the BBC wanted a couple of ageing chorus boys who can open a can of lychees they could have found them closer to home". The Daily Star called them "pathetically unfunny", Spike Milligan described them as a "failed Laurel and Hardy combo" and The Independent wrote, "They think they're such fun, so camp. You'll think they're naff on roller skates."[3][7] Despite this criticism, the first series of their BBC programme attracted three million viewers, rising to 10 million by the end of the second series. The show followed the same format; cooking and celebrity guest interviews, including personalities such as Thelma Barlow, Barbara Windsor, Pam St Clement, Bonnie Langford, Dora Bryan, Gorden Kaye and Christopher Biggins. Hudson and Halls had ambitions to use their BBC programme as a stepping stone to the USA. However, this did not materialise despite the series being sold to many countries in Europe. The BBC cancelled the programme after four series, with the last episode being broadcast in December 1990.[3][7][9] By now, Hudson's health was failing, and the duo were struggling to find work. However, they made occasional appearances in the cooking segment on the BBC1 afternoon magazine programme Bazaar between January 1991 and June 1992. Hudson and Halls were subject to a Gotcha, a hidden camera practical joke, on Noel Edmonds' Noel's House Party, under the pretence of filming a children's cookery programme with Mr Blobby. The segment was filmed in 1992 and broadcast after Hudson's death, on 6 February 1993.[10]
Hudson and Halls moved from New Zealand to the United Kingdom in 1990 and lived in a flat at 60 Jermyn Street, London.[3] After thirty years, their long-term professional and personal relationship ended when Hudson developed prostate cancer and died in September 1992 in London, aged 61, with Halls at his side. The death was announced on 20 September 1992. A devastated Halls changed his surname by deed poll to Hudson-Halls in January 1993, and continued to make some solo television appearances.[4][11] Halls, grief-stricken and in dire financial straits, committed suicide the following year, taking an overdose of Hudson's morphine pills.[2][4] Halls was found dead in the back bedroom of his London flat by two friends on 24 November 1993, with a picture of Hudson held tightly in his hand, and a note in his diary, which read "I don't want to grow old and alone, without Peter I don't want to go on – he was my life, and I have no regrets. I love him now as much as I always did and I want to be with him for all eternity."[4][7] He was 57. Halls, who had arranged and paid for his own funeral, had written the date of the service in his diary.[11]
Hudson and Halls were the subject of a 2001 documentary, Hudson & Halls – A Love Story,[14] as well as a 2017 play, Hudson and Halls Live![15] A book, Hudson & Halls: The Food of Love, written by Joanne Drayton, was published in 2018.[5]
My published books: