Her first TV appearance was in 1959.[6] She presented daytime cookery programmes for the BBC and, later, Channel 4,[4] through the 1960s and 1970s.[2] Her style tended to the homely and economical, "relaxed and friendly",[1] without fancy techniques or exotic ingredients. She also contributed to the Radio Times, and wrote several cookery books, including Zena Skinner's Book of Recipes (1968)[7] and Zena Skinner's Down to Earth Cookbook (1982).[8]
Skinner was a brand ambassador for Tupperware products.[2] In 1970 she appeared in a Sainsbury's film, "Quick Change", about the shopping and the change to decimal currency.[9] She appeared as a castaway on the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs, on 3 March 1969.[10] She founded a charity, Keech Hospice Care, in Luton and raised funds for it.[11][12]
Personal life
Skinner retired from television in 1989 and lived in Redbourn, Hertfordshire.[1] She died on 6 March 2018, aged 91 years,[13] a year after her brother Bruce,[14][15] at the hospice they both supported in Luton.[11][16]