Zoe Ball is left in tears as she kicks off remaining Radio 2 Breakfast Show after being flooded with help from celeb buddies

Zoe Ball was left in tears as she presented her final  BBC Radio 2 Breakfast Show on Friday morning after six years. 

The DJ, 54, began the programme in an upbeat mood, quoting adapted lines from Les Miserables’ One Day More by telling listeners: ‘Another day, another destiny, one final show from me, ZB… only joking I’m not going to sing, let’s have some Daft Punk.’

She then played the French electronic duo’s hit One More Time and read out a message from a man who said he was driving home for Christmas early so he could listen to her last show.

Admitting she’d been left in tears, she said after the show: ‘Thank you Oti Mabuse for your gorgeous message this morning, that made me cry too.’

After reading out some ‘five-word weekends’ where listeners sum up their weekends in short form, Ball said one of her plans was: ‘Having a good old blub.’

She played Peggy Gou’s (It Goes Like) Nanana and then announced that Father Christmas would be appearing on the show after 8am ‘talking to the kids’.

Zoe Ball kicked off her final BBC Radio 2 breakfast show with Daft Punk’s One More Time after teasing that she might sing a song from a musical instead

Ball played a farewell message from Australian singer Kylie Minogue: ‘Hi Zoe, it’s Kylie. Thank you for an incredible six years. The nation loves you and I love you, and every time I’ve been in to see you, it’s been so much fun.

‘You’ve been part of some of the biggest and best memories I’ve had in the last six years. In 2019 you spoke to me before my legends slot at Glastonbury, you were there for the disco era in 2020 and you were the first person anywhere in the world to play Padam Padam and kick start the ‘Padamic’.

‘We’ve danced around the studio, you, me and your fabulous prod squad, shout out to them, it has all happened with you Zoe.

‘You’re the best, we’re all going to miss you but ‘bye bye morning alarm, you were great for six years but no more’.

‘Zoe I wish you all the love, success and joy and everything you want moving on, we love you’.

Ball, the daughter of children’s TV presenter Johnny Ball, began presenting The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show almost six years ago in January 2019, taking over from radio presenter Chris Evans and becoming the first woman to present the show.

She announced her decision to leave in November, saying it was time for her to ‘step away from the very early mornings and focus on family’.

At the time, she also said she would not be ‘disappearing entirely’ and added: ‘I’ll still be a part of the Radio 2 family, with more news in the new year.’

Ball will return to the airwaves to present two episodes of Zoe Ball’s Christmas Crooners, on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.

From January, Scott Mills will take over the breakfast show and his previous weekday slot of 2pm to 4pm will be filled by Trevor Nelson.

Ball took a break from hosting her breakfast show over the summer and returned in September.

In November, after she revealed she would be leaving, she announced she had a temporomandibular joint disorder, which affects the movement of the jaw, according to the NHS.

Ball was the BBC’s highest-paid on-air female presenter in 2023/24 with a salary between £950,000 and £954,999, ranking her second on the list of top-earning talent behind Gary Lineker, according to the corporation’s annual report published in July.

From January, Scott Mills will take over the breakfast show (PA)