The 53-year-old wouldnt be the first UK star to rehabilitate her reputation on American screens. In recent years, the likes of Piers Morgan and Gordon Ramsay have weathered British headlines with success on the far side of the pond. The Tastes ratings flopped towards the end of its first run, but if the shows viewer figures can rise again like a perfectly judged souffl, Nigellas future would be secured. If they remain flaccid, however jeopardising the chances of a third series then the prospects for the domestic goddess could look a lot less appetising.
The nations sweet-toothed sweetheart saw her reputation sour with the recent fraud trial of sisters Francesca and Elisabetta Grillo, formerly her close aides, whom Saatchi accused of unlawfully spending his money on frivolous luxury items including flights and designer clothing. The Grillos were acquitted, but only after a painful public trial during which Lawson was forced to admit to having used cocaine, and to smoking cannabis in front of her children.
The defendants claimed their spending had been the price for their silence about Lawsons alleged drug-taking. Some observers even suggested that an embittered Saatchi had engineered the case as a forum in which to attack his former wife. Lawson deplored the drug claims as a ridiculous sideshow. Following the trial, friends insisted it was business as usual in the lead-up to her transatlantic TV offering.
But on Thursday, in her first interview since the verdict, Lawson admitted that having distortions about her private life made public had been mortifying. During her appearance on ABCs Good Morning America to publicise The Taste, Lawson said she had been maliciously vilified without the right to respond. Although illicit drugs went unmentioned in the exchange, the TV cook did admit to having eaten a lot of chocolate since the trial.
Americas distaste for the UKs tabloid culture may make its audiences sympathetic to British celebrities who have been humiliated at home. Yet in spite of her best efforts, Lawsons US fame is slight in comparison with other TV food imports such as Ramsay or Jamie Oliver. She was first on US screens in 2002, when Nigella Bites was first broadcast on the E! and Style channels, with the book tie-in becoming a Christmas bestseller. She penned a regular column for the New York Times, and the then First Lady Laura Bush even used one of her soup recipes at a presidential Christmas dinner. But the critics were not always kind about Lawsons seductive cooking style, and it has taken The Taste to truly put her on the US TV menu.
Chris Coelen, the chief executive of Kinetic Productions, which created The Taste, gushed before the first series that Lawsons dream has always been to conquer America, and she is now well on her way I am sure 2013 will be the Year of Nigella in America.
Instead, 2013 was the year of Nigella in court. Friends and colleagues are reportedly concerned that her travails could place Lawsons burgeoning US reputation in jeopardy, but while the US is in many ways more puritanical than Britain, it can also be more forgiving. Home-making megastar Martha Stewart, who was sentence to five months in prison in 2004 on charges related to insider trading, enjoyed a successful comeback following her release.
Lawsons co-star Bourdain, as he related in his bestselling memoir Kitchen Confidential, was an enthusiastic consumer of heroin, cocaine and LSD during his younger days as a tyro New York chef. We were high all the time, sneaking off to the walk-in refrigerator at every opportunity, he wrote. Yet he went on to become the executive chef at Brasserie Les Halles in Manhattan, and later translated his edgy past into an edgy TV persona with incredible success.
Several of the amateur cooks featured in Thursdays audition episode of The Taste cited Lawson as an inspiration, and the Twitter response to the show, and particularly to its British star, was almost universally positive. Although, in what could be viewed as a bad omen, Jeff Kawakami he of the drug problems and deconstructed bacon roll decided to join Team Ludo instead.
- The Independent