Nigella Lawson | |
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![]() Lawson in 2017 | |
Born | Nigella Lucy Lawson (1960-01-06)6 January 1960 (age 65) Wandsworth, London, England |
Education | Godolphin and Latymer School |
Alma mater | Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1983–present |
Employers |
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Known for | TV presenting, cookery, writing |
Style | Desserts,pastry,Middle Eastern,English,Mediterranean |
Spouses | |
Children | 2 |
Parents |
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Relatives | Dominic Lawson (brother) |
Website | Official website |
Nigella Lucy Lawson (born 6 January 1960)[2] is an English food writer and television cook.
After graduating from Oxford, Lawson worked as a book reviewer and restaurant critic, later becoming the deputy literary editor ofThe Sunday Times in 1986. She then wrote for a number of newspapers and magazines as a freelance journalist. In 1998, her first cookery book,How to Eat, was published and sold 300,000 copies, becoming a best-seller. Her second book,How to Be a Domestic Goddess, was published in 2000, winning theBritish Book Award for Author of the Year.
In 1999, Lawson hosted her own cooking show series,Nigella Bites, onChannel 4, accompanied by another best-selling cookbook.Nigella Bites won Lawson a Guild of Food Writers Award. Her 2005ITV daytime chat showNigella met with a negative critical reaction and was cancelled after attracting low ratings. She hosted theFood Network'sNigella Feasts in the United States in 2006, followed by a three-partBBC Two series,Nigella's Christmas Kitchen, in the UK, which led to the commissioning ofNigella Express onBBC Two in 2007. Her owncookware range, Living Kitchen, has a value of £7 million, and she has sold more than 8 million cookery books worldwide to date.[3]
Nigella Lawson was born in 1960 inWandsworth, London,[4] one of the daughters ofNigel Lawson, Baron Lawson of Blaby (1932–2023),[5] a business and finance journalist who later became aConservative MP andChancellor of the Exchequer inMargaret Thatcher's government, and his first wife, Vanessa Salmon (1936–1985),[6] a socialite[7] and the heiress to theJ. Lyons and Co. fortune.[8] Both her parents were from Jewish families.[9][10][11] Her given name was originally suggested by her grandmother.[12] Her family owned homes inKensington andChelsea.[13][14]
Nigel and Vanessa Lawson divorced in 1980, when Nigella was 20. They both remarried: her father that year to aHouse of Commons researcher, Therese Maclear (to whom he was married until 2008), and her mother, in the early 1980s, to philosopherA. J. Ayer (they remained married until her mother's death).[8] As her father was at the time a prominent political figure, Nigella found some of the judgements and preconceptions that were formed about her frustrating.[12] She has attributed her unhappiness as a child, in part, to the problematic relationship she had with her mother.[13]
Lawson's mother died ofliver cancer inWestminster, London at the age of 48.[8][15] Lawson's full-blood siblings are her brother,Dominic, former editor ofThe Sunday Telegraph, sister Horatia, and sister Thomasina, who died of breast cancer, in her early thirties, in 1993.[16][17][18] She has a half-brother, Tom, who is currently headmaster atEastbourne College, and a half-sister, Emily; Tom and Emily are her father's children by his second wife. Lawson is a cousin to bothGeorge Monbiot andFiona Shackleton through the Salmon family.[19]
Taking part in the third series of theBBC family-history documentary seriesWho Do You Think You Are?, Lawson sought to uncover some of her family's ancestry. She traced her ancestors toAshkenazi Jews who originate from eastern Europe and Germany, leaving Lawson surprised not to haveSephardi ancestry, as she had believed.[20] She also uncovered that her maternal great-great-great-grandfather, Coenraad Sammes (later Coleman Joseph), had fled to England fromAmsterdam in 1830 to escape a prison sentence following a conviction for theft.[20][21] His daughter Hannah marriedSamuel Gluckstein, who was in business withBarnett Salmon ofSalmon & Gluckstein. They had several children, includingIsidore andMontague Gluckstein, who together with Salmon founded J. Lyons and Co. in 1887,[20][22] and Helena, who married him. One of the children of Helena and Barnett Salmon wasAlfred Salmon (1868–1928), the great-grandfather of Nigella Lawson.
Lawson spent some of her childhood in the Welsh village ofHigher Kinnerton. She had to move schools nine times between the ages of 9 and 18; consequently, she described her school years as difficult. "I was just difficult, disruptive, good at school work, but rude, I suspect, and too highly-strung", Lawson reflected.[16] She was educated at several independent schools, among themIbstock Place School,Queen's Gate School andGodolphin and Latymer School. She worked for many department stores in London,[23] and went on to graduate fromLady Margaret Hall[24] at theUniversity of Oxford[23] with a second-class degree inmedieval andmodern languages.[25] She lived inFlorence, Italy, for a time.[15]
Lawson originally worked in publishing, first taking a job under publisherNaim Attallah.[23] At 23, she began her career in journalism afterCharles Moore had invited her to write forThe Spectator[23] – her father had previously been editor at the same publication, and her older brother soon would take up the same role.[26] Her initial work at the magazine consisted of writing book reviews,[27] after which she became a restaurant critic there in 1985.[16] She became the deputy literary editor ofThe Sunday Times in 1986, aged 26.[16]
She attracted publicity in 1989 when she admitted voting forLabour in an election, not her father's Conservative Party, and then criticised Margaret Thatcher in print.[8] Regarding her political relationship with her father, Lawson has stated, "My father would never expect me to agree with him about anything in particular and, to be honest, we never talk about politics much."[28]
AfterThe Sunday Times, she embarked upon a freelance writing career, realising that "I was on the wrong ladder. I didn't want to be an executive, being paid to worry rather than think".[13] In the United Kingdom, she wrote forThe Daily Telegraph, theEvening Standard,The Observer andThe Times Literary Supplement, and penned a food column forVogue[29] and a make-up column forThe Times Magazine,[13] as well as working withGourmet andBon Appétit in the United States.[30] In 1995 Lawson left a two-week stint atTalk Radio early after making a statement that her shopping was done for her, apparently due to its incompatibility with the radio station's desired "common touch".[8]In the mid-1990s she occasionally hosted TV press-reviews slotWhat the Papers Say, and was co-host, withDavid Aaronovitch, of Channel 4 literary-discussion seriesBooked. In 1998 she repeatedly guested on Channel 4 cookery seriesNigel Slater's Real-Food Show.
Lawson had an established sense of cooking from her childhood, having had a mother who enjoyed cooking.[13] She conceived the idea of writing a cookbook after she observed a dinner party host in tears because of an unsetcrème caramel.[31]How to Eat (1998),[16] featuring culinary tips on preparation and saving time,[31] sold 300,000 copies in the UK.[27]The Sunday Telegraph dubbed it "the most valuable culinary guide published this decade".[32]
Its successor,How to be a Domestic Goddess (2000), focuses primarily on baking.[15]The Times wrote of the book that it "is defined by its intimate, companionable approach. She is not issuing matronly instructions likeDelia; she is merely making sisterly suggestions".[13] Lawson rejected feminist criticism of her book,[33] adding that "[s]ome people did take the domestic goddess title literally rather than ironically. It was about the pleasures of feeling like one rather than actually being one."[5] The book sold 180,000 copies in four months,[31] and won Lawson the title of Author of the Year at theBritish Book Awards in 2001,[27] fending off competition from authors such asJ. K. Rowling.[34]How to Eat andHow to be a Domestic Goddess were published in the U.S. in 2000 and 2001.[35] As a result of the book's success,The Observer took her on as a social affairs columnist.[16]
Lawson next hosted her own cooking show television series,Nigella Bites, which ran from 1999 to 2001 onChannel 4,[36][37] followed by a Christmas special in 2001.[38]Victor Lewis-Smith, a critic usually known for his biting comments, praised Lawson for being "formidably charismatic".[5] The first series ofNigella Bites averaged 1.9 million viewers,[39] and won her the Television Broadcast of the Year at the Guild of Food Writers Awards[40] and the Best Television Food Show at the World Food Media Awards in 2001.[41] The show yielded an accompanying best-selling recipe book, also calledNigella Bites,[42] for whichWaterstone's book stores reported UK sales of over 300,000.[43] The book won theWH Smith Lifestyle Book of the Year award.[44]
TheNigella Bites series, which was filmed in her home in west London, was later broadcast on American television channelsE![45] andStyle Network.[27] Lawson said of the US release, "In the UK, my viewers have responded to the fact I'm trying to reduce, not add to, their burden and I'm looking forward to making that connection with Style viewers across the US".[45] Overall, Lawson was well received in the United States.[28] Those who did criticise her often suggested she was too flirtatious; a commentator fromThe New York Times said, "Lawson's sexy roundness mixed with her speed-demon technique makes cooking dinner with Nigella look like a prelude to an orgy".[27] The book ofNigella Bites became the second best-selling cook book of Christmas 2002 in America.[46] The series was followed byForever Summer with Nigella in 2002 on Channel 4, the concept being, "that you cook to make you still feel as though you're on holiday".[28] Fellow food writerHugh Fearnley-Whittingstall condemned the concept as "cynical and reckless" and referred to the book as "FuckSeasonality".[47]
In 2002 Lawson also began to write a fortnightly cooking article forThe New York Times,[6] and brought out a profitable line of kitchenware, called the Living Kitchen range, which is sold by numerous retailers.[29] Her range's value has continued to grow, starting at an estimated £2 million in 2003.[48]
In November 2003, Lawson oversaw the menu and preparations for a lunch hosted byTony Blair atDowning Street forGeorge W. Bush and his wife during their state visit to the UK.[49] FormerFirst Lady of the United States,Laura Bush, is said to be a fan of Lawson's recipes and once included one of her soups as the starter for the 2002 presidential Christmas dinner.[46] Lawson's fifth book,Feast: Food that Celebrates Life, released in 2004,[50] made sales worth £3 million.[51] London'sEvening Standard wrote that the book "works both as a practical manual and an engrossing read. ... Nobody else writes so openly about the emotional significance of food."[52] Lawson appeared frequently on American television in 2004, conducting cookery slots on talk shows such asThe Ellen DeGeneres Show.[53]
In the UK in 2005, Lawson started to host a daytime television chat show onITV1 calledNigella, on which celebrity guests joined her in a studio kitchen.[21] The first episode debuted with a disappointing 800,000 viewers.[54] The show was met with a largely negative critical reaction,[55] and after losing 40% of its viewers in the first week, the show was cancelled.[56] She later commented toRadio Times that on her first show, she was almost too frightened to come out of her dressing room.[57] Lawson added that having to pretend to be interested in the lives of the celebrities on her show became too much of an effort.[21]
Her third food-based television series, calledNigella Feasts, debuted on theFood Network in the United States in Autumn 2006 for a 13-week run.[56]Time magazine wrote a favourable review of the show; "the real appeal ofFeasts ... is her unfussy, wry, practical approach to entertaining and quality comfort food.Feasts will leave you wishing for an invite".[58]
Lawson was next signed toBBC Two to host a three-part cookery show entitledNigella's Christmas Kitchen, which began on 6 December 2006 and aired weekly. The first two episodes secured the second highest ratings of the week for BBC Two, with the first episode debuting with a strong 3.5 million.[59][60] The final episode went on to become the top show on BBC Two the week that it was aired.[59]Nigella's Christmas Kitchen won Lawson a second World Food Media Award in 2007.[61] Her influence as a food commentator was also demonstrated in late 2006, when after she had lauded goose fat as being an essential ingredient for Christmas, sales of the product increased significantly in the UK.Waitrose andTesco both stated that goose fat sales had more than doubled, as well asAsda's increasing by 65% from the previous week.[62] Similarly, after she advised usingprunes in a recipe onNigella's Christmas Kitchen, Waitrose had increased sales of 30% year on year.[63]
Nigella's Christmas Kitchen led to the commissioning of a 13-part cookery series about fast food entitledNigella Express.[64] She said, "The recipes aren't particularly healthy. That said, I wouldn't describe them as junk."[65] The show became another ratings success and one of BBC Two's top-rated shows each week.[66] The first episode debuted with 2.85 million viewers,[66] a high percentage above the channel's slot average.[67] The second episode's viewing figures rose to 3.3 million,[68] and the series peaked at 3.4 million on 22 October 2007.[69]
Her influence with the public was again demonstrated when sales ofRiesling wine increased by 30% in the UK after she had incorporated it into herCoq au Riesling recipe onNigella Express.[70] In December 2007 she appeared on BBC'sThe Graham Norton Show and said that she had once eaten 30 pickled eggs for a £1,000 bet.[71]
Lawson was criticised by some viewers who complained that she had gained weight since the debut episode of the series.[72][importance?]The Guardian, however, noted, "the food matches her appearance – flawless, polished and sexy".[73] The rights toNigella Express were sold to Discovery Asia.[74] The series was nominated at the35th Daytime Emmy Awards in the United States for Outstanding Lifestyle Program, and Lawson herself for the Outstanding Lifestyle Host.[75]
The accompanying book toNigella Express was released in the UK in September 2007, US in November 2007, and in Australia in 2008.[76] Sharing the same name as the television series, the book became another best-seller in the UK,[77] and was outselling television chefJamie Oliver by 100,000 copies, according to Waterstone's. It was reported that over 490,000 copies had been sold by mid-December in the UK.[43] Furthermore, the book was number one for a period onAmazon UK's best-selling books,[43] and was ninth on their overall list of Christmas best-sellers in any category.[78] Paul Levy ofThe Guardian wrote that the tone of the recipes was "just right. One of the appealing things about Nigella's brief introductions to each of them is that she thinks not just as cook, but as eater, and tells you whether they're messy, sticky or fussy."[73] In January 2008, Lawson was estimated to have sold more than 3 million books worldwide.[79] Her Christmas book was released in October 2008 and the television show in December of the same year.[citation needed]
Lawson was featured as one of the three judges on a special battle ofIron Chef America, titled "The Super Chef Battle", which pittedWhite House Executive ChefCristeta Comerford and Iron ChefBobby Flay against chefEmeril Lagasse and Iron ChefMario Batali. This episode was originally broadcast on 3 January 2010. Lawson's cookbookKitchen: Recipes from the Heart of the Home (2010) is a tie-in with the TV series "Nigella Kitchen". This was shown in the UK and on the Food Network in the United States.
Nigellissima: Instant Italian Inspiration was released in 2012. The 8-part TV series entitledNigellissima was broadcast by theBBC. Lawson obtained work experience in Italy during hergap year.[80]
She travelled to the United States in 2013 and starred alongsideAnthony Bourdain in the reality cooking showThe Taste. TheUK version of the show began airing on 7 January 2014 onChannel 4. Lawson was granted a visa to travel to the United States and travelled there for a continuation of the series.[81] In 2014, Lawson was hired by a chocolate company to appear in an advertisement, the advertisement was filmed in New Zealand in May for a local confection manufacturerWhittaker's.[82][83][84]
The UK and US series ofThe Taste were both completed[85] and in autumn 2015 Lawson beganSimply Nigella for BBC 2.[86] The focus was oncomfort food, familiar dishes that are simple and quick to cook.[87]
Lawson was spokesperson for theUnited Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest 2015, giving the twelve points to Sweden'sMåns Zelmerlöw and his song "Heroes", which went on to win the contest.[88]
It was reported on 18 January 2016, that Lawson would make a return to Australian television, joining theeighth series ofMasterChef Australia as a guest judge, alongside the returning judges.[89] She returned to the show for thetenth series in 2018[90] andeleventh series in 2019.[91]
In 2022, it was announced that Lawson would be returning to Australian television as a judge on thetwelfth season of7 Network'sMy Kitchen Rules.[92][93][94] Lawson co-hosted and judged the first six episodes of the season alongside long term judgeManu Feildel before leaving the series after the first round of instant restaurants.[95] In 2023, it was announced that Lawson would be returning to the show for its thirteenth season as a judge in Kitchen HQ alongside fellow returning judges Manu Feildel andColin Fassnidge.[96][97][98]
Though Lawson has enjoyed a successful career in cookery, she is not a trained chef,[99] and does not like being referred to as a "celebrity chef".[12] Nor does she see herself as a cook or an expert in her field;[15] nonetheless, she is frequently described as a chef.[100][101][102][103] Throughout Lawson's television programmes,[104] she emphasises that she cooks for her own pleasure,[13] for enjoyment,[5] and that she finds cooking therapeutic. When deciding upon which recipes to feature in her books, she takes the view of the eater, stating, "If it's something I don't want to carry on eating once I'm full, then I don't want the recipe ... I have to feel that I want to cook the thing again."[15]
Lawson has adopted a casual approach to cooking, stating, "I think cooking should be about fun and family. ... I think part of my appeal is that my approach to cooking is really relaxed and not rigid. There are no rules in my kitchen."[99] One editor, highlighting the technical simplicity of Lawson's recipes, noted that "her dishes require none of the elaborate preparation called for by most TV chefs".[105]
Lawson has become renowned for her flirtatious manner of presenting, although she argues "It's not meant to be flirtatious. ... I don't have the talent to adopt a different persona. It's intimate, not flirtatious".[21] The perceived overt sexuality of her presentation style has led to Lawson being called the "queen offood porn".[106][107] Many commentators have alluded to Lawson's attractiveness, and she was once named as one of the world's most beautiful women.[15]
The media have also noted Lawson's ability to engage with both male and female viewers;[5][108]The Guardian wrote, "Men love her because they want to be with her. Women love her because they want to be her."[12] ChefGary Rhodes said that viewers were attracted to her smile rather than her cooking.[109] Despite often being labelled as a "domestic goddess",[110] she said that she exhibits very few of the qualities associated with the title.[28]
Lawson met journalistJohn Diamond in 1986, when they were both writing forThe Sunday Times.[16] They married inVenice in 1992, and had a daughter, Cosima, and a son, Bruno.[111] Diamond was diagnosed withthroat cancer in 1997 and died in March 2001, aged 47.[27] One of his last messages to Lawson was, "How proud I am of you and what you have become. The great thing about us is that we have made us who we are."[5] His death occurred during the filming ofNigella Bites; "I took a fortnight off. But I'm not a great believer in breaks", Lawson said;[5] she suffered a bout ofdepression following the funeral.[12] After Diamond's death, Lawson kept all of the related press clippings in what she called her "Morbidobox".[5]
Lawson married art collectorCharles Saatchi in September 2003.[112]
In June 2013, photographs were published byThe Sunday People of Lawson being grabbed around the neck by Saatchi, during an argument outside a London seafood restaurant.[113][114] According to a witness, Lawson was very distressed by the incident.[115] Saatchi later described the pictures as showing only a "playful tiff" and his trying to emphasise a point.[115][116] After a police investigation of the incident, Saatchi wascautioned for assault, and Lawson left the family home.[117][118] Lawsonsaid in court Saatchi subjected her to "intimate terrorism", that he threatened to destroy her unless she cleared him in court.[119] Subsequently, while giving evidence, Lawson claimed casual cruelty andcontrolling behaviour by Saatchi made her unhappy and drove her to occasional drug use. She cited an example that Saatchi prevented her entertaining at home and punished her for going to a birthday party of a woman friend. She was not beaten but was left emotionally scarred.[120][121]
Saatchi announced his divorce from Lawson in early July, stating that he had "clearly been a disappointment to Nigella during the last year or so" and the couple had "become estranged and drifted apart". Lawson made no public comment in response;[122] however, court papers showed that it was Lawson who applied for divorce, citing ongoing unreasonable behaviour.[123] On 31 July 2013, seven weeks after the incident, the pair were granted adecree nisi, ending their ten-year marriage.[123] They reached a private financial settlement.[123]
On 27 November 2013, a trial of the former couple's two personal assistants, Italian-born sisters began inR v Grillo and Grillo. The Grillos were accused of fraudulently using the credit cards of Saatchi's private company.[124][125] During court proceedings in early December, the sisters claimed that Lawson had permitted their use of the credit cards in exchange for their silence regarding her drug use. Questions regarding Lawson's drug use were allowed by the judge as part of the sisters' "bad character" defence. Lawson admitted to takingcocaine andcannabis but denied she had been addicted, stating, "I found it made an intolerable situation tolerable."[126] On 20 December 2013, the two sisters were acquitted.Scotland Yard said that Lawson would not be investigated over the drug allegations.[127]
Charles Saatchi was alleged to have started a smear campaign against Lawson in the British media through PR man Richard Hillgrove before the trial was over.[128][129] Lawson's lawyers demanded that Hillgrove remove comments about her from his blog.[130] Lawson said in court that ending her marriage to Saatchi had created intolerable conditions for herself and her family, describing Saatchi as "a brilliant but brutal man".
Lawson maintained she was "totally cannabis, cocaine, any drug, free" after the divorce.[131]
On 30 March 2014, Lawson was not permitted to board a flight from London to Los Angeles. TheUS Department of Homeland Security explained that foreigners who had admitted drug taking were deemed "inadmissible".[132] However, US authorities invited her to apply for a visa shortly afterwards, and she was granted a "waiver of inadmissibility" allowing her to travel to the US.[133]
In 2008, Lawson reported that she held a personal fortune of £15 million. Her husband Charles Saatchi was worth £100 million at that time. She said her two children should not inherit any of her money, saying: "I am determined that my children should have no financial security. It ruins people not having to earn money."[134]
Lawson is of Jewish heritage. Both of Lawson's parents are Jewish and her upbringing was non-observant. Lawson is anatheist.[12][135][136] In one of her newspaper articles, she said "most [women] simply have, somewhere, a fantasy about having sex, in a non-defining, non-exclusive way, with other women."[137]
Lawson is a supporter of theLavender Trust which gives support to young women with breast cancer. She first became involved with the charity in 2002 when she baked some lavender cupcakes to be auctioned at a fundraising event, which sold for a significant amount of money. She subsequently featured the recipe in her bookForever Summer with Nigella.[138]
In December 2008, Lawson was criticised by animal rights groups for comments which suggested it would be morally acceptable to wear the fur of an animal that one had killed, and that she would be proud to wear the fur of a bear that she had hunted or "[gone] into battle" with.[139]
It was revealed by leakedWhitehall documents in 2003 that Lawson declined anOBE fromQueen Elizabeth II in 2001,[140] explaining that "I'm not saving lives and I'm not doing anything other than something I absolutely love."[141] As the daughter of alife peer, Lawson is entitled to thecourtesy style of "The Honourable", and may thus be referred to as The Hon. Nigella Lawson; however, she does not use this courtesy style.
Lawson has stated that she believes cooking is "a metaphor for life", in the sense that "When you cook, you need structure [...] but just as importantly you need to be able to loosen up and go with the flow [...] you must not strive for perfection but, rather, acknowledge your mistakes and work out how you can rectify them". She has described cooking as "a way of strengthening oneself", in the sense that "being able to sustain oneself is the skill of the survivor".[142]
Year | Title | Role | Episodes |
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1999–2001 | Nigella Bites | Host | 16 episodes (series 1–2; one Christmas special) |
2002 | Forever Summer | Host | 8 episodes |
2005 | Nigella | Host | 20 episodes |
2006 | Nigella Feasts | Host | 13 episodes |
2006, 2008 | Nigella's Christmas Kitchen | Host | 6 episodes (series 1–2) |
2007 | Nigella Express | Host | 13 episodes |
2009 | Top Chef | Guest judge | Episode: "Strip Around the World" (season 6)[143] |
2010 | Super Chef Battle: An Iron Chef America Event | Guest judge | Television special |
Nigella Kitchen | Host | 13 episodes | |
2011, 2016, 2018–2021 | MasterChef Australia | Guest judge | 16 episodes |
2012 | Nigellissima | Host | 7 episodes |
2013–2014 | The Taste | Judge | 23 episodes (series 1–3) |
2014 | The Taste (UK) | Judge | 10 episodes (series 1) |
Modern Family | Herself (voice on a cookingapp) | Episode: "Three Turkeys"[144] | |
2015 | Eurovision Song Contest 2015 | Herself, Spokesperson | Final |
Simply Nigella | Host | 6 episodes and one Christmas special | |
2017 | Nigella: At My Table | Host | 6 episodes and one Christmas special[145] |
2019 | MasterChef US | Guest Judge | Episode: "London Calling – Pt. 2" (season 10)[146] |
2020 | Nigella's Cook, Eat, Repeat | Host | 6 episodes and one Christmas special[147] |
2022–present | My Kitchen Rules | Judge | Season 12, Season 13 |
2023 | Nigella's Amsterdam Christmas | Presenter | Christmas special[148] |
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