Nigella Lawson

Writer

Birthday January 6, 1960

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Wandsworth, London, England

Age 64 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5 ft 7 in (170 cm)

#5887 Most Popular

1830

She also uncovered that her maternal great-great-great-grandfather, Coenraad Sammes (later Coleman Joseph), had fled to England from Amsterdam in 1830 to escape a prison sentence following a conviction for theft.

His daughter Hannah married Samuel Gluckstein, who was in business with Barnett Salmon of Salmon & Gluckstein.

1868

One of the children of Helena and Barnett Salmon was Alfred Salmon (1868–1928), the great-grandfather of Nigella Lawson.

Lawson spent some of her childhood in the Welsh village of Higher Kinnerton.

She had to move schools nine times between the ages of 9 and 18, and 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.

She was educated at several independent schools, among them Ibstock Place School, Queen's Gate School and Godolphin and Latymer School.

She worked for many department stores in London, and went on to graduate from Lady Margaret Hall at the University of Oxford with a second-class degree in medieval and modern languages.

She lived in Florence, Italy, for a time.

Lawson originally worked in publishing, first taking a job under publisher Naim Attallah.

At 23, she began her career in journalism after Charles Moore had invited her to write for The Spectator – her father had previously been editor at the same publication, and her older brother soon would take up the same role.

1887

They had several children, including Isidore and Montague Gluckstein, who together with Salmon founded J. Lyons and Co. in 1887, and Helena, who married him.

1960

Nigella Lucy Lawson (born 6 January 1960) is an English food writer and television cook.

Nigella Lawson was born in 1960 in Wandsworth, London, one of the daughters of Nigel Lawson, Baron Lawson of Blaby (1932–2023), a business and finance journalist who later became a Conservative MP and Chancellor of the Exchequer in Margaret Thatcher's government, and his first wife, Vanessa Salmon (1936–1985), a socialite and the heiress to the J. Lyons and Co. fortune.

Both her parents were from Jewish families.

Her given name was originally suggested by her grandmother.

Her family owned homes in Kensington and Chelsea.

1980

Nigel and Vanessa Lawson divorced in 1980, when Nigella was 20.

1985

Her initial work at the magazine consisted of writing book reviews, after which she became a restaurant critic there in 1985.

1986

After graduating from Oxford, Lawson worked as a book reviewer and restaurant critic, later becoming the deputy literary editor of The Sunday Times in 1986.

She then wrote for a number of newspapers and magazines as a freelance journalist.

She became the deputy literary editor of The Sunday Times in 1986 aged 26.

1989

She attracted publicity in 1989 when she admitted voting for Labour in an election, not her father's Conservative Party, and then criticised Margaret Thatcher in print.

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."

After The 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".

1993

Lawson's full-blood siblings are her brother, Dominic, former editor of The Sunday Telegraph, sister Horatia, and sister Thomasina, who died of breast cancer, in her early thirties, in 1993; She has a half-brother, Tom, who is currently headmaster at Eastbourne College, and a half-sister, Emily; Tom and Emily are her father's children by his second wife.

Lawson is a cousin to both George Monbiot and Fiona Shackleton through the Salmon family.

Taking part in the third series of the BBC family-history documentary series Who Do You Think You Are?, Lawson sought to uncover some of her family's ancestry.

She traced her ancestors to Ashkenazi Jews who originate from eastern Europe and Germany, leaving Lawson surprised not to have Sephardi ancestry, as she had believed.

1998

In 1998, her first cookery book, How to Eat, was published and sold 300,000 copies, becoming a best-seller.

1999

In 1999, Lawson hosted her own cooking show series, Nigella Bites, on Channel 4, accompanied by another best-selling cookbook.

Nigella Bites won Lawson a Guild of Food Writers Award.

2000

Her second book, How to Be a Domestic Goddess, was published in 2000, winning the British Book Award for Author of the Year.

2005

Her 2005 ITV daytime chat show Nigella met with a negative critical reaction and was cancelled after attracting low ratings.

2006

She hosted the Food Network's Nigella Feasts in the United States in 2006, followed by a three-part BBC Two series, Nigella's Christmas Kitchen, in the UK, which led to the commissioning of Nigella Express on BBC Two in 2007.

Her own cookware range, Living Kitchen, has a value of £7 million, and she has sold more than 8 million cookery books worldwide to date.

2008

They both remarried: her father that year to a House of Commons researcher, Therese Maclear (to whom he was married until 2008), and her mother, in the early 1980s, to philosopher A. J. Ayer (they remained married until her mother's death).

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.

She has attributed her unhappiness as a child, in part, to the problematic relationship she had with her mother.

Lawson's mother died of liver cancer in Westminster, London at the age of 48.