(Dr) Annie Gray

Intelligent, dry and crystal clear

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(Dr) Annie Gray

Contacts

Agent:
Emma Torrens

emma@vobjmanagement.co.uk
020 7287 1112


Audio

  • DownloadAUDIOBOOK - Victory in the Kitchen

Languages

English

Styles

Animated, Broadcaster, Cool, Corporate, Narrative, Versatile, Warm

Accent

Neutral, RP


Dr Annie Gray is one of Britain’s leading food historians, specialising in the history of food and dining from c.1600 to the present day. She is an author, broadcaster and consultant.

She has published numerous books, including: The Greedy Queen, The Official Downtown Abbey Cookbook, From the Alps to the Dales – 100 Years of Bettys, Victory in the Kitchen – The Life of Churchill’s Cook, a biography of Winston Churchill’s longest-serving cook and an in depth look into the most crucial members of the Churchillian support team.

In 2021 Annie published At Christmas We Feast: Festive Food Through the Ages, a fascinating look at the origins and traditions that surround Christmas feasting. Annie has also written for publications such as Delicious Magazine, The Telegraph, The Guardian online and BBC Good Food.

Annie has worked widely across both TV and radio and has been the resident food historian on BBC Radio 4’s award-winning culinary panel show, The Kitchen Cabinet, since its inception in 2012. In 2021 she published the shows companion book. She was a consultant and presenter on Victorian Bakers (BBC Two) and The Sweetmakers (BBC Two) and has appeared and consulted on A Merry Tudor Christmas with Lucy Worsley (BBC Two) and Victoria and Albert: The Royal Wedding (BBC Two), as well as appearing on James Martin’s Saturday Morning (BBC One), James Martin: Home Comforts (BBC One) and The Great British Bake Off (BBC) among others.

Annie has given numerous talks around the UK for clients such as the Historic Royal Palaces, The National Trust and Morley Arts Festival. Some of her previous talks include Cuckold’s Delight and Mother’s Ruin: a history of gin in England, Dining at Downton: cooking and eating in the early twentieth century country house, Christmas Dinner: from Edward I to Edward VII and To please the palate, charm the eye: 400 years of food as edible art.