The Herald

Berry says she was never tempted to leave BBC with baking show

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FORMER Great British Bake Off judge Mary Berry has said she had her difference­s with Paul Hollywood, but she “admired him a lot”.

The 81-year-old decided to stay with the BBC and presenters Mel Giedroyc and Sue Perkins when Channel 4 poached the hit show, saying she was never tempted by the money.

She told Radio Times magazine “no one was more surprised than me” when Bake Off left the BBC, but that she avoided even being asked to join the show at its new home.

Asked if she had ever been attracted by the prospect of a bigger pay cheque, she replied: “No, I wasn’t. And anyway, I was never asked to go. I avoided being asked. It was suggested what would happen if I did go to Channel 4, what I would get, the advantages.

“But I didn’t ever have a meeting with them. I’d made up my mind. To me, it’s an honour to be on the BBC. I was brought up on it.”

The baking queen, who could be replaced by Prue Leith on the Channel 4 show, said of Hollywood: “I would always stand by him. Paul and I had our difference­s about what was important to us, but he is a brilliant breadmaker and I admired him a lot.”

She called Mel and Sue “extraordin­ary,” adding: “They are extremely bright and their humour is spontaneou­s and very cheeky. They are hilarious and I am so fond of them. It was the BBC’s programme, it grew there. So I decided to stay with the BBC, with Mel and Sue.”

Berry said she was no fan of the clean eating craze and has a glass of wine most evenings with supper, adding: “I don’t do any of the clean food thing. It says sugar is out. There’s nothing wrong with having a little sugar. I eat sugar and I’m not huge.”

And she joked about her appearance: “I’m quite good, aren’t I? I’m not bad”.

Opening up about her long and successful marriage to Paul, a retired antiquaria­n bookseller, she said when he asked her father for her hand, he accidental­ly ran over and killed a dove.

“He called me a blithering idiot,” her husband told the magazine. “So I left it for a week.” The couple had three children, Thomas, Annabel and William. In 1989, William died, aged 19, in a car crash while driving his younger sister into town.

“It was an immense blessing Annabel survived. If it had been the other way round, if William had killed his sister, his heart would have broken.

“He would have blamed himself to the end of his days.”

 ??  ?? MARY BERRY: Is not a fan of craze for clean eating.
MARY BERRY: Is not a fan of craze for clean eating.

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