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Celebrity MasterChef Australia


FieldValue
imageCelebrity MasterChef Australia 2021 Landscape Logo.png
genreCooking
Game show
judges{{Plainlist
narratedNicholas McKay
theme_music_composerKaty Perry
opentheme"Hot n Cold"
countryAustralia
languageEnglish
num_series2
num_episodes23
executive_producerPaul Franklin
Cathie Scott
locationSydney, New South Wales (2009)
Melbourne, Victoria (2021)
runtime60 minutes (including commercials)
channelNetwork 10
first_aired
last_aired
first_aired2
last_aired2present

Game show

  • Gary Mehigan
  • George Calombaris
  • Matt Preston
  • Jock Zonfrillo
  • Melissa Leong
  • Andy Allen Cathie Scott Melbourne, Victoria (2021) Celebrity MasterChef Australia is an Australian competitive cooking game show. It is a spin-off of MasterChef Australia, itself an adaptation of the British show MasterChef, and features celebrity contestants.

The first series began production in early September 2009, and premiered on Network Ten on 30 September 2009. Judges Matt Preston, George Calombaris and Gary Mehigan returned from MasterChef Australia for the first series of the show, with Calombaris and Mehigan also taking over as hosts from Sarah Wilson. Former world-record holder and Olympic medallist swimmer Eamon Sullivan won the first series, taking home $50,000 for charity Swim Survive Stay Alive.

On 25 May 2021, it was announced that a second series of Celebrity MasterChef Australia had been commissioned, 12 years after the first edition had aired, it premiered on 10 October 2021 .{{cite web|first=David|last=Knox|url=https://tvtonight.com.au/2021/05/10-confirms-celebrity-masterchef-return.html|title=10 confirms Celebrity MasterChef return

Format (2009 show)

In contrast to its parent show, the 2009 celebrity version was based around a heats and semi-finals format similar to MasterChef Goes Large, and was aired only once a week in an hourly format.

Celebrities were split into groups of three as they competed in a heat round featuring two challenges, with one celebrity making their way from each heat into the semi-finals. The heats consisted of an Invention Test, in which they prepared a dish of their own concoction, and a Pressure Test, in which they had to complete a dish prepared by a professional chef. Due to the difficulty of these dishes, contestants were given a single "lifeline" in which the chef was able to aid them for 90 seconds.

The six remaining celebrities then faced further challenges in order to secure their place in the final.

Hosts and judges

StarringSeries12
Jock Zonfrillo
Melissa Leong
Andy Allen
Gary Mehigan
George Calombaris
Matt Preston

Winners

SeriesContestantOccupationDate Won
1Eamon SullivanOlympic swimmer25 November 2009
2Nick RiewoldtAFL player22 November 2021

Series synopsis

Series 1 (2009)

Main article: Celebrity MasterChef Australia series 1

Celebrity MasterChef Australia, a spin-off featuring celebrities as contestants began production in early September 2009, and aired for ten weeks starting from 30 September 2009.

The host of the first series of MasterChef Australia, Sarah Wilson, did not return to host the show. Ten states that she was dropped because "the appropriate role for Sarah was not achievable without dramatically changing the format", but Gary Mehigan, George Calombaris and Matt Preston returned as judges, Calombaris and Mehigan took Wilson's presenting role. It was won by Olympic swimmer Eamon Sullivan, who took home $50,000 for charity Swim Survive Stay Alive.

In February 2010, executive producer Mark Fennessy stated that he doubted the spin-off would return for a second series.

Series 2 (2021)

Main article: Celebrity MasterChef Australia series 2

On 25 May 2021, it was announced that a second edition of Celebrity MasterChef Australia had been commissioned, 12 years after the first edition had aired. It aired in late 2021. Andy Allen, Melissa Leong and Jock Zonfrillo undertook the role of judges in the new series.

On 17 June 2021, Network Ten announced the 10 celebrity contestants competing on the second series of the show. Former AFL player Nick Riewoldt won the series, winning $100,000 for charity Maddie Riewoldt’s Vision.

Reception

Ratings

SeriesPremiere dateFinale dateEpisodesPremiere
ratingsRankFinale ratings
(Grand final)RankFinale ratings
(Winner announced)RankSeries Average11.18720.558
101.36321.2971colspan="2"
130.62060.70060.8055

References

References

  1. "Celebrity Masterchef will begin production in September".
  2. Perry, Kevin. (25 May 2021). "Channel 10 confirms Celebrity MasterChef is coming".
  3. Wilson, Zanda. (25 May 2021). "Ten revives Celebrity MasterChef after more than a decade".
  4. [http://au.tv.yahoo.com/news/article/-/article/5760382/biggest-loser-trainer-lined-up-for-celebrity-masterchef/ Biggest Loser trainer lined up for Celebrity MasterChef?] {{Webarchive. link. (10 July 2012 - Yahoo!7 TV)
  5. [http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2009/09/masterchef-negus-pengilly-thomas-westaway.html MasterChef: Negus, Pengilly, Thomas, Westaway.]
  6. Knox, David. (26 July 2009). "Celebrity MasterChef chop-chops Sarah Wilson". tvtonight.com.au.
  7. Knox, David. (11 September 2009). "TEN drops Sarah Wilson from MasterChef 2". tvtonight.com.au.
  8. Knox, David. (26 July 2009). "Celebrity MasterChef chop-chops Sarah Wilson". tvtonight.com.au.
  9. "Future of Celebrity MasterChef uncertain". news.com.au.
  10. Knox, David. (17 June 2021). "Rebecca Gibney, Ian Thorpe, Dami Im for Celebrity MasterChef". [[TV Tonight]].
  11. Knox, David. (23 November 2021). "Nick Riewoldt wins Celebrity MasterChef 2021". [[TV Tonight]].
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