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Jancis Robinson
Jancis Robinson is instantly recognisable as the wine
expert with the
soft voice....and glasses. She became popular when presenting The Wine
Programme and later Jancis Robinson’s Wine Course. She is also the
voice for several documentaries.
But where did “Jancis” come from?
“I was given the unusual name Jancis because my mother and her sister
had read the novel Precious Bane by Mary Webb in their teens, and liked
the name of the heroine Jancis Beguildy so much (despite the fact that
she drowned herself and her illegitimate son) that they decided the
first one to have a daughter would call her Jancis. Mary Webb was very
popular in the 20s and 30s and wrote rural melodramas of the sort that
Stella Gibbons' Cold Comfort Farm parodies. (Our prime minister of the
time, Stanley Baldwin, even wrote a preface to Precious Bane, a book in
which the male characters tend to be called Seth and Gideon.)”
“Mr. Robinson” is in fact Nick Lander, who writes about food and
restaurants for the Financial Times and is a consultant
for the Royal Opera House, the South Bank Centre (Festival
Hall etc) and several other arts organisations. He once had a
restaurant called L’Escargot in Soho and knows a bit about food! Jancis
describes Nick as a “Saintly Mancunian”. (For my readers who hail from
outside the UK, I should explain that Nick is a native of Manchester
and not Manchuria.) 
I asked Jancis who does the cooking when they are home... “Nick is most
definitely the cook, and has been since he took over from me in 1984.”
Lucky woman!
I know that Jancis enjoys eating, drinking, talking and occasionally
listening and it’s amazing that she finds time for any of that. She is
the wine consultant for British Airways and, since early 2005, has been
a member of the Royal Household Wine Committee, choosing wines for the
Queen. Every few weeks she heads to a spot near Heathrow airport (those
sunny vineyards of Hounslow) and tastes up to 100 wines blind for the
airline.
Jancis says, “We have three exceptional children, (of course)
vintage-dated 1982, 1984 and 1991,” so I asked if any of the children,
now adults, feel drawn to either the food or wine industry? “Our son
Will Lander, 23, has worked at Vinoteca in London and was treasurer of
the Oxford Wine Circle when at university, but he also has many other
irons in the fire as far as work goes.”
Jancis Robinson’s career began on 1 Dec 1975, when she started as
assistant editor of the British wine trade magazine Wine & Spirit.
Jancis said that she couldn’t type but managed to wangle the job
anyway. As soon as she started work she took all of the wine trade
exams organised by the Wine & Spirit Education Trust. Based in
London they are now the world’s most prominent wine educator. In 1984
Jancis passed the Master of Wine exams, becoming the first
non-wine-trade person to earn the letters MW after their name.
In 1997 Jancis was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of The Open
University. “A great British institution founded by the Labour
government in 1971 whereby people of all ages and conditions can study
for a university degree.” Jancis is now Dr. Robinson. Ok, she might not
be much help at sorting your varicose veins but the title (which, like
the MW, she does not in practice use very often) recognises the regard
in which she is held.
Surprisingly, some of the work that Jancis has enjoyed the most has
been the voice-overs. “Unlike filming, you don't need any make-up. You
don't have to be careful what you wear (except for manmade fabrics that
can make terribly distracting crackling noises into the hypersensitive
mikes used by sound engineers). All you need is to be able to read. In
fact it seems a miracle to me that people are prepared to pay me to go
and sit in a little dark room, watch an interesting programme and do a
relatively undemanding performance while playing with words.” A very
modest lady, I’d say.
Her major outlet is www.JancisRobinson.com
into which she pours thousands and thousands of words of wine
recommendations and advice every week, updating it several times a day.
Her current major project is a redesign of this very complex site which
incorporates the world’s only online version of her magnum opus The
Oxford Companion to Wine. She’s also co-author with Hugh Johnson of The
World Atlas of Wine – two major wine reference books which can’t leave
her much free time.
Jancis admits that she does have “a groaning mantelpiece” of awards.
It’s not only a groaning mantelpiece but a very long one. 2008 is
already looking good:
Shortlisted for Lifetime Achievement Award in the first International
Restaurant and Hotel Awards 2008.
Inducted into Wine Media Guild Hall of Fame, US.
“World Atlas of Wine” given Special Hall of Fame Award for being the
Best Book on Wine at Gourmand World Cookbook Awards 2008.
I’d buy another tin of Brasso if I were you, Jancis!
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