
Los Angeles Times – October 15, 2006
Padma Lakshmi, the show's host, isn't just a pretty face. She's a food
fiend and a model-actress who actually eats.
By Matea Gold, Times Staff Writer
Padma Lakshmi had a confession to make. "I hate reality TV, I have to tell you," said the new host of "Top Chef," Bravo's
reality cooking competition, leaning over the table at a busy Manhattan
restaurant on a recent afternoon. "I think a lot of it brings out the
worst common denominator of the human spirit."
But the Indian-born model and actress, perhaps best known for being
married to Salman Rushdie, is satisfied that Season 2 of "Top Chef" won't
contribute to the decline of modern culture. The reality series pits
15 up-and-coming chefs against one another in an intense culinary contest. "At the end of the day, it's about the skills," Lakshmi said. "I think
it's very compelling seeing someone trying to be really good at their
job, no matter what that job is." "Top Chef," from the producers of the zeitgeist fashion competition "Project
Runway," premiered last spring and was the top-rated cable food show
among young adults. As with "Runway," its popularity was fueled by the
contestants' raw ambition along with the inevitable kitchen drama that
ensued as they raced to out-cook one another.
This season, which kicks off Wednesday, the producers brought in prominent
chefs such as "Kitchen Confidential" author Anthony Bourdain and Le
Bernardin's Eric Ripert as guest judges. The presence of culinary superstars
helped ease Lakshmi's doubts about wading into the reality television
genre. "They're all people that I really respect food-wise, so I think in that
respect, it's a very high-caliber, high-brow food show," she said. "I
was very pleased about that, because I didn't want it to turn into some
kind of schlocky reality piece of fluff that I would feel embarrassed
about."
The 35-year-old is acutely aware of the challenges of cultivating a
career in the public eye. Ever since she began dating and subsequently
married "Satanic Verses" author Rushdie, 23 years her senior, the New
Delhi native has had to endure a constant media spotlight on their relationship.
When asked how she deals with the persistent interest in her marriage,
Lakshmi sighed, a slight hint of annoyance clouding her lilting accent. "I just have to do my own thing and try to steer people away from it," she
said. "I had my own identity before I met him and a successful career."
Lakshmi had already published her first cookbook — "Easy Exotic:
A Model's Low-Fat Recipes From Around the World" — when she was
introduced to Rushdie at a party in New York in 1999. "I've always loved to cook," said Lakshmi, as she delicately munched
a grilled cheese sandwich. "Food is very sensual. It's so integral to
the daily fabric of our lives that it has a lot of emotional context."
So when Bravo approached her about hosting "Top Chef" last year, she
was intrigued. Scheduling conflicts ultimately forced her to turn down
the role in the first season, which then went to Katie Lee Joel (wife
of singer Billy Joel). But when it came time to tape the second season,
producers decided they wanted a host with more culinary knowledge and
called Lakshmi again. "Padma is the perfect fit for this show," said Bravo president Lauren
Zalaznick. "She is an absolute food fanatic, and she is both very intelligent
and very emotional about food. I think she's a magnet, both by her intellect
and looks."
Ever since she was spotted by a talent scout in a Spanish café as
a college student, Lakshmi's striking appearance has drawn attention.
On this fall afternoon, she was recovering from a bad cold but still
looked effortlessly luminous, in a chic gray vest over a black T-shirt
and pants, her wide-set eyes setting off her slender face. A long scar
winds down her arm, the result of a car accident when she was a teenager — a
blemish she refuses to hide or get airbrushed out of photos.
A passion for cooking
On "Top Chef," Lakshmi brings a certain gravity to the role of host.
She intensely debates the merits of each dish with judges Tom Colicchio
and Gail Simmons. At the end of each episode, she tells the losing contestant
solemnly: "Please pack your knives and go."
The home cook said she has "great respect" for the chefs on the show. "I can make you a fabulous meal," she said. "But can I take a mystery
box of ingredients and in a half an hour, make something edible? That's
where the true ingenuity of a chef's mind comes out."
Executive producer Dan Cutforth said Lakshmi did not treat the competition
frivolously. "She has a real point of view about food, and that is really important,
because the credibility of the show in terms of how it's perceived by
foodies is extremely important to us," he said. "While we have fun,
the intent was to create a serious show that explores what it means
to be a chef."
Lakshmi's ardor for cooking was instilled at an early age. She split
her time as a child between Madras (now Chennai), where her grandparents
lived, and New York, where her mother worked as a nurse. "I grew up around the kitchen — all the secrets of the family
were divulged there," she said. "As I was peeling potatoes or shelling
peas or chopping the ginger, you would hear all these tales of what
was going on in generations past, all the gossip. And I really came
to associate femininity with being in the kitchen."
Her mother took her on "culinary adventures" around New York, sampling
food from Chinatown to Spanish Harlem, and she learned to love an array
of ethnic foods. "I do have a very strong palate," she said. "If I go out and eat something,
I can usually tell what's in it by tasting it and reproduce it in my
own kitchen."
Even as a runway model for Giorgio Armani and Gianni Versace, Lakshmi
didn't lose her gusto for food, often cooking for her fellow models
as they traveled around the world, creating dishes that inspired her
first cookbook. "I think models eat a lot less now," Lakshmi said, then added with
a laugh: "Maybe I just eat more."
She is now wrapping up work on a second cookbook scheduled for release
this spring, a more ambitious endeavor that includes 150 recipes, many
that fuse different types of cuisine. "I am a traditionalist where food is concerned, but I do believe in
mixing things that organically fit together," Lakshmi said, noting that
both Mexican and Indian dishes rely heavily on ingredients such as coriander,
cumin and chiles.
With the cookbook nearly complete, Lakshmi — who divides her
time between New York and London — said she now wants to focus
on her acting career, which has recently included roles in the BBC miniseries "Sharpe's
Challenge" and the ABC movie "The Ten Commandments."
Next year, she is slated to film "Exclusion," a movie by Indian director
Deepa Mehta based on a true story of Indian Sikhs who sailed to Canada
at the turn of the last century, only to be denied entry and left out
at sea for three months. "This is a role that I've been waiting for a long time," she said. "There
are a lot of times when I go for auditions and they say, 'Oh, we love
Padma, but we're not going ethnic with this role.' "
The typecasting frustrates Lakshmi, who speaks five languages and majored
in theater at Clark University in Worcester, Mass. "I think people forget that," she fretted.
In fact, as much as she said she's enjoyed working on "Top Chef," she
fears it could overshadow her other work. "I am not a believer in 'All exposure is good exposure,' " Lakshmi said
firmly. "I think our culture has become like that, but frankly I don't
think I need to be any more well known. I think I need to do more work,
and my work should be known. "Of course I want 'Top Chef' to do really well, but I'm scared that
people will only see me doing that, and they already know me like a
model. You can't be too many things to too many people. Will no one
ever hire me again because they'll say, 'Oh, she's that girl?' "
She paused and took a breath, shaking off her worries with a small smile. "But I can only do a good job at what I'm doing. I can't live my life
in fear of what might not be."
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