Loyd Grossman

TV Show Host

Loyd Grossman was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts, United States on September 16th, 1950 and is the TV Show Host. At the age of 74, Loyd Grossman biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
September 16, 1950
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Marblehead, Massachusetts, United States
Age
74 years old
Zodiac Sign
Virgo
Profession
Journalist, Television Presenter
Loyd Grossman Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 74 years old, Loyd Grossman physical status not available right now. We will update Loyd Grossman's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Loyd Grossman Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Loyd Grossman Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Deborah Jane Puttnam, ​ ​(m. 1985; div. 2004)​
Children
2
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Loyd Grossman Career

Grossman became involved with journalism as an undergraduate in Boston writing for a number of ‘underground’ and music publications including Boston After Dark, Fusion, Vibrations, the New York Review of Rock and Rolling Stone. After graduation from the LSE he joined the staff of Harpers & Queen as design editor and subsequently went to work for The Sunday Times as contributing editor. He has written for many British newspapers and is a regular contributor to Country Life. While at Harpers & Queen he was also the magazine's restaurant critic, a pursuit which he continued for thirteen years also writing about restaurants for GQ and The Sunday Times.

Grossman's television career began in 1983 as one of the regular faces on TV-am presenting among other things a short segment, Through the Keyhole, which he devised along with Kevin Sim and David Frost. Through the Keyhole transferred to primetime on ITV in 1987 and scored some of ITV's highest viewing figures for light entertainment. Grossman continued on the show until 2003. He presented Masterchef from 1990 to 2000 and Junior Masterchef as well as a great number of other programmes including Loyd on Location, The History of British Sculpture, and Behind the Headlines. He also presented the BBC Radio 3 series Composers at Home.

Grossman has a continuing career as a guitarist initially with punk band Jet Bronx And The Forbidden, who reached number 47 in the UK singles chart in December 1977 with "Ain't Doin' Nothing". He returned to playing music in 2008 at the Vienna Rebellion Punk Festival. He subsequently formed a new band, The New Forbidden, with Valentine Guinness. The New Forbidden have appeared at Glastonbury eight times. Grossman also appears as a guest artist with Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull when they play their annual concerts in aid of English cathedrals.

In 1995, Grossman introduced his own brand of cooking sauces which became the most successful UK celebrity sauce brand. The sauces are produced by arrangement with Premier Foods.

In 2000, he was asked to head a project to improve the quality of food served in British NHS hospitals. Although some newspapers reported that the project had a £40 million budget, Grossman pointed out in a Nursing Times interview that almost all of that money was earmarked for the ward housekeeping programme. He was disappointed that there seemed to be little real money or political will to change hospital catering.

Grossman's lifelong interest in history, the arts and heritage has involved him in a number of organisations. He is a former commissioner of the Museums and Galleries Commission, a former commissioner of English Heritage (where he was chairman of the Museums Advisory Committee and the Blue Plaques Panel), and of the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. He was a founding member of the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, past chairman of the National Museums Liverpool, deputy chairman of Liverpool European Capital of Culture, chairman of Culture Northwest and of the Public Monuments and Sculpture Association. He founded the 24 Hour Museum (now Culture24).

He was chairman of the University for the Creative Arts from 2008 to 2012 and a member of the Court of Governors of the LSE from 1996 to 2009 and is now an emeritus governor. He was deputy chair of the Royal Drawing School, a member of the Council of the British School at Rome, a member of the board of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions and a governor of the Building Crafts College. Grossman was chairman of the Churches Conservation Trust from 2007 to 2016 and in 2009 became chairman of the Heritage Alliance – the UK organisation that represents more than 100 leading non-governmental organisations across the heritage sector. In 2015, he was elected for an unprecedented third term as chairman. In 2016, he was appointed chairman of The Royal Parks.

Grossman is chairman of The Royal Parks, having been reappointed for a four-year term in July 2020, to run from 5 July 2020 to 4 July 2024. He is also chairman of Gresham College, a governor of the British Institute at Florence, a governor of the Compton Verney House Trust and a trustee of the Warburg Charitable Trust. He is president of the Arts Society (formerly NADFAS) and patron of the Association for Heritage Interpretation.

Grossman is a Liveryman of The Worshipful Company of Carpenters, an Honorary Liveryman of The Worshipful Company of Glaziers and Past Master of the Worshipful Company of Arts Scholars. He is a fellow of a number of learned societies: The Society of Antiquaries, The Royal Historical Society, The Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and The Royal Society of Medicine.

Source

RICHARD EDEN: Handbag designer Lulu Guinness's ex-husband Valentine, who founded louche Oxford University society, marries actress who played sex addict

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 19, 2024
RICHARD EDEN: He's the second of the eight offspring Lord Moyne fathered by three different women and has, himself, one previous marriage behind him, while his bride's acting career has included a convincing performance as a sex addict in the ITV drama Cracker. So Valentine Guinness, 65, and Vanya Eadie, 58, were never likely to play it entirely safe when they married this week at Marylebone Town Hall. But the couple were certainly more restrained than some of Valentine's old friends from Oxford University might have predicted. While there in the late 1970s, he helped establish the Piers Gaveston Society, a group of uninhibited males who cavorted in fishnet stockings and suspender belts at parties where pretty well anything went.

Through The Keyhole host Loyd Grossman, 73, who also has a £50m pasta sauce fortune, marries Melissa Knatchbull, 63, the ex-wife of Earl Mountbatten of Burma's grandson Michael, EDEN CONFIDENTIAL reveals

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 30, 2024
EDEN CONFIDENTIAL: Famed for his catchphrase 'Who lives in a house like this?' - Loyd Grossman will no doubt be waking up to a feeling of pure marital bliss in his own home today. As I am delighted to disclose that the former Through The Keyhole presenter has this week married Melissa Knatchbull; seven years after they went public with their relationship. Melissa, 63, the ex-wife of Earl Mountbatten of Burma's grandson Michael, had long remained quiet on their union - once telling me: 'I make it a policy not to talk about my private life.' Yet the Four Weddings And A Funeral star is clearly a fan of Grossman's nasal mid-Atlantic drawl and perhaps also his pasta sauces which have made him a £50 million fortune.

Britain's oldest fly-fishing club which counts King Charles as a patron is facing calls to admit women for the first time ever following The Garrick Club's decision to change its men only policy

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 27, 2024
The Flyfishers' Club was established in 1884 and describes itself as a club for gentlemen interested in the art of fly fishing, with around 600 current members. It has a male-only guest policy, except in the case of events. Its current patron is King Charles. But keen fly fishing women have challenged the policy by publicly criticising it for being old fashioned. Marina Gibson said during an event at the Hay Festival: 'I don't go to London that often but if I did, I would just love to go and sit and read a book and talk about fishing to other fishermen'. Alastair Collett, president of the club, told The Telegraph the matter was under consideration and may be put to a membership vote.