Celebrity MasterChef Australia series 1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Celebrity MasterChef Australia
Season 1
Judges
No. of contestants18
WinnerEamon Sullivan
Runner-upKirk Pengilly
Release
Original networkNetwork Ten
Original release30 September (2009-09-30) –
25 November 2009 (2009-11-25)
Series chronology
Next →
Series 2

The first series of the Australian cooking game show Celebrity MasterChef Australia began production in early September 2009, and premiered on Network Ten on 30 September 2009.[1] Matt Preston, George Calombaris and Gary Mehigan returned as judges for the show; however Sarah Wilson did not reprise her role as host from the first season of MasterChef Australia.[2]

Former world-record holder & Olympic medalist Eamon Sullivan won the series, taking home $50,000 for charity Swim Survive Stay Alive.

Contestants[edit]

Celebrity MasterChef Australia features 18 celebrities as contestants. Network Ten officially revealed the first batch of contestants on the 3 September 2009 episode of The 7pm Project.[3] However, several contestants were revealed before Ten's official announcement of their participation.

The contestants include:[4]

Contestant Occupation Status
Eamon Sullivan Olympic freestyle swimmer Winner
Kirk Pengilly INXS musician Runner-Up
Rachael Finch Miss Universe Australia 2009 Third Place
Alex Lloyd Singer-songwriter Eliminated Semi Final 3
Michelle Bridges The Biggest Loser personal trainer Eliminated Semi Final 2
Simon Katich New South Wales Blues cricketer Eliminated Semi Final 1
Faustina "Fuzzy" Agolley Video Hits presenter Eliminated Heat 6
Peter Rowsthorn Actor & stand-up comedian
George Negus Journalist & television presenter Eliminated Heat 5
Ryan O'Keefe Sydney Swans midfielder
Wendy Harmer Comedian & radio presenter Eliminated Heat 4
Alex Perry Fashion designer
Anna Bligh Politician Eliminated Heat 3
Simon Westaway Film & television actor
Peter FitzSimons Former radio broadcaster & rugby player Eliminated Heat 2
Kathleen de Leon Jones Singer, dancer & actress (Hi-5)
Indira Naidoo Journalist & television presenter Eliminated Heat 1
Josh Thomas Comedian

Ten initially announced that actor Steve Bisley would also be a participant, but he later withdrew from the show. Ten cited a scheduling conflict for his departure, though the ABC have claimed that Network Ten are using it as an excuse; the announcement of his participation on the show was the same day the actor was charged with assaulting his ex-wife Sally Burleigh during an argument between the former couple.[5] Rachael Finch previously auditioned for the first series of MasterChef Australia, but did not make past the initial rounds.[6]

Special guests[edit]

  • Matt Moran - Heat 1 Pressure Test
  • Brent Savage - Heat 2 Pressure Test
  • Kylie Kwong - Heat 3 Pressure Test
  • Stephanie Alexander - Heat 4 Pressure Test
  • Tony Bilson - Heat 5 Pressure Test
  • Katrina Kanetani - Heat 6 Pressure Test
  • Steven Krasicki - Semi Final 2
  • Adriano Zumbo - Semi Final 3
  • Andrew McConnell - Grand Final

Episodes[edit]

Ep# Original airdate Episode Title / Event Total viewers (five metro cities) Nightly Ranking Weekly Ranking
Heats
1 Wednesday 30 September 2009 Heat 1 - Indira Naidoo, Kirk Pengilly and Josh Thomas. Pengilly moved on to the semi-finals. 1,363,000 #2 #12
2 Wednesday 7 October 2009 Heat 2 - Michelle Bridges, Kathleen de Leon and Peter FitzSimons. Bridges moved on to the semi-finals. 1,090,000 #10 #31
3 Wednesday 14 October 2009 Heat 3 - Eamon Sullivan, Anna Bligh and Simon Westaway. Sullivan moved on to the semi-finals. 1,187,000 #7 #20
4 Wednesday 21 October 2009 Heat 4 - Alex Perry, Wendy Harmer and Simon Katich. Katich moved on to the semi-finals. 1,279,000 #3 #13
5 Wednesday 28 October 2009 Heat 5 - Rachael Finch, George Negus and Ryan O'Keefe. Finch moved on to the semi-finals. 1,150,000 #8 #26
6 Wednesday 4 November 2009 Heat 6 - Fuzzy Agolley, Alex Lloyd and Peter Rowsthorn. Lloyd moved on to semi-finals. 1,224,000 #6 #21
Finals
7 Wednesday 11 November 2009 Semi Final 1 - The first semi-final consisted of the six semi-finalists competing in an individual Mystery Box challenge, and a Christmas lunch-themed Invention Test where they competed in pairs, with one member of the worst performing pair to be eliminated. Paired with Alex Lloyd, Simon Katich was the contestant eliminated. 1,124,000 #6 #23
8 Wednesday 18 November 2009 Semi Final 2 - The five remaining contestants were required to staff the kitchen at Altitude Restaurant in Sydney. Contestants were allocated a course, and following service they must present the dish they have prepared for service to the judges for tasting, with the contestant with the worst dish to be eliminated. Michelle Bridges was the contestant eliminated. 1,076,000 #8 #29
9 Tuesday 24 November 2009 Semi Final 3 - The four remaining contestants competed in a Pressure Test involving recreating a croquembouche, with the contestant with the least accomplished dessert to be eliminated. Alex Lloyd was the contestant eliminated. 1,083,000 #7 #27
10 Wednesday 25 November 2009 Final - The final involved three rounds, a Taste Test, a dessert-only Invention Test and a Pressure Test, with points being won as the contestants progressed. Based on accumulated points, Rachael Finch and Kirk Pengilly came third and second respectively, with Eamon Sullivan declared the winner of Celebrity MasterChef Australia. 1,297,000 #1 #9

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Celebrity Masterchef will begin production in September". Archived from the original on 19 July 2009. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
  2. ^ Knox, David (26 July 2009). "Celebrity MasterChef chop-chops Sarah Wilson". tvtonight.com.au. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  3. ^ Premier Bligh for Celebrity MasterChef
  4. ^ MasterChef: Negus, Pengilly, Thomas, Westaway.
  5. ^ Steve Bisley no longer taking part in Celebrity MasterChef, after assault charge - Herald Sun, 10 September 2009
  6. ^ Finch-fried judges

External links[edit]

Preceded by MasterChef Australia spin-off
30 September 2009 – 25 November 2009
Succeeded by