You know her for the Italian cookbooks and the TV cooking shows. But did you know that this bestselling author got her start writing for a free Portsmouth weekly newspaper? Mary Ann Esposito offers a candid look at her busy life in this fascinating interview with her first publisher.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Writer Jean Kerr is editor of Taste of the Seacoast magazine. Back in the early eighties, she was the editor and publisher of a local arts and entertainment weekly called re:Ports. Kerr ran a Culinary Arts column which she occasionally wrote under a pseudonym. Most weeks, however, it was written by a local Seacoast cook and writer by the name of Mary Ann Esposito. Kerr is proud to say she was the first to publish Esposito’s work.
Since then, Mary Ann has risen to international prominence as a writer and chef. She is the author of nine bestselling cookbooks, the host and co-producer of the longest-running cooking show on television, Ciao Italia, with a per-episode audience of 1.2 million people. I consider my self fortunate that our paths have crossed again.
Taste Magazine talks to Ciao Italia creator
about cooking, writing, and seventeen years on camera.
More than 20 years ago, Mary Ann Esposito enrolled in a writing course at the University of New Hampshire near her home in Durham. Their weekly assignment was to bring a piece into class each week with the aim of submitting it for publication. Re:Ports, a local arts newspaper, began running her column frequently but her aims were higher. She submitted a column to the in-flight magazine for Alitalia. The response was positive, but she says, "They wrote back and said we really liked your article but we can’t publish it because you’re not famous." Undaunted, she submitted a story on how the tomato came to Italy to Attenzione, an Italian-interest magazine published in New York. Finally, she was able to go back to her writing class with the news that she was being published in a national publication.
How she managed to find time to write is anyone’s guess. At the time, she was running a catering business, teaching Italian cooking at a local adult education center, beginning work on her master’s degree and raising two kids. Her ability to juggle numerous priorities led to her continued success and to the pilot for Ciao Italia which first aired in 1989. When New Hampshire Public Television accepted her proposal for a new Italian cooking show, she was unprepared for what came next.
On a hot August day in 1988, the television crew arrived. "They came to the house and I had no idea what this would entail — I didn’t have a clue. Twenty two people arrived at the house and started rearranging things. It was two o’clock before they were ready to shoot. The producer just kept saying, ‘Mary Ann, you have to be up, up up! Up, up, up!"
"The theme was an Italian picnic and I remember sitting on the lawn after we finished shooting sometime around seven o’clock at night and just being exhausted. It was hot and I was just mentally tired."
The next day, when her husband asked how it had gone, I said ‘You know, I hope they don’t do this program. It’s too mental, too exhausting, too draining —this up, up, up."
Thankfully, she rose to the challenge. The station sent the pilot out and it got a great reception so the station decided to film 13 episodes. Looking back she says, "I would hate to see those first shows…I would die!" Still, she recalls the day the first show aired, listening to NHPTV host Fritz Weatherbee introduce the program "and I thought, you know, dreams really do come true. That was the beginning of Ciao and now we’ve just finished our 17th season."
Music of Astronomy, 875BC - 1790 May 23, 2008 CONCORD -- Harpsichordist, astronomer and historian R.P. Hale presents a special Friday evening event, “Qui Est in Coelis,” his acclaimed program of music spanning over 2,600 years of various cultures celebrating astronomy, the seasons, and the skies. H...
Barbara Walters Live Onstage May 23, 2008 PORTSMOUTH -- The first lady of broadcast journalism – an award-winning journalist known for her talent as a news anchor and for her historic and insightful interviews of leading politicians and celebrities – will discuss her new memoir, Audition. Vouch...
Mother Courage May 23 - 24, 2008 PORTSMOUTH -- Our mainstage season wraps up in May with the Senior Youth Repertory Company production of Bertolt Brecht’s epic masterpiece Mother Courage and Her Children. Through Brecht’s stark vision, the play relentlessly questions the distinctions b...
Whittier Yard Sale May 24, 2008 AMESBURY -- Whittier Home’s Yard, Bake, and Plant Sale Visit Whittier’s garden and buy some quality “junque,” homemade baked goods in the Whittier’s Cafe, and beautiful flowers and plantings for your garden. At the Whittier Home Garden, 86 Friend St., A...
Lighthouse Open House May 24, 2008 NEW CASTLE -- The Friends of Portsmouth Harbor Lighthouse are holding their first open house of the 2008 season on Saturday, May 24, 2008,
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Lilac Festival May 25, 2008 PORTSMOUTH – Annual Lilac Festival at Little Harbor Road near South Cemetery on Memorial Day weekend, May 25. Please call the Wentworth Coolidge Mansion for details.
TO THE WOMAN WHO CALLED ABOUT LILAC FESTIVAL
My sincere apologies for giving you t...
Mother Courage and Her Children May 25, 2008 PORTSMOUTH -- Our main stage season wraps up in May with the Senior Youth Repertory Company production of Bertolt Brecht’s epic masterpiece Mother Courage and Her Children. Through Brecht’s stark vision, the play relentlessly questions the distinctions ...
Be a Herbal Apprentice Course May 28, 2008 CANTERBURY -- Fee: $175, members $160
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Naked in the Woods May 29, 2008 PORTLAND -- Jim Motavalli will explore the story of Joseph Knowles who, in 1913, went alone, naked and without supplies, into the Maine woods. The stunt, sponsored by the “Boston Post,” proved to be a hoax, one of several examples of nature fakery in t...
Walking in Space May 30, 2008 CONCORD -- This special night is in commemoration of the first American spacewalk by Ed White on June 3, 1965. Join Planetarium Educator Mal Cameron as he explains how astronauts prepare for a spacewalk, how they do it, and what dangers are lurking if t...