Current:Home > ContactGreat British Bake Off's Prue Leith Recalls 13-Year Affair With Husband of Her Mom's Best Friend -ProsperityEdge
Great British Bake Off's Prue Leith Recalls 13-Year Affair With Husband of Her Mom's Best Friend
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:15:40
Prue Leith is reflecting on past confessions she may have left under-proofed.
More than a decade after the longtime Great British Bake Off judge revealed her affair with Rayne Kruger—who was the husband of her mother's best friend Nan Munro—in her 2012 memoir Relish: My Life on a Plate, Prue is sharing why she decided to go public with the story.
"I thought a lot about this and I thought, should I put everything in? Or shall I be discrete and careful?" she said on the May 5 episode of Kate Thornton's podcast White Wine Question Time. "And I decided that the rule should be, if it's interesting it should go in. If it's boring it shouldn't."
Prue and Rayne's affair went on for 13 years before they married in 1974.
"If there are things in your life you're not exactly proud of, but they would be interesting to the reader, you should try to tackle them," the 83-year-old continued. "So I did write about a long affair I had with my husband before we married and he was married at the time to somebody else, to a wonderful woman."
Rayne, who was 20 years Prue's senior, acted as a mentor to her and was the chairman of her company during their extramarital relationship. Prue credits this as a large reason as to why the two were able to keep their affair a secret for so long.
"It was easier, in a way, because he was a family friend and he was the chairman of my company," Prue explained. "Everybody knew that we were great friends and that he was my mentor because he was 20 years older than me."
And as to why Prue never asked Rayne to leave his wife? "Because I was very happy," she continued. "I was building my business. I had none of the duties of a wife, and I had all the pleasures of somebody who loved me. I wasn't pressing for marriage."
But after 13 years of secrecy, Prue said she turned 34 and, as she thinks happens to many women, "you suddenly want a baby so badly."
"At that point I thought, I've got to leave Rayne because he's not going to leave Nan," Prue explained. "I left him and I left him by the simple expedient of running away with somebody who said he was in love with me, and I thought, 'That'll do.'"
And run away she did, going on to explain that she and the unnamed man traveled throughout Austria, Egypt and "wherever place" for about a month.
And while Prue admits that she and her mystery lover soon realized running away was a mistake, it helped Rayne realize that the only reason his marriage to Nan worked was because of his affair with Prue.
As Prue shared on the podcast, she got a call from Rayne saying that he'd left Nan while she was in Tel Aviv: "He rang me up and said, 'Come home. We'll have a baby. I can't live without you.'"
It was true. They wed in 1974, just months after welcoming son Danny. They also adopted a daughter, Li-Da Kruger, and were together until Rayne's death in 2002.
In 2016, Prue married John Playfair, a retired clothes designer.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (76)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Congress is eying immigration limits as GOP demands border changes in swap for Biden overseas aid
- NASCAR inks media rights deals with Fox, NBC, Amazon and Warner Bros. What we know
- Iranian cyber criminals targeting Israeli technology hack into Pennsylvania water system
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- U.S. moves to protect wolverines as climate change melts their mountain refuges
- Young activists who won Montana climate case want to stop power plant on Yellowstone River
- Hearing in Minnesota will determine if man imprisoned for murder was wrongfully convicted
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Search remains suspended for 4 missing crewmembers in Mississippi River
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Police officers in Maryland face lawsuit after they shoot dog who was later euthanized
- Gary Oldman had 'free rein' in spy thriller 'Slow Horses' — now back for Season 3
- 'Sex and the City' star Cynthia Nixon goes on hunger strike to call for cease-fire in Gaza
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Check your child’s iPhone for this new feature: The warning police are issuing to parents
- Black employees file federal discrimination suit against Chicago utility
- Suicide deaths reached record high in 2022, but decreased for kids and young adults, CDC data shows
Recommendation
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
OPEC+ suppliers struggle to agree on cuts to oil production even as prices tumble
Deutsche Bank was keen to land a ‘whale’ of a client in Trump, documents at his fraud trial show
Iranian cyber criminals targeting Israeli technology hack into Pennsylvania water system
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Mavericks likely will end up in the hands of one of Las Vegas’ most powerful families
Vice President Harris will attend COP28 climate conference in Dubai
Ohio police review finds 8 officers acted reasonably in shooting death of Jayland Walker