I’m A Celeb’s Frankie Dettori has revealed how he learned English by watching BBC soap EastEnders after moving to the UK alone aged just 14.
The Italian sporting legend, 52, made the revelation during Friday’s episode and admitted how his time away from home left him so homesick he’d ‘cry every night’.
Frankie recalled: ‘I said, ‘Dad, I’m going to be a jockey’ He said, ‘Right, if you’re going to be a jockey, I want you to take it serious, so I’m going to send you for six months in England, six months in France”.
‘I stayed in a bed and breakfast. It was hard. I was homesick, cry every night. About three months [I cried]. Not always. I learned the phrase, ‘What is this?’.
He then explained Danielle Harold, who played Lola Pearce in the soap, how he brushed up on his English by watching the goings on in Walford.
Brushing up his skills: I’m A Celeb ‘s Frankie Dettori, 52, has revealed how he learned English by watching BBC soap EastEnders after moving to the UK alone aged just 14
Icon: The Italian sporting legend made the revelation during Thursday’s episode and admitted how his time away from home left him so homesick he’d ‘cry every night’ (Pam St Clement pictured as Pat Butcher on EastEnders in 1995)
Danielle replied: ‘Do you know how many people say to me, ‘I learned English watching EastEnders’. It’s probably the worst place to learn’.
Frankie, who now lives in England, has a career spanning over 35 years.
He has been British flat racing Champion Jockey three times and has ridden the winners of 287 Group 1 races including 23 winners of the British Classic Races.
It comes after Frankie arrived alongside former professional boxer Tony Bellew, 40, and was met with the other celebrities during their first trial on Thursday night.
And as they settled into camp life, Frankie was not one to shy away from chatting about his work life on his first night as he revealed why he didn’t retire when he first announced it to the world.
In a conversation with Jamie Lynn Spears, Frankie explained that he found it ‘too hard to walk away from winning’, which made him decide to continue working.
Washing up at the creek in main camp, Jamie Lynn asked Frankie: ‘So you have obviously won a lot of races, how does that feel when you’re out there? How much is it your control that makes it.. is it different when you have a great one [horse]?’
Frankie explained: ‘Of course, like in any sport, when you’re at top level the margins are so small. It’s a bit like formula 1. Why is one driver faster than the other when they’ve got the same cars?’
Honest:’I stayed in a bed and breakfast. It was hard. I was homesick, cry every night. About three months [I cried]. Not always. I learned the phrase, ‘What is this’
TV fan: He then explained Danielle Harold (pictured) who played Lola Pearce in the soap, how he brushed up on his English by watching the goings on in Walford
Not too sure: Danielle replied: ‘Do you know how many people say to me, ‘I learned English watching EastEnders’. It’s probably the worst place to learn’ (Danielle pictured on the soap)
Throwback: A young Frankie pictured in 1990
Jamie Lynn said: ‘Just that one little edge they have.’
Frankie said: ‘I was born in racing, my dad was a jockey. I was practically born on a horse really. Then I had good teachers… the rest is history.’
Admitting he changed his mind about retiring, Frankie explained: ‘I got to the beginning of the season, I thought I’m 52, I’ve had a great life riding, and I’m on the top at the moment.
‘I might as well stop at the top. So I announced: ‘Right, this is my last year, going to say my last goodbyes.’ Announced it to the world, went to California for four months, smashed it, did really well.
Champion: Frankie has been British flat racing Champion Jockey three times and has ridden the winners of 287 Group 1 races including 23 winners of the British Classic Races
‘Then I came back to England, kept on winning, kept on winning… and I got to August, the season stops in October and I thought, ‘I don’t really want to retire!”
He added: ‘You’re winning, the crowd is shouting your name.’
Jamie Lynn agreed: ‘It’s hard to walk away from that, right?’
She added in the Bush Telegraph: ‘He’s been a disciplined athlete since he was born. That’s someone you want on your side.’
I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! continues on Saturday at 9:30pm on ITV1 and ITVX.