[1] The expression is derived from the slang use of the term "crumpet" to refer to a woman who is regarded as an object of sexual desire.
[2] The first person to be called "the thinking man's crumpet" was Joan Bakewell, by humourist Frank Muir, following her appearances in highbrow television discussion programmes such as BBC2's Late Night Line-Up.
[3] Bakewell is still synonymous with the phrase, but it has subsequently been applied to other high-profile women such as Anne Gregg,[4] Joanna Lumley,[4] Kate Bush and Felicity Kendal,[4] and, more recently, Helen Mirren,[5] Jennifer Saunders, Lucy Worsley and Gillian Anderson.
[6][7] In a poll in the Radio Times in 2003, Nigella Lawson received the most votes to be the readers' "thinking man's crumpet".
[9] Actors Benedict Cumberbatch, Colin Firth and Bill Nighy have been repeatedly called by the press "the thinking woman's crumpet",[10][11][12][13][14][15] as has historian Michael Wood.