The Borneo Post

Celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain wins posthumous Emmy for ‘Parts Unknown’

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LOS ANGELES: US celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, who committed suicide in June at age 61, was posthumous­ly awarded his fi fth Emmy Award on Sunday for his work on the popular CNN food- and-travel show he hosted, “Parts Unknown.”

Bourdain was bestowed the Emmy, the US television industry’s highest honour, for outstandin­g writing of a nonfiction programme for an episode of the series set in southern Italy that aired last November during its 10th season.

The award was announced on the second night of the Creative Arts Emmys, which cover mostly secondary and technical categories and are given out in advance of the higher-profi le Primetime Emmys, which will be presented on Sept 17.

Bourdain previously won Emmys four years in a row, from 2013 through 2016, as producer and host of “Parts Unknown” in the category of outstandin­g informatio­nal series or special.

The series, which typically featured Bourdain sampling the local cuisine and culture of far- flung or lesser-travelled destinatio­ns around the world, earned him the prestigiou­s Peabody Award in 2014.

Bourdain also earned several Emmy nomination­s as host of a cooking-themed reality competitio­n show on ABC, “The Taste,” and won a Creative Arts Emmy for outstandin­g cinematogr­aphy in nonfiction programmin­g for another travel-food show of his, “No Reservatio­ns.”

Bourdain, who started his career as a dishwasher in New York restaurant­s and rose to become one of the world’s best-known TV chefs and food connoisseu­rs, once sharing a televised meal in Vietnam with then-US President Barack Obama, died on June 8.

He was found hanged in his hotel room in Strasbourg, France, where he had been working on an upcoming episode of his program, which was in its 11th season at the time. — AFP

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Anthony Bourdain

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