Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Anthony Bourdain, host of ‘Parts Unknown,’ dies

- Jayme Deerwester

Anthony Bourdain, the outspoken celebrity chef, author and host of CNN’s “Parts Unknown,” has died at age 61.

CNN reported that Bourdain’s friend chef Eric Ripert found him unresponsi­ve in his hotel room in eastern France and called his death a suicide. The news came just three days after fashion designer Kate Spade killed herself.

The New York Times and People reported Bourdain had been staying at Hotel le Chambard in Kaysersber­g, in the Alsace region of France. CNN confirmed he was there shooting footage for “Parts Unknown.”

Christian de Rocquigny du Fayel, the public prosecutor in nearby Colmar, told both outlets that Bourdain’s cause of death was suicide by hanging. “At this stage, we have no reason to suspect foul play,” he said.

“It is with extraordin­ary sadness we can confirm the death of our friend and colleague, Anthony Bourdain,” CNN said in a statement. “His love of great adventure, new friends, fine food and drink and the remarkable stories of the world made him a unique storytelle­r.”

Bourdain, who was born in New York and raised in New Jersey, graduated from the Culinary Institute of America and rose to nationwide prominence as executive chef at New York’s Brasserie Les Halles.

He then began transition­ing into the second phase of his career, turning a 1999 New Yorker story called “Don’t Eat This” into the best-selling book “Kitchen Confidenti­al,” offering foodies a glimpse at what goes on behind the doors of their favorite restaurant­s and insider tips like why they should never order fish on Monday. He was also frank about his past heroin use and the prevalence of substance abuse in the culinary world.

“Kitchen Confidenti­al” spawned two TV series: a Food Network travelogue called “A Cook’s Tour” and a short-lived Fox sitcom based on his career and personal foibles, starring a then up-andcoming Bradley Cooper.

He became a household name with his next series, the Travel Channel’s “No Reservatio­ns,” which followed him as he traveled the world in search of life-changing culinary and cultural experience­s.

The show also sometimes made him a witness to history, like in 2006 when he and his fixer found themselves trapped in Beirut as the Israeli-Lebanese conflict broke out. A decade later, Bourdain and President Barack Obama supped together at a hole-in-the-wall restaurant in the Vietnamese capital, Hanoi – a meal that became known as the “noodle summit.”

In one of his final interviews with the Bergen Record’s (201) Magazine, Bourdain explained that he focused more on taking risks than pleasing the audience. It paid off: Those gambles led to a dozen Emmy nomination­s and four wins.

“In my opinion, if you start thinking about what people like about the show, or who’s watching, you repeat yourself,” he said in April.

Despite his success on TV, he continued cranking out magazine articles and books.

He was also outspoken on political and social-justice issues. When the immigratio­n debate reached a full boil, he defended Mexican and Central American restaurant workers as “the backbone of the industry.” Through his girlfriend, actress Asia Argento, who has accused Harvey Weinstein of assault, he became a prominent male activist in the Me Too movement.

 ?? JOE BRIER FOR USA TODAY ?? Chef-turned-TV host Anthony Bourdain, whose legacy reaches beyond food into cultural exchange and social justice, has died at age 61.
JOE BRIER FOR USA TODAY Chef-turned-TV host Anthony Bourdain, whose legacy reaches beyond food into cultural exchange and social justice, has died at age 61.

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