Anthony Bourdain’s mother Gladys Bourdain remembers her son as someone who was “feisty and very talented,” as well as someone who was a “lover of people of all kinds.”
The celebrity chef died of apparent suicide by hanging on Friday. His colleague and fellow chef Éric Ripert found Anthony unresponsive in a hotel room in France, where the CNN star was visiting for his show Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown.
According to Today, Gladys learned of Anthony’s death from his younger brother, Christopher. She told the news outlet she had last heard from Anthony on Mother’s Day. When asked if there were any signs something was wrong, she replied, “not a one.”
Anthony graduated from the Institute in 1978 and went on to cook for a number of restaurants, including The Supper Club and Coco Pazzo Teatro. However, his career would soon extend beyond the kitchen. In the 1990s, Anthony started writing. He would go on to pen a number of books, including Kitchen Confidential.
Gladys told Today her son had an “incredible vocabulary” and that his second grade teacher even suggested moving him to a private school because he had already surpassed his peers in reading.
“He didn’t disguise anything or take on any act of persona,” Gladys told Today. “He was who he was, and it was out there for everyone to see.”
“Anthony gave all of himself in everything that he did,” she wrote in a statement shared via Twitter. “His brilliant, fearless spirit touched and inspired so many, and his generosity knew no bounds. He was my love, my rock, my protector. I am beyond devastated. My thoughts are with his family. I would ask that you respect their privacy and mine.”
Source: E! News