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September 15, 2009

Keith Floyd R.I.P. Best of Floyd on France - Video Obituary

RT @mrjyn - Keith Floyd R.I.P. - http://j.mp/Mrp2G - Best of Floyd on France - Video Obituary #YouTube #video -

Keith Floyd specialised in cooking in the most extraordinary places. With a whisk in one hand, a glass of wine in the other and wearing his trademark bow-tie, Keith Floyd transformed the face of television cookery.

Whether rustling up a spicy prawn dish on a beach in Thailand, 40-clove garlic chicken in Provence or jambalaya in Louisiana, Floyd's idiosyncratic, often shambolic, style of presentation endeared him to millions of viewers around the world.

After working as everything from a potato peeler to a dishwasher, Keith Floyd opened his first restaurant, Floyd's Bistro, in Bristol. He was a mere 22 years old. His culinary style, with its emphasis on fish, proved a hit and he was soon running three establishments.

The 1985 series Floyd on Fish established him as a star.
The first episode, for example, featured Floyd cooking on a trawler while out at sea, meeting other chefs and demonstrating their recipes. But Floyd's lack of business acumen, and a staggering propensity to distribute largesse to all and sundry, soon proved his downfall, just as they would throughout his career.

After selling up, he sojourned in France for a while before buying a restaurant there. This too, was a failure and Floyd returned to Bristol and opened yet another bistro. This restaurant, situated near the city's BBC studios, was frequented by a television producer and bon viveur by the name of David Pritchard. It was Pritchard who first recognised the star potential of the place's eccentric, Stranglers-loving, patrons.

As a presenter, Keith Floyd was unique. Well lubricated with the ubiquitous glass of wine, both booze and banter would flow as he directed his long-suffering cameraman Clive to show either his face or the dish with regular commands like "back to me". Additionally, Pritchard would often order scenes to be re-shot, with a recharged glass each time so, as Floyd later admitted:

"I used to come off those shoots just wrecked."

It should probably have failed, but the alchemy produced by the flamboyant chef and the immediacy of Pritchard's production style proved an instant hit.

Series after series followed - Floyd on Food, on France, Spain, Italy, Australia, Floyd's American Pie and Far Flung Floyd, to name but a few. And the books of the series made Floyd a wealthy man.

But the good times were not to last. Having ploughed a million pounds into his dream pub, The Maltsters Arms in Devon, Keith Floyd lost the lot.

His media commitments prevented him from spending much time there and not even the presence of superchef-in-waiting Jean-Christophe Novelli in the kitchen was consolation for diners who wanted to meet the man himself. Floyd eventually went bankrupt, allegedly after he accepted a £36,000 cheque for a drinks order. The cheque bounced.

And matters got even worse when the BBC canceled his shows. In an era of Nigella, Gordon, Jamie and a re-emergent Delia, the airwaves were packed with cookery programmes.

More recently, Floyd appeared on channel Five and had been in negotiations with the BBC about a return. But many bridges had been burned. He fell out spectacularly with David Pritchard and was bitter, both about his treatment by the BBC and his own legacy.

"We don't cook any more, we just watch TV programmes about cookery," he told one interviewer. "Nobody takes cookery seriously now, it's just cheap entertainment. I'm totally to blame. I started it all and now I'm going to go down in history for having started a series of culinary game shows.

"It makes me terribly sad."