Jean-Pierre Coffe
Jean-Pierre Coffe | |
---|---|
Born | Jean-Pierre Henri Marcel Adolphe Coffe 24 March 1938 Lunéville, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France |
Died | 29 March 2016 Lanneray, France | (aged 78)
Occupation | Radio presenter, television presenter, food critic |
Notable credit(s) | Comment c'est fait ? C'est tout Coffe Ça se bouffe pas, ça se mange (France Inter) |
Website | www.jeanpierrecoffe.com |
Jean-Pierre Coffe (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ pjɛʁ kɔf]; 24 March 1938 – 29 March 2016) was a French radio and television presenter, food critic, and author.
Early life and education[]
Jean-Pierre Coffe spent a major part of his childhood in the town where he was born, Lunéville. He never knew his father, mobilized in 1937 and killed on the field of battle in 1940. He was raised by his mother, who took over the family hairdressing salon. His grandmother was a cook and his grandfather a market gardener.
His mother left Lorraine for Paris where he studied at boarding school. At the age of 13, he was seized by a passion for theatre. After completing his studies, he took classes at the Cours Simon and had a number of small jobs at the same time.
Television career[]
Jean-Pierre Coffe then began a career in television in the early 1980s. He joined Canal+ on November 4, 1984 and appeared on a number of occasions in the programs hosted by Michel Denisot. In 1992 and 1993, he made his first appearances in La Grande Famille hosted by Jean-Luc Delarue and Demain hosted by Michel Denisot for the cooking theme.
He then joined the French public television channels where he hosted a cooking program with children titled Comment c'est fait ? ("How is it done?") from 1992 to 1993 on France 3, followed in 1994 by C'est tout Coffe ("This is all Coffe") on France 2. He joined private channel TF1 in 1999 to present Bien jardiner ("Gardening well"), produced by Jean-Luc Delarue, who finally decided to end the broadcast soon after, which marked the end of their friendship. In 2003, he joined Michel Drucker on France 2 where he served as a food critic in the program Vivement dimanche prochain. On 5 September 2012 he announced his departure of the program to spend more time on writing.
Radio career[]
In September 1990 he joined the team of Les Grosses Têtes, a radio program hosted by Philippe Bouvard on RTL, for which he became a regular participant. He left in September 2010 and soon after joined the program On va s'gêner, hosted by Laurent Ruquier on Europe 1, which he left after one season in 2011. In 2014, he returned to Les Grosses Têtes on RTL when Laurent Ruquier took over as presenter. From 1998 to June 2008, he presented the program Ça se bouffe pas, ça se mange on France Inter every Saturday. At the end of the show on June 21, 2008 he announced his forced retirement by France Inter management.
Advertisement[]
In 1997, he appeared in advertising spots for the appliance manufacturer Siemens. In 2001, he appeared in advertising spots for Weight Watchers.
In 2009, as a defender of healthy and natural food, he became famous for appearing on poster campaigns for the hard discount store brand Leader Price.
Books[]
Coffe published many books, ranging from recipes and gardening, to critiques of mass-produced food production and the manufacture of commercial food products. Some of his best-sellers were:
- Le Bon Vivre (Living Well) and Le Vrai Vivre (Authentic Living) in 1992, - Comme à la Maison (Homely cooking) in 1993, - Le Potager Plaisir (The Joy of Home-grown Food) and Le Marché (The Food Market) in 1998, - Fleurs Bonheur (The Joy of Flowers) in 1999, - Le Verger Gourmand (The Greedy Gardener) in 2000, - La Véritable Histoire des Jardins de Versailles (The Trues History of the Gardens of Versailles), with Alain Baraton in 2007, - Les Recettes Inratables de Jean-Pierre Coffe (Jean-Pierre Coffe's Failure-proof Recipes) in 2007, - Mes Confitures (My Jams) in 2008, and - Le Plaisir à Petit Prix (Good Food on a Budget) in 2009.
Private life[]
Jean-Pierre Coffe was a private individual, however he has declared his bisexuality publicly, notably in 2011 during an interview with MFM Radio and in 2013 during France 2's programme La parenthèse inattendue.
Married three times to women, Jean-Pierre Coffe lived his final years with a man, whom he declared himself ready to marry in 2013.
Jean-Pierre Coffe had a son who died shortly after birth and a step-daughter who died aged 35.
Death[]
On 29 March 2016, Coffe died at his home in Lanneray.[1]
Filmography[]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1972 | What a Flash! | ||
1976 | Scrambled Eggs | Le maire | |
1977 | Le dernier baiser | ||
1978 | Violette Nozière | Le docteur Déon | |
1978 | La clé sur la porte | Le collègue prof | |
1979 | Ils sont grands, ces petits | Charles, l'ex-mari | |
1979 | Au bout du bout du banc | Brigitte's husband | |
1979 | The Associate | L'employé du museum d'histoire naturelle | |
1979 | Gros-Câlin | Le Père Joseph | |
1984 | Swann in Love | Aime | |
1985 | All Mixed Up | Le commissaire de police | |
1986 | Suivez mon regard | ||
2008 | Mia and the Migoo | Nénesse | Voice |
2013 | C'est bon | Narrator | Voice, (final film role) |
Honors[]
- Chevalier (Knight) of the Legion of Honour
- Commander of the Order of Agricultural Merit
References[]
- ^ « Jean-Pierre Coffe est mort à l'âge de 78 ans », on rtl.fr, March 29, 2016
External links[]
- 1938 births
- 2016 deaths
- French radio personalities
- French television presenters
- French food writers
- People from Lunéville
- French male non-fiction writers
- LGBT people from France
- Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur