Keith Floyd

British chef, restaurateur, and television personality
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Keith Floyd, was a British chef, restaurateur, and television personality who starred in a score of TV programs, beginning with Floyd on Fish (1985), and created a more spontaneous, improvisational style of British cooking show than had previously existed. Floyd combined rakish charm, irreverent wit, and boundless enthusiasm for food and wine (exemplified by the ever-present wine glass from which he regularly slurped as he cooked) with a considerable culinary bravura. He traveled and cooked on location—without a formal script and under sometimes primitive local conditions—on such shows as Floyd on Food (1986), Floyd on Spain (1992), Far Flung Floyd (1998), Floyd’s Fjord Fiesta (1998), Floyd Uncorked (1998), and Floyd’s India (2001).

Floyd was compelled to drop out of Wellington School at age 16 when his family could no longer afford to send him there. After working briefly as a journalist for the Bristol Evening Post newspaper, he discovered a talent for cooking while serving in the army. He opened (1966) his first restaurant, Floyd’s Bistro, in Bristol at age 22, and within a few years he had established a catering business and several more restaurants, including one in Provence in France.

Although his restaurants garnered accolades from both critics and customers, Floyd proved to be a poor businessman. He lost all of his restaurants, struggled with depression and four divorces, and eventually declared bankruptcy. He later lived in France, though in 2007 he launched his last venture, Floyd’s Brasserie, in Phuket, Thailand. Floyd also wrote some two dozen cookbooks, many based on his TV shows, as well as two autobiographies, Out of the Frying Pan (2001) and Stirred but Not Shaken (2009). The TV documentary Keith Meets Keith was broadcast on the day he died.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.