![]() ![]() ![]() Seemingly reacting to the biography, Argento posted a picture to Instagram last week. According to Leerhsen, Argento continued texting about wanting to break up, apparently unaware Bourdain had already hanged himself. Later that day, Bourdain asked: “Is there anything I can do?” Argento replied, “Stop busting my balls.” “Okay,” Bourdain responded. But I hope you will have mercy on me for these feelings.” I meant and mean everything I have ever said to you. I am not jealous that you have been with another man. On June 8, 2018, the day of Bourdain’s suicide, after images of Argento and French journalist Hugo Clément in the lobby of Rome’s Hotel de Russie surfaced online:īourdain: “I am okay. Bourdain allegedly responded, “Because you will feel really horrible and neurotic … Also because I love you and it makes me frantic with worry and concern when you harm yourself or are unhappy.” Here are some of the alleged conversations:Īccording to Leerhsen, Argento asked Bourdain in 2016 for “a good reason not to do Charlie ,” not long after they met for the first time in May of that year on the “Parts Unknown” set. Leerhsen also includes private text messages and emails exchanged between her and Bourdain from a “confidential source.” She’s listed in the “Down and Out” acknowledgments as one of the people Leerhsen spoke with “and did not mind being named,” though the actor recently told the New York Times that she “wrote clearly to this man that he could not publish anything I said to him.” His book shares an excerpt from an email she sent him in which she cited Oscar Wilde (“It is always Judas who writes the biography”). ![]() Leerhsen writes that the qualities that Bourdain’s former boss, the late Formerly Joe’s owner Andy Menschel, “brought out in … I believe, figured very strongly in his final decision in that hotel room.” Texts with ArgentoĪrgento declined to speak on the record with Leerhsen, but that did not keep the author from quoting her. Leerhsen writes, “Not being able to end that relationship may have cost him his life.” Other people are also brought into the blame game. Leerhsen repeatedly suggests that messages from Argento, Bourdain’s girlfriend at the time of his death, triggered his decision to kill himself. ![]() ‘Down and Out in Paradise’ by Charles Leerhsen features revelatory text messages between late chef Anthony Bourdain, his estranged wife and actor Asia Argento. It also seeks concrete explanations for suicide, which, as Times columnist Mary McNamara wrote recently, makes it a “whodunit in which the answer” - addiction and mental illness - “is obvious.”īooks Author responds to family’s unrest over controversial new Anthony Bourdain book The Times dipped into “Down and Out in Paradise: The Life of Anthony Bourdain,” by Charles Leerhsen, to break down what’s making some relatives and friends of the Emmy winner cringe.īourdain’s brother, Christopher, has called the book “hurtful and defamatory fiction.” However, in an e mail sent last week to The Times, Leerhsen said other Bourdain family and friends with advance copies “have confirmed that my take on the Bourdain family dynamic is accurate.”īut first, a word of warning: Leerhsen relies on many confidential sources and quotes some people, including Bourdain’s girlfriend, Asia Argento, and separated wife, Ottavia, who won’t confirm they spoke to him on the record. 11 publication date - especially among those who knew Bourdain best. A new biography about the late chef and TV personality Anthony Bourdain, who took his own life while filming CNN’s “Parts Unknown” in 2018, has been raising hackles well in advance of its Oct. ![]()
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