R.I.P.

Julia Child

Died August 13th, 2004

LOS ANGELES — Julia Child, whose chirping words of encouragement and unpretentious style brought French cuisine to American homes through her television series and books, died Friday. She was 91.

A 6-foot-2 American folk hero, “The French Chef” was known to her public as Julia. She showed a delight not only in preparing good food but in sharing it, and ended her landmark public television lessons at a set table with the wish, “Bon appetit.”

Child died at her home in an assisted-living center in Montecito, about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles, said her niece, Philadelphia Cousins.

“She passed away in her sleep,” Cousins said. “She was with family and friends and her kitten, Minou. She had cookbooks and many paintings by her husband Paul around the house.”

Child, who died two days before her 92nd birthday, had been suffering from kidney failure, Cousins said.

“America has lost a true national treasure,” Nicholas Latimer, director of publicity for Child’s publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said in a statement. “She will be missed terribly.”

Picked by The Wishman.