/cdn.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_image/image/66678108/458567936.jpg.0.jpg)
Larger-than-life restaurateur Sirio Maccioni — the man behind seminal French fine dining restaurant Le Cirque, and one of New York’s grandest maitre d’s — has died. He was 88.
Eater has reached out to his son Mauro for more details, though early reports say it was not due to COVID-19.
Maccioni immigrated to New York from Italy and worked at restaurants before opening Le Cirque in 1974. The restaurant became known as one of the city’s top fine dining restaurants, and some of New York’s most acclaimed chefs spent time in its kitchen, including Daniel Boulud, David Bouley, Geoffrey Zakarian, Jacques Torres, and Michael Lomonaco. In 2013, Esquire magazine wrote that “no restaurant in America, perhaps the world, has graduated so many renowned chefs as Le Cirque.”
But the food was almost secondary to the charisma of Maccioni, who built an empire and attracted the most powerful and famous people in New York to his dining room. Luminaries, politicians, and celebrities all made their way to the restaurant, from the Reagans and the Clintons to Sofia Loren and Alec Baldwin. The consummate host — whose restaurant didn’t always treat folks equally — eventually wrote a memoir and made many appearances on television and in film, including a documentary called Le Cirque: A Table in Heaven.
The original Le Cirque moved locations and eventually closed in late 2017. Over the years, it became less known for the food — and had problems like bankruptcy, as well as sexual harassment lawsuit and wage lawsuits — but it continued to be a destination for the well-heeled. Now, there’s no longer an outpost in New York, but Maccioni and his wife Egidiana and children Mario, Marco, and Mauro have since expanded the brand around the world. There have been locations in Las Vegas, New Delhi, and Dubai.
Stay tuned for more.
Good bye to a “Grande Maestro “ of the Italian restaurant scene in NY and all over the world. Thank you for your many contributions . RIP Sirio Maccioni pic.twitter.com/jWtAhmsij4
— Lidia Bastianich (@LidiaBastianich) April 20, 2020
With the death of Sirio Maccioni we have lost the canniest,most intuitive restaurateur of them all.A natural showman, Sirio masterminded an upwardly mobile, well-heeled clientele with insights such as realizing rich people love freebies.
— Mimi Sheraton (@mimisheraton) April 20, 2020
Condolences to Egi and his 3 charming sons