Robert Lawrence Balzer

Robert Lawrence Balzer (June 25, 1912 – December 2, 2011) has been called the first serious wine journalist in the United States.

Early life edit

Balzer was born in Des Moines, Iowa.[1] At the age of 24, he was put in charge of the wine department of his family’s grocery/gourmet market in Los Angeles, California. Because he knew nothing about wine, Balzer quickly educated himself on the subject. Balzer soon championed quality California wines and stocked his shelves with the best American wines available. He promoted wine in his customer newsletter and was asked by Will Rogers, Jr. to write a regular wine column in his local newspaper in 1937.[2]

Accomplishments edit

 
Cambodia's Buddhist elite before Balzer's (left) ordination. He is speaking to the Samdech Dhammalikket (right; *?1873, of Wat Langka, វត្តលង្ការ), seated between are his preceptor Bhante Dharmawara (1889-1999; 2nd from right) next to him in the corner is: Indanano Phul Tés (1891–1966).
 
Balzer as Buddhist monk in Wat Phrachumsagar, March 1955.

In 1948, Balzer published California’s Best Wines, the first of his eleven books. His wine writings include articles published in Travel Holiday magazine for over twenty years, a weekly wine column in the Los Angeles Times Magazine, and Robert Lawrence Balzer’s Private Guide to Food and Wine. He also hosted a daily broadcast "A Word on Wine" on Los Angeles' classical radio station KFAC for many years. His final book Hollywood and Wine, published and available online, included vignettes of his personal relationships with Hollywood celebrities and wine luminaries.

In the 1950s he worked for United Press in Asia, at the same time producing propaganda pieces for the US Information Service. After reporting on the coronation of Norodom Suramarit in March, 1955, his agency arranged for his widely publicized twelve day stay in the Wat Phrachumsagar (វត្តប្រជុំសាគរ). Present at his ordination was the creme of Cambodian Buddhism, his preceptor Dharmawara, who was taken to the US for the first time in 1955 by the USIA.

Balzer was on a similar propaganda assignment in Japan late in 1959 when the AMPO riots brought relations between the countries to a new low. Here his reporting about Zen and the 101 year old abbot of Hōkō-ji (Shizuoka), Ashikaga Shizan, was to instill a positive image.

In 1973, Balzer organized the New York Wine Tasting of 1973 which was a precursor to the matching of French and Californian wine at the Judgment of Paris. He assembled fourteen leading wine experts including vigneron Alexis Lichine and accomplished wine merchant Sam Aaron.

Balzer oversaw food and wine at the presidential inaugurations of Ronald Reagan in 1981 and 1985, and for George H. W. Bush in 1989. He was friends with some of Hollywood's elite, including Cecil B. DeMille, Alfred Hitchcock, Marlon Brando, Ingrid Bergman, Olivia De Havilland, and Gloria Swanson.[3]

Balzer died on December 2, 2011, in Orange, California, at the age of 99.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Robert L. Balzer". IMDb.
  2. ^ "Robert L. Balzer". IMDb.
  3. ^ Prial, Frank J. (2011-12-15). "Robert Lawrence Balzer, Wine Writer, Dies at 99". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  4. ^ Robert Lawrence Balzer's obituary

Further reading edit

  • Taber, George M. Judgment of Paris: California vs France and the Historic 1976 Paris Tasting that Revolutionized Wine. NY: Scribner, 2005.

External links edit