Barbara Heine Costikyan (December 25, 1928 – June 18, 2020), born Barbara Virginia Fatt, was an American food writer.
Early life
Barbara Virginia Fatt was born in New York City, the daughter of
Arthur C. Fatt and Virginia Finder Fatt (later Gernsback). Her father was an advertising executive.[1][2] She attended the
Birch Wathen School in Manhattan, and graduated from
Smith College in 1950.[3]
Career
Barbara Heine was an editor at Esquire magazine, and a political hostess through her second husband's work in New York City. During the
1980 Democratic National Convention, she hosted a reception for the Alaska delegation.[4]
Costikyan became a contributor to New York magazine in 1980, writing the "Underground Gourmet" column,[1] and other features about affordable dining in the city.[5] Her writing reflected an interest not only in the food on the plate, but in the people who prepare it. "I can't think about food without thinking about the people who do it. It is, after all, a very human enterprise. People prepare it with love for other people to eat," she explained in 1980.[6] She also wrote for The New York Times,[7]Harper's Bazaar,[8] and Cosmopolitan magazine,[9] and published a children's book, Be Kind to Your Dog at Christmas (1982).[10]
Personal life
Barbara Fatt married twice. Her first husband was lawyer Andrew Heine; they married in 1950, and had three children before they divorced.[3][11] Her second husband was lawyer
Edward N. Costikyan; they married in 1977, and later divorced.[12][13] Game designer and writer
Greg Costikyan was her stepson. Barbara Costikyan died from complications of
COVID-19 in June 2020, at the age of 91.[1]
^Costikyan, Barbara (January 6, 1980). "How Houses and Barns Move On". New York Times. p. R2 – via ProQuest.
^Costikyan, Barbara (August 1985). "The Petite Gourmet: Fine, wholesome foods in easy-to-prepare recipes can whet even the most finicky appetites". Harper's Bazaar. 118: 142, 160, 220 – via ProQuest.
^Costikyan, Barbara (February 1987). "Barbara Hershey, Actress in Transit". Cosmopolitan. 202: 78, 82, 89 – via ProQuest.