The Wine Stars We Lost in 2025
Before we turn the page on 2025, Wine Spectator‘s editors would like to remember the wine and restaurant industry pioneers, innovators and history makers we lost this year.
This year we said goodbye to many American wine industry leaders, none more personal to us than longtime Wine Spectator senior editor James Laube. We also bid farewell to California wine legends Don Bryant, Sam Sebastiani and Carl Doumani, as well as chef John Ash, all of whom helped define the tastes of California wine country. French wine stars Nicolas Potel, Château Pavie’s Gérard Perse, Château Rayas’ Emmanuel Reynaud and Ruinart’s Frédéric Panaïotis were also lost this year. We’ll remember them all as we celebrate the new year to come. Click through on each name to read our full tributes to them.
In Sonoma and Mendocino kitchens and through his writing, chef John Ash helped teach America the joy of farm-fresh ingredients and clever wine pairings.
The Midwestern finance CEO and art collector founded his Napa cult Cabernet winery on Pritchard Hill.
The former owner of Stags’ Leap Winery and Quixote followed his heart when making business decisions and was a key figure in Napa’s “War of the Apostrophes.”
During nearly four decades writing passionately about wine, senior editor James Laube helped put both Wine Spectator and the California wine industry on the world stage.
The Champagne native spent 18 years leading Ruinart with a dynamic, innovative style.
Born into a poor Paris family, Gérard Perse was driven to succeed, first in grocery stores and then as a champion of Right Bank wines as the owner of Château Pavie.
The founder of his own Burgundy négociant firm later started Domaine de Bellene and expanded into Beaujolais.
The Châteauneuf-du-Pape vigneron made some of the world’s most sought-after wines at Château Rayas.
A trailblazer in the 1970s and ’80s, the pioneering wine importer and filmmaker introduced Americans to great Burgundy and Rhône wines.
Sonoma Valley winemaker and conservationist was forced out of his family’s namesake winery after leading a shift to high quality, but went on to start Viansa and La Chertosa.
After escaping Nazi Germany, Sichel found success first as a spy and then as the force behind Blue Nun and other wines, earning Wine Spectator’s Distinguished Service Award.
In three decades behind the stove at landmark New York bistro Lutèce, the Alsatian chef promoted fresh ingredients and good wine.
Instrumental in helping define California Chardonnay as an early winemaker at Kendall-Jackson, Jed Steele championed unheralded terroirs and newcomers to wine.
After a childhood in raisin vineyards in the Central Valley, the college-trained agronomist moved to Napa and helped lead Beringer’s—and the region’s—evolution in premium grapegrowing.
The owner of Stoller and Chehalem wineries was devoted to the future of Oregon wine.
Legendary German wine importer introduced American wine drinkers to the best wines of Germany at a time when German Riesling was unheralded.