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Friedman Paul Erhardt Friedemann Paul Erhardt (November 5, 1943 – October 26, 2007) was a German American pioneering early television chef. He was known as "Chef Tell" to his 40 million Baby Boomer fans. He is widely regarded as one of the first chefs to enjoy widespread popularity on American television. Former Philadelphia Inquirer food writer, Elaine Tait, wrote, "Chef Tell is America's pioneer TV showman chef whose food always tastes good." Erhardt's thick German accent reportedly made him the inspiration for the Swedish Chef, a well known Muppet character on ''The Muppet Show'',〔 although this is denied by Brian Henson. ==Early life== Friedemann Paul Erhardt was born in Stuttgart, Germany 〔 on November 5, 1943. He was the son of a German newspaper publisher.〔 Erhardt earned the nickname "Tell" when he played the character William Tell in a school play. Later, when asked by his TV producer, Art Moore, what he would like to take as his TV persona, he replied, "I'm known as Tell, so call me 'Chef Tell.'"〔 Erhardt began his mandatory, three-year training to be a cook and a chef at the age of 13. Following his apprenticeship and further study and work in several hotels and restaurants in Europe, in 1970, he graduated at the age of 27 as Germany's youngest master chef to that time. That same year, he led a team of chefs to the Gold Medal in the Cooking Olympics in West Germany, and was also named "Chef of the Year." Two years later, invited by a former Miss Philadelphia, Janet Louise Nicoletti, whom he later married, he moved to the United States〔 where he became the Executive Chef at the famed Barclay Hotel in Philadelphia.
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