TV star has died of ovarian cancer aged just 49

The world of television is once again mourning a quiet but deeply felt loss. A woman millions were used to seeing smiling, confident, and full of life has gone far too soon. Her story is not only about fame and success on screen, but also about strength, resilience, and dignity until the very end.

She inspired viewers through the screen, taught with clarity, explained complex things in simple ways, and created the feeling that every viewer was a welcome guest in her kitchen. But behind the scenes, she was fighting a very different battle—one far more difficult, and one that not everyone knew about.

The diagnosis came at the very moment her career was taking off. Instead of stepping away, she chose to speak openly, to share the truth, and to use her growing platform to support others. Social media became not a place of pity, but a space for honesty, education, and hope.

Only now has it been revealed that this was Elle Simone Scott — a star of the PBS cooking show America’s Test Kitchen, who has died of ovarian cancer at the age of 49. Her death was announced by a close friend, who described her as “a force, a trailblazer, and a woman who changed what representation looked like in food media.”

Born in Detroit, she began her professional life as a social worker before making the bold decision to change direction. She worked as a chef for cruise lines, studied culinary arts in New York, collaborated with renowned Manhattan chefs, and eventually broke into television. It was there that her warmth, authority, and professionalism made her one of the most recognizable Black chefs on TV.

Alongside her media career, she founded SheChef — an initiative dedicated to supporting women of color in the culinary industry. Rather than simply talking about inequality, she focused on building solutions and creating positive kitchen cultures where women could thrive without barriers.

Her love for cooking began in childhood, in her grandmother’s kitchen on the west side of Detroit, where she helped prepare food for their church community. And it was that same spirit—of care, generosity, and connection—that viewers felt for years. Her voice may be gone, but the impact she made will live on in every kitchen she inspired and every person who finally saw themselves reflected on screen.