Decanter’s Man of the Year 2010 is Aubert de Villaine, proprietor of one of the world’s legendary wine estates.
Stephen Brook reports in the latest issue of Decanter magazine that the owner of Burgundy’s Domaine de la Romanee-Conti’s ‘first impulse was to refuse’ the award.
But after ‘some arm-twisting’ de Villaine (pictured above and below) changed his mind and has now become the first Burgundian to be named Man of the Year.
Brook does not overplay de Villaine’s modesty: after all, he makes probably the most famous – and certainly the most expensive – wine in the world.
‘He is not self-effacing,’ Brook writes. He gladly fulfils his role as the public face of the domaine, and his humility rather lies in his insistence on the fact he is merely the custodian of the estate.
It took de Villaine some years to decide he wanted to follow in his father’s footsteps and take over the Domaine. As a young man he studied literature and law and worked in New York for Burgundy importers the Wildman family.
He even worked as a journalist, interviewing the then-unknown Robert Mondavi in 1966.
It was around that time that his father took him on as an apprentice at the domaine, co-owned, as it still is, by the de Villaine and Leroy families.
‘In 1964 I found myself pruning vines, driving tractors, sweeping the courtyard, racking the barrels…’
Now he also makes wines with Domaine Dujac in Provence, and under the HdV label with his cousin by marriage Larry Hyde in Carneros, Napa, as well as wine under his own name in ‘the most modest’ of appellations, Aligote de Bouzeron.
In a wide-ranging interview, which covers everything from the sometimes mediocre reviews of DRC to the ‘falling out’ between de Villaine and Lalou Bize-Leroy, de Villaine demonstrates his dedication to his customers, both wealthy and otherwise, at a time when ‘we could double the price of our Montrachet or La Tache and we would still sell out.’
But, as he says, ‘We want at least some of our wines to be affordable to lovers of great Burgundy.’
The choice of de Villaine for Man of the Year, Brook says, is ‘surely uncontroversial’.
‘It is not only his achievement at the Domaine.. but his complete integrity, and his willingness to involve himself in the wider community.
‘If the domaine’s wines unavoidably slot into an elitist niche, de Villaine himself refuses to play the elitist game, and eagerly associates himself with other Burgundian producers, celebrated or obscure.’
Decanter Men (and Women) of the Year 1984-2009
2009 Nicolas Catena – Mendoza, Argentina
2008 Christian Moueix – Pomerol
2007 Anthony Barton – Bordeaux
2006Marcel Guigal – Rhône
2005Ernst Loosen – Mosel
2004Brian Croser – Adelaide Hills
2003Jean-Michel Cazes – Bordeaux
2002Miguel Torres – Penedès
2001Jean-Claude Rouzaud – Champagne
2000Paul Draper – California
1999Jancis Robinson MW – London
1998Angelo Gaja – Piedmont
1997Len Evans, OBE AO-Australia
1996Georg Riedel – Austria
1995Hugh Johnson – London
1994May-Eliane de Lencquesaing – Bordeaux
1993Michael Broadbent – London
1992André Tchelistcheff – California
1991José Ignacio Domecq – Jerez
1990Prof Emile Peynaud – Bordeaux
1989Robert Mondavi – California
1988Max Schubert – Australia
1987Alexis Lichine – Bordeaux
1986Marchese Piero Antinori – Florence
1985Laura and Corinne Mentzelopoulos – Bordeaux
1984Serge Hochar – Lebanon
Read the full feature in Decanter magazine, April 2010 issue, on sale Wednesday 3 March, or subscribe now
Written by Adam Lechmere