Polemicist and journalist Christopher Hitchens, who died in December at 62 after a battle with esophageal cancer, was celebrated Friday as an incorrigible contrarian, dazzling public intellectual, obdurate justice seeker, and passionate bon vivant in a star-studded memorial service at New Yorkâs Cooper Union.
Yet âservice,â as in pious activity, is probably the wrong wordâfor Hitchens was famously an adamant atheist, and his 2007 faith-debunking bestseller God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything was the most successful of his 12 books and five essay collections.
âShortly after his death, I was interviewed by an annoying interviewer on CNN,â theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss told the capacity crowd of around 800, which included many of the leading figures in literature, journalism, science, and entertainment that Hitchens counted as friends, notably Hollywood actors Sean Penn and Olivia Wilde (who confided that Hitchens, a close pal of her parents, âwas a wonderful babysitterâ).
Krauss went on with his story by saying that the unnamed CNN personality introduced the Hitchens segment thusly: âOn the one hand, he inspired the ideals of skepticism, free inquiry, and rational thought, but at the same time has been called a bullying, lying, opportunistic, cynical contrarian. She said that as if it were a bad thing.â
Big laugh from the audienceâone of many moments of hilarity throughout the two hours of remembrances by friends and family and readings from Hitchensâs prolific body of work. His writingsâoften dashed off while he sat on a barstool yet informed by amazing eruditionâappeared everywhere from The Nation to Newsweek to Vanity Fair, where he spent more than a decade as a marquee columnist.
Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter, who organized the event, called Hitchens âa man of ferocious appetitesâfor Scotch, for cigarettes, and for talk. That he had the output to equal what he consumed was the true miracle of the man.â Carter added, âHe wrote fast, frequently without benefit of a second draft or even corrections.â He was âan editorâs dream and he was a readerâs dream,â Carter continued, noting that Hitchens possessed âa legendary memory that held up even under the most liquid of late-night conditions.â

Hitchensâ prodigious drinking and smokingâdocumented by numerous photographs and a tailor-made documentary projected behind the stageâwas a leitmotif of the memorial, as was his insistence on leaving âthe cozy cocoon of conventional liberal wisdom,â as Carter put it, to back George W. Bushâs war in Iraq, savage the sainted Mother Teresa as a fraud and hypocrite, and pursue Henry Kissinger as an evil war criminal. Richard Nixonâs former national security adviser and secretary of state, generally one of the more sought-after eulogists whenever a VIP passes away, was understandably not in attendance.
Sitting in the invited audience, however, were media mogul Tom Freston, writer and director Nora Ephron, 60 Minutes correspondent Steve Kroft, New Yorker editor David Remnick, Newsweek and The Daily Beast editor Tina Brown, and London lawyer Eleni Meleagrou, Hitchensâ ex-wife and the mother of two of his three children, Alexander and Sophia. Carol Blue, his widow and the mother of his daughter Antonia, joined his son Alexander Meleagrou-Hitchens in reading excerpts from his writing.
Among others who read from Hitchensâs work were playwright Tom Stoppard, novelist Salman Rushdie, and satirist and novelist Christopher Buckley, along with Penn and Wilde. Geneticist Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, who helped guide Hitchensâs cancer treatment, played a piano piece that he composed in honor of the writer after noting that they became warm friends even though âI am a follower of Jesus Christ.â
Eulogist Martin Amis, the famed novelist and Hitchensâs close friend since their Oxford days, cheekily recalled that his pal was a âself-mythologizerâ who âoften referred to himself in the third person,â as in âThe Hitch.â Whenever an injustice occurred, Hitchens would declare, âThe pen of the Hitch will flash from its scabbard.â Once, when they were strolling toward a movie theater in Southampton, N.Y., Amis teased his friend that âno one has recognized The Hitch for at least 10 minutes,â Amis recounted. âAnd he said, âLonger. Itâs been at least 15 minutes.ââ
British actor and playwright Stephen Fry, memorializing Hitch the hedonist, recalled that he maintained that âthe most overrated things in life were champagne, lobster, anal sex, and picnics.â Fry, who is out and proud, waited a beat before adding, âWell, three out of four!â
It would have tickled Hitchens that his memorial started and ended with a rousing recording of âThe Internationale,â and it probably wouldn't have bothered him excessively that afterward, once the mourners were outside on the sidewalk, clouds of cigarette smoke wafted over their heads.