In the 1951
Bugs Bunny cartoon
French Rarebit, a reference to Antoine's plays a pivotal role, as Bugs convinces two Parisian chefs to let him show them how to cook "Louisiana Back-Bay Bayou Bunny Bordelaise", exclusively because it is "a la Antoine". "Antoine of New Orleans?" the first chef asks, awestruck. Bugs retorts, "Well, I sure don't mean Antoine of Flatbush!" In the film
Apocalypse Now, Chef (
Frederic Forrest), a character from New Orleans, briefly mentions it.
The book ''Dinner at Antoine's'' ''Dinner at Antoine's'', a 1948
murder mystery by
Frances Parkinson Keyes, begins with a dinner party in the 1840 Room and includes another dinner party at Antoine's near the end. Antoine's itself is not pivotal to the plot, which hinges on the murder of a woman from a snobbish-but-impoverished old Creole family, just as she was beginning to face a serious chronic illness. Rather, Antoine's is part of the ambience of New Orleans, which Keyes depicts as an exotic, half-foreign city whose ways are not easily understood by outsiders, especially those from the North. The novel is notable for its use of the "least likely person" motif in revealing the identity of the murderer, and for a final plot twist that renders the murder and its aftermath even more tragic. Antoine's is mentioned in other novels by Keyes, including
Once on Esplanade,
Crescent Carnival,
The River Road, and its sequel, ''Vail D'Alvery
. Dinner at Antoine's'' was Keyes's best-selling and best-known book.
Appearance in the film JFK Antoine's was used for the filming of two sequences in
Oliver Stone's 1991 movie,
JFK. The first, which is quite brief, shows the Garrison family waiting for their father in the mirrored Main Dining Room. In the second, which lasts several minutes,
Jim Garrison (played by
Kevin Costner) has lunch with his staff in the Large Annex Room. At the beginning of the segment, he is greeted by the real ''
maitre d'hôtel'', Henri Alciatore, a direct descendant of the founder. ==Hurricane Katrina==