Food Network's Alton Brown coming to Pantages next March

HOLLYWOOD -- Television personality, author and Food Network star Alton Brown has announced "ALTON BROWN LIVE: Eat Your Science" will return to Hollywood Pantages Theatre for two performances only on March 17 & 18, 2017.

Both performances are at 8 pm. Tickets for these two performances will go on sale to the public on Thursday, August 11, at 10 a.m. Tickets will be available for purchase online at HollywoodPantages.com or Ticketmaster.com, by phone at 800-982-2787, and at the Hollywood Pantages box office.
 
Later this year during Thanksgiving week, Brown will make his Broadway debut for eight performances at the Barrymore Theatre. Brown created a new form of entertainment – the live culinary variety show – with his “Edible Inevitable Tour”, which played in over 100 cities with more than 150,000 fans in attendance. The first leg of Eat Your Science sold 100,000 tickets in the 40 cities Brown visited.
 
Brown says fans can expect “all-new everything including songs, new comedy, new puppets, and bigger and better potentially dangerous food demonstrations.” He promises “plenty of new therapy inducing opportunities during our audience participation segments. I don’t want to give too much away, but this time we’re going to play a little game.”
 
Brown has a knack for mixing together science, music and food into two hours of entertainment.

“Plus, you’ll see things I’ve never been allowed to do on TV,” he promised.
 
Brown, author of “I’m Just Here for the Food” and the New York Times bestselling sequence “Good Eats,” is releasing his new cookbook through Ballantine Books (an imprint of Random House) on Sept. 27. “Alton Brown: EveryDayCook”, or EDC as Brown calls it, is a collection of more than 100 personal recipes as well as a pinch of science and history.

He has hosted numerous series including “Cutthroat Kitchen,” “Camp Cutthroat” and “Iron Chef America” and created, produced and hosted the Peabody award winning series “Good Eats” for 13 years on Food Network; Good Eats can still be seen on the Cooking Channel and Netflix.