From Yahoo/GMA:
“Barbara Walters, trailblazing
TV icon, dies at 93”
Barbara Walters, the trailblazing
television news broadcaster and longtime ABC News anchor and correspondent who
shattered the glass ceiling and became a dominant force in an industry once
dominated by men, has died. She was 93. Walters joined ABC News in 1976,
becoming the first female anchor on an evening news program. Three years later,
she became a co-host of "20/20," and in 1997, she launched "The
View." In a career that spanned five decades, Walters won 12 Emmy awards,
11 of those while at ABC News. She made her final appearance as a co-host of
"The View" in 2014, but remained an executive producer of the show
and continued to do some interviews and specials for ABC News. "I do not
want to appear on another program or climb another mountain," she said at
the time. "I want instead to sit on a sunny field and admire the very
gifted women -- and OK, some men too -- who will be taking my place."
Barbara Jill Walters was born in
Boston on Sept. 25, 1929, to Dena and Louis "Lou" Walters. Her father
worked in show business as a booking agent and nightclub producer, and
discovered comedians Fred Allen and Jack Haley, who would go on to star as the
Tin Man in the classic film "The Wizard of Oz." Growing up around
celebrities taught a young Barbara a lesson that she relied upon throughout her
career. "I would see them onstage looking one way and offstage often
looking very different. I would hear my parents talk about them and know that
even though those performers were very special people, they were also human
beings with real-life problems," Walters said in a 1989 interview with the
Television Academy of Arts & Sciences. "I can have respect and
admiration for famous people, but I have never had a sense of fear or
awe."
In her 2008 memoir
"Audition," Walters revealed that she got her ambition to succeed
from her older sister, Jacqueline, who was born developmentally disabled. "Her
condition also altered my life," Walters wrote. "I think I knew from
a very early age that at some point Jackie would become my responsibility. That
awareness was one of the main reasons I was driven to work so hard. But my
feelings went beyond financial responsibility. "Much of the need I had to
prove myself, to achieve, to provide, to protect, can be traced to my feelings
about Jackie. But there must be something more, the 'Something' that makes one
need to excel," she added. "Some may call it ambition. I can live
with that. Some may call it insecurity, although that is such a boring, common
label, like being called shy, that means little. But as I look back, it feels
to me that my life has been one long audition -- an attempt to make a
difference and to be accepted."
(Today Show anchor Barbara
Walters covers the Democratic National Convention in 1972.)
After graduating from Sarah
Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, in the 1950s, Walters found work as a
publicist and television writer, before landing a spot as a writer on NBC's
"Today" show in 1961. She would become the program's first female
co-host in 1974, and won her first Emmy award the following year for
Outstanding Talk Show Host. "No one was more surprised than I," she
said of her on-air career. "I wasn't beautiful, like many of the women on
the program before me, [and] I had trouble pronouncing my r's." In her
memoir, Walters wrote that she had dark hair, a sallow complexion and was often
told she was skinny. She said her parents' term of endearment for her was
"Skinnymalinkydin."
(Barbara Walters and Harry
Reasoner on the ABC News set, Sept. 30, 1976.)
In her inaugural broadcast on
Oct. 4, 1976, with co-anchor Harry Reasoner, Walters scored an exclusive
interview with Earl Butz, who had just resigned as President Gerald Ford's
Secretary of Agriculture after it was revealed he told a racist joke. She also
conducted a satellite interview with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat on his
plans to end his country's fighting with Lebanon. At ABC, her interviews were
wide-ranging and her access to public figures, unparalleled; Walters crossed
the Bay of Pigs with Fidel Castro and conducted the first joint interview with
Sadat and Israel's Prime Minister Menachem Begin. She also developed a reputation
for asking tough questions. "I asked Vladimir Putin if he ever ordered
anyone to be killed," she once recalled. "For the record, he said
'no.'" Upon the death of Castro in 2016, Walters released a statement
saying the dictator had called her two interviews with him "fiery
debates." "During our times together, he made clear to me that he was
an absolute dictator and that he was a staunch opponent of democracy,"
Walters said in her statement. "I told him that what we most profoundly
disagreed on was the meaning of freedom."
There were lighter interviews,
too. For years, she hosted an annual Oscars special, in which she interviewed
Academy Award nominees and was known for making a number of them reveal deeply
personal information and even cry. In 1994, she launched the "Most Fascinating
People" special, which aired every December and afforded her the
opportunity to chat with the year's top newsmakers. In 1999, an estimated 74
million viewers tuned in to watch Walters interview Monica Lewinsky about the
former White House intern's affair with then-President Bill Clinton. Toward the
end of the interview, Walters asked Lewinsky, "What will you tell your
children when you have them?" Lewinsky replied, "Mommy made a big
mistake" to which Walters quipped, "And that is the understatement of
the year."
Walters also interviewed every
U.S. president and first lady from the Nixons to the Obamas. She interviewed
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump before they entered the
White House. With "The View," she created a forum for women of
different backgrounds and views to come together and discuss the latest hot
topics in the news, a format that has since been widely imitated by other
networks. In a May 2019 New York Times Magazine cover story, "The
View" was deemed "the most important political TV show in
America."
(Barbara Walters is pictured with
her daughter, Jackie Danforth, April 18, 2008.)
Walters was married four times to
three different men (she wed Merv Adelson, a television producer and real estate
developer, twice) and adopted daughter Jacqueline Guber with second husband Lee
Guber, a theater producer and owner. She named her daughter after her sister,
writing in her memoir that she "wanted Jackie to feel that she, too, has a
child, because I knew by this time she never would." "She keeps me
sane, she keeps me grounded," Walters said of her daughter. "Children
do that ... I think a lot of working women struggle with the job and being home
and there's never a right answer. Whatever you do is wrong, but whatever you do
will turn out eventually to be OK."
She was honored in 2001 with a
wax portrait of her likeness at Madame Tussauds in New York City and in 2007
she was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She was also the
recipient of honorary doctoral degrees from her alma mater Sarah Lawrence
College, as well as Ohio State University, Temple University, Marymount
College, Wheaton College, Hofstra University and Ben-Gurion University in
Jerusalem. After 25 years in television, she was inducted into the Television
Academy Hall of Fame in 1989 and was presented the award by Peter Jennings,
then the anchor and senior editor of ABC's "World News Tonight." "In
all the years that Barbara has spent covering the world, those of us who have
moved along in her wake have done better because she was there first setting
standards, and she has taught us all something," Jennings, who died in 2005,
said at the time. In 2000, Oprah Winfrey echoed Jennings' speech when she
presented Walters a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences. "Had there not been Barbara Walters, surely
all of the other women who have followed in her footsteps, including myself,
could not stand where we stand and do what we do in this industry today,"
Winfrey said. In her acceptance speech, Walters said, "I have been blessed
with a life I never expected, and helping me up the steps of the ladder over the
years have been hundreds of people."
Part of ABC News' Headquarters in
New York was renamed "The Barbara Walters Building" in May 2014.
During the ceremony, Walters accepted the honor, saying, "People ask me
very often, 'what is your legacy?' and it's not the interviews with presidents,
or heads of state, nor celebrities. If I have a legacy, and I've said this
before and I mean it so sincerely, I hope that I played a small role in paving
the way for so many of you fabulous women."
^ This is sad to hear. She brought
National and International News to Ordinary Americans. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/gma/barbara-walters-trailblazing-tv-icon-023600549.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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