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Former NAB Chief Eddie Fritts Named a Giant of Broadcasting
8/25/2010
COLLEGE PARK, MD.The
former and mildly flamboyant head of the National Association of Broadcasters
had been named as one of the Giants of Broadcasting. The honor is bestowed by
the University of Maryland’s Library of American Broadcasting.
Along with Mr. Edward O. Fritts, America’s “poet laureate of radio” Norman
Corwin will be honored, as will Dick Clark, Sam Donaldson, Hal Jackson, Agnes
Nixon, Lesley Stahl and--posthumously--Rue McClanahan, Daniel Schorr, Art
Linkletter and David Wolper. The honors will be awarded at a luncheon in New
York City Oct. 6. Charles Osgood will emcee the event, a fundraiser for the
library, now managed by former
Broadcasting & Cable chief Don West.
There are now 116 Giants of Broadcasting. Among this year’s honorees, Dick
Clark is best known for hosting “American Bandstand,” which aired on ABC for
three decades. He’s also hosted and produced multiple projects, including “The
$100,000 Pyramidm” and “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve.” Norman Corwin’s radio programs
included “26 by Corwin,” “We Hold These Truths” and his wartime
broadcasts “An American in England” and “On A Note of Triumph.”
His movie script for “Lust For Life,” a biography of Van Gogh, won him an
Oscar nomination.
Sam Donaldson is a 42-year veteran of ABC news. Fritts ran the NAB for more
than 20 years. Hal Jackson was the first
black radio announcer in network radio, the first black host of a jazz show on
the ABC network and the first black to host an interracial network television
show on NBC. Art Linkletter hosted “People Are Funny” and “House Party,” two of
the longest-running shows in broadcasting. “House Party” started on radio in
1945 and started airing on TV as well in 1952, running until 1969.
Rue McClanahan was Blanche Devereaux on “The Golden Girls.” Her work includes
more than 100 film, television and stage roles, including “Out to Sea,” a
comedy starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, and on Broadway in “Wicked.”
Agnes Nixon is considered the queen of soap operas, having created “Search for
Tomorrow,” “One Life to Live,” “All My Children” and “Loving.”
She also contributed to “As the World Turns,” “Another World” and “The
Guiding Light.” She wrote more than 25,000 hours of television in her 40-year
career, and won five Daytime Emmys.
Daniel Schorr was the longtime senior news analyst for National Public Radio
and a veteran Washington journalist who broke major stories at home and abroad
during the Cold War era and Watergate. Lesley Stahl is marking her 20th season
as a correspondent on CBS News’ “60 Minutes” this year. David Wolper
is best known for producing the TV miniseries “Roots,” and the opening and
closing ceremonies of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. He also produced
“Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory,” “L.A. Confidential,” “North and South,”
and the 1983 mini-series “The Thorn Birds.” He was inducted into the Academy of
Television Arts and Sciences’ Hall of Fame in 1989.
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