Showing posts with label Mike Wallace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Wallace. Show all posts

03 January 2013

Movies and TV: Final Exits of 2012


Famed Greek Director Theo Angelopoulos Killed During Movie Filming
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/01/famed-greek-director-theo-angelopoulos.html

Robert Hegyes
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/01/robert-hegyes.html

Ian Abercrombie
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/01/ian-abercrombie.html

Award Winning Actor Ben Gazzara Dies
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/02/award-winning-actor-ben-gazzara-dies.html

Mike Wallace, Iconic American Journalist, Dies at 93
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/04/mike-wallace-iconic-american-journalist.html

TV Remote Control Inventor Dies
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/05/tv-remote-control-inventor-dies.html

Remembering Remote Control Inventor Gene Polley
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/06/remembering-remote-control-inventor.html

US TV Legend Andy Griffith Dead at 86
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/07/us-tv-legend-andy-griffith-dead-at-86.html

Oscar-Winning Actor Ernest Borgnine Dies at 95
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/07/oscar-winning-actor-ernest-borgnine.html

Oscar-Winning Film and Stage Actress Celeste Holm Dies at 95
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/07/oscar-winning-film-and-stage-actress.html

Hollywood Director Tony Scott Dies
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/08/hollywood-director-tony-scott-dies.html

Actor Michael Clarke Duncan Dies
http://post-humous.blogspot.com/2012/09/actor-michael-clarke-duncan-dies.html

10 April 2012

Mike Wallace, Iconic American Journalist, Dies at 93


Mike Wallace — an entertainer in the early days of television who rose to become one of America's best known broadcast journalists — has died. He was 93.

In a statement Sunday, the CBS network said Wallace died Saturday at an extended care facility in Connecticut after a long illness.

Wallace spent nearly 40 years on the ground-breaking CBS news magazine “60 Minutes.” There, he interviewed hundreds of the world's most prominent public figures, from U.S. presidents, generals, artists and athletes to international dignitaries, writers, playwrights and Hollywood stars. He also interviewed scores of lesser-known figures, including suspected cheats, fraudsters, and many others alleged to have used dubious means to achieve wealth and fame.

CBS on Sunday cited Wallace's “extraordinary contribution as a broadcaster,” calling him “a force within the television industry throughout its existence.”

Wallace's relentless style drew millions of viewers and fans to Sunday night television, where “60 Minutes” has been a mainstay since its first broadcast segment in 1968. But that style also drew criticism and a highly publicized lawsuit stemming from the Vietnam War.

That suit, brought by army General William C. Westmoreland — the commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam — sought $120 million in damages for a Wallace-anchored “60 Minutes” report alleging the general deceived the American public by under-counting the enemy in Vietnam. The case went to trial in 1984, and months later Westmoreland withdrew the suit.

Wallace later revealed in an interview with colleague Morley Safer that he had attempted suicide during the lawsuit crisis. He later spoke repeatedly about his recovery from depression and said the years after the attempt were some of the most productive of his long life.

Photo: Journalist Mike Wallace in the television program Mike Wallace Interviews, 1957.