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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Ordinary Folk Doing Extraordinary Things
2004-03-30
Unedited for length because he deserves the tribute. He was the one good thing about the godawful BBC. He shall be missed. The title of this entry comes from him saying what stories he wanted to be remembered for telling.
Esteemed writer and BBC broadcaster Alistair Cooke, famed for his programme Letter From America, has died aged 95. BBC News Online looks back at his long and respected career. For more than half a century, Alistair Cooke’s weekly broadcasts of Letter from America for BBC radio monitored the pulse of life in the United States and relayed its strengths and weaknesses to 50 countries. His retirement from the show earlier this month after 58 years, due to ill health, brought a flood of tributes for his huge contributing to broadcasting.

Born in Salford, near Manchester, northern England, Alistair Cooke’s father was an iron-fitter and Methodist lay-preacher. Winning a scholarship to Jesus College, Cambridge he read English, edited the undergraduate magazine, Granta, and founded the Cambridge University Mummers. Alistair Cooke made his first visit to the United States in 1932, on a Commonwealth Fund Fellowship which took him to both Yale and Harvard universities. Following his return to Britain, he became the BBC’s film critic and, in 1935, London correspondent for America’s National Broadcasting Corporation. He returned to the United States in 1937 to work as a commentator on American affairs for the BBC. He made his home there and, in 1941, became an American citizen.

March 1946 saw the first edition of American Letter, which became Letter from America in 1949. The series was the longest-running series in history to be presented by a single person. Alistair Cooke never decided what he was going to talk about until he wrote the script, made no notes during the preceding week and preferred to rely on his memory. In an interview given at the time of the 3,000th edition of Letter from America, he appeared to have mixed feelings about the future of the United States. "In America," he said, "the race is on between its decadence and its vitality, and it has lots of both."

Cooke led his listeners through the American vicissitudes of Korea, Kennedy, Vietnam, Watergate, Nixon’s resignation and Clinton’s scandals. In all of this, Cooke pulled no punches. The lyricism of his broadcasting and the urbanity of his voice did not disguise his fears for America which he saw becoming a more violent society. A liberal by nature, he reserved particular dislike for what he saw as the shallow flag-waving of the Reagan presidency.

Alongside working for the BBC and The Guardian, for which he wrote from 1945 to 1972, he developed a passion for jazz and golf and, as a film critic, he mixed with Hollywood stars. As a commentator on history, Cooke was sometimes an eyewitness too. He was just yards away from Senator Bobby Kennedy when the latter was assassinated in 1968. He was never as comfortable on television as radio but, by the 1970s, his hugely successful television series America recounted his personal history of his adopted homeland and won international acclaim, two Emmy Awards and spawned a million-selling book.

The Queen awarded him an honorary knighthood in 1973 and the following year, for a journalist, he received the ultimate recognition - he was asked to address the United States Congress on its 200th anniversary. He told his audience he felt as if he was in a dream, standing naked before them and there was only one thing he could find to say. Teasing, he exclaimed to the assembled legislators, "I gratefully accept your nomination for President of the United States!" Naturally, he brought the house down.

Many Britons thought he was American, but to the Americans he was the quintessential Brit, the man who brought them the best of British television as presenter of Masterpiece Theatre. For his part, he explained, "I feel totally at home in both countries." He impressed both audiences with his high quality work. With his unquenchable curiosity, Alistair Cooke remained for decades the consummate broadcaster, an elegant writer and a man of enormous wit and charm who made sense of the American Century.
If you never had the privilege of hearing him speak, go to this page and give a listen.
Posted by:growler

#7  "Your news is all of woe! Great harm is this death to Minas Tirith, and to all of us. That was a worthy man!..." (Eomer, in _The Two Towers_, reacting to the news of Boromir's death; I felt the quote was apporopriate here)
Posted by: Joe   2004-03-30 5:57:35 PM  

#6  I vote for Arlington... I'll swap Uncle Walter to the Brits for a corpse to be named later.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-03-30 3:34:17 PM  

#5  I passed an AP Am. History Exam with his TV show and book.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-03-30 3:31:57 PM  

#4  Master of the anecdote, wielding disarming honesty and remarkable insight into the humor and hubris of both societies, Alistair Cooke bridged the Atlantic as no other. Missed, indeed.
Posted by: .com   2004-03-30 3:10:09 PM  

#3  On teh radio this AM they said he'd gotten citizenship
Posted by: Frank G   2004-03-30 2:33:45 PM  

#2  ..America has lost a friend. I know it may be late to do so now, but could he be granted honorary citizenship? He earned it.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2004-03-30 2:02:43 PM  

#1  Rest in peace. We miss you already.
Posted by: Korora   2004-03-30 12:28:05 PM  

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