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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Lydia Chantler-Hicks

Barbara Walters dies: Trailblazing US news anchor and interviewer passes away aged 93

President Barack Obama speaks to Barbara Walters during his guest appearance on ABC's 'The View’ in July 2010

(Picture: AP)

Barbara Walters - one of the most visible women on US television and one of TV’s most prominent interviewers - has died at the age of 93.

Walters, the first female anchor on an American network evening news broadcast who also created the popular ABC women’s talk show “The View” in 1997, died peacefully at her home in New York on Friday, her publicist Cindi Berger said in a statement.

“She lived her life with no regrets. She was a trailblazer not only for female journalists, but for all women,” she added.

Former President Richard M. Nixon answers questions during an interview by Barbara Walters on May 8, 1980, in New York (AP)

Robert Iger, chief executive of ABC’s corporate parent, The Walt Disney Co, paid tribute to Walters as “a true legend, a pioneer not just for women in journalism but for journalism itself”.

In a broadcast career spanning five decades, Walters interviewed a myriad of world leaders including Cuba’s Fidel Castro, Britain’s Margaret Thatcher, Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi, Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein, Russian presidents Boris Yeltsin and Vladimir Putin, and every US president and first lady since Richard and Pat Nixon.

“I never thought I’d have this kind of a life,” she said in a 2004 Chicago Tribune interview. “I’ve met everyone in the world. I’ve probably met more people, more heads of state, more important people, even almost than any president, because they’ve only had eight years.”

Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, centrr right, responds to a question from Barbara Walters, center left, during a news conference granted to members of the US press covering Senator George McGovern's trip to Cuba, in Havana, in 1975 (AP)

Walters’ critics said she too often asked softball questions and she was long skewered for a 1981 interview in which she asked Hollywood actress Katharine Hepburn what kind of tree she would like to be.

Walters pointed out that she only asked because Hepburn had first compared herself to a tree.

But she knew how to ask tough questions, too.

“I asked Yeltsin if he drank too much, and I asked Putin if he killed anybody,” Walters told the New York Times in 2013. Both answered no.

Celebrity interviews were also an important part of Walters‘ repertoire, and for 29 years she hosted a pre-Oscars interview programme featuring Academy Award nominees. She also had an annual “most fascinating people” show but dropped it when she decided she was weary of celebrity interviews.

President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with Walters in Moscow's Kremlin, in November 2001 (AP)

Walters reached the top of her field despite difficulty pronouncing R’s - a trait that made her the target of a biting “Bawa WaWa” impersonation by Gilda Radner on the “Saturday Night Live” sketch comedy show in the 1970s. Walters said the spoof bothered her, until her daughter told her to lighten up.

Walters was born in Boston. Her father, Lou Walters, worked in show business as a nightclub owner and booking agent, and was credited with discovering such talent as comedian Fred Allen and actor Jack Haley, who would go on to play the Tin Man in the motion picture classic “The Wizard of Oz.”

After graduating from Sarah Lawrence College, she worked in public relations before joining NBC’s “Today” show as a writer and segment producer in 1961. She began getting air time with feature stories - such as a report on her one-day stint as a Playboy bunny - and became a regular on the programme.

Co-hosts, from left, Meredith Vieira, Star Jones, Joy Behar and Barbara Walters sit on the set of

After 13 years on “Today,” Walters was given an unprecedented $1million annual salary to move to rival network ABC in 1976 and made history as the first woman co-anchor on a US evening newscast.

She soon encountered resistance. Her unwilling partner, Harry Reasoner, made his disdain for Walters obvious even when they were on the air.

“It was not pleasant,” Walters told the San Francisco Examiner. “For a long time, I couldn’t talk about that time without tears in my eyes. It was so awful to walk into that studio every day where no one would talk to me.”

(AP)

After her unhappy run on the ABC Evening News ended in 1978, Walters established herself on the network’s prime-time news magazine show “20/20” and stayed with the program for 25 years. Being interviewed by Walters on “20/20” or on her numerous specials became a distinction - and guaranteed exposure - for her subjects.

In 1977, she scored a joint interview with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin before they made peace.

Walters became so prominent that her star quality sometimes overshadowed the people she was questioning. The New York Times called her “arguably America’s best-known television personality” but also observed that “what we remember most about a Barbara Walters interview is Barbara Walters.”

Walters with her husband, Merv Adelson, in November 1986 (AP)

She was known for her sometimes blunt line of questioning, such as in asking Martha Stewart, the lifestyle guru who went to prison in an insider-stock-trading case, “Martha, why do so many people hate you?”

In 1997, Walters launched “The View” on ABC, a popular roundtable discussion show for women that was sometimes riven by disputes with her co-hosts Star Jones and Rosie O’Donnell. She made her final appearance as co-host of the show in 2014 but remained an executive producer of the programme and continued to do occasional interviews and specials for ABC News.

Walters’ three marriages - to businessman Robert Katz, theatrical producer Lee Guber and television executive Merv Adelson - ended in divorce. She also had high-profile boyfriends such as Alan Greenspan, former head of the Federal Reserve, and John Warner, who would later become a senator from Virginia.

(AP)

Her love life made headlines in 2008 when her autobiography, “Audition: A Memoir,” revealed an affair with then-married Edward Brooke of Massachusetts, the first black senator since post-Civil War Reconstruction.

Walters underwent heart surgery in 2010, which provided material for an ABC special in which she and former President Bill Clinton, actor Robin Williams and other high-profile heart surgery patients discussed their conditions.

She earned 12 Emmy awards, 11 of those while at ABC News, the network said.

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