Mike Wallace, the legendary CBS News broadcaster, interviewer and "60 Minutes" icon, has died, the network said Sunday. He was 93.
Wallace, whose "probing, brazen style made his name synonymous with the tough interview -- a style he practically invented for television more than half a century ago" died "peacefully" on Saturday night, surrounded by family in New Canaan, Conn., CBS said.
"It is with tremendous sadness that we mark the passing of Mike Wallace," Les Moonves, CBS Corp. president and CEO, said in a statement. "His extraordinary contribution as a broadcaster is immeasurable and he has been a force within the television industry throughout its existence. His loss will be felt by all of us at CBS."
"All of us at CBS News and particularly at 60 Minutes owe so much to Mike," Jeff Fager, CBS News chairman, said in a statement of his own. "Without him and his iconic style, there probably wouldn't be a 60 Minutes. There simply hasn't been another broadcast journalist with that much talent. It almost didn't matter what stories he was covering, you just wanted to hear what he would ask next. Around CBS he was the same infectious, funny and ferocious person as he was on TV. We loved him and we will miss him very much."
Morley Safer, Wallace's longtime colleague, remembered him in a video tribute posted on CBS' website.
"For half a century, he took on corrupt politicians, scam artists and bureaucratic bumblers," Safer said. "His visits were preceded by the four dreaded words: Mike Wallace is here."
Wallace "took to heart the old reporter's pledge to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable," Safer continued. "He characterized himself as 'nosy and insistent.' So insistent, there were very few 20th century icons who didn't submit to a Mike Wallace interview. He lectured Vladimir Putin, the President of Russia, on corruption. He lectured Yassir Arafat on violence. He asked the Ayatollah Khoumeini if he were crazy. He traveled with Martin Luther King (whom Wallace called his hero). He grappled with Louis Farrakhan. And he interviewed Malcolm X shortly before his assassination."
Among the political and cultural
icons to be interviewed by Wallace: Ronald and Nancy Reagan, John F.
Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Eleanor Roosevelt, Leonard
Bernstein, Johnny Carson, Luciano Pavarotti, Janis Joplin, Tina Turner,
Salvador Dali, and Barbra Streisand.
"Mike Wallace didn't interview people," the Associated Press' Frazier Moore wrote. "He interrogated them. He cross-examined them. Sometimes he eviscerated them."
Wallace retired in 2006. His last
appearance on "60 Minutes" was in 2008, when he interviewed Roger
Clemens. But he was slowed by heart surgery later that year.
According to the New York Times, Wallace was "noticeably absent" at the memorial service for colleague Andy Rooney in January. (Rooney died in November.)
And in a recent interview with the Times, his son, Fox News' Chris Wallace, said his father's health had deteriorated.
"He's in a facility in
Connecticut, Wallace said. "Physically, he's okay. Mentally, he's not.
He still recognizes me and knows who I am, but he's uneven. The
interesting thing is, he never mentions '60 Minutes.' It's as if it
didn't exist. It's as if that part of his memory is completely gone. The
only thing he really talks about is family--me, my kids, my grandkids,
his great-grandchildren. There's a lesson there. This is a man who had a
fabulous career and for whom work always came first. Now he can't even
remember it."
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