Robert Saudek (television executive)

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Robert Saudek (April 11, 1911 – March 13, 1997) was an American TV producer and executive, son of flutist and conductor Victor Saudek (1879–1966).

Career

A director

Omnibus at the behest of the Ford Foundation. Saudek sought to bring uplifting entertainment to American television audiences by bringing them the best actors, musicians, scientists, authors, comedians, and cultural figures.[2] Saudek also produced other cultural television programming, including Profiles in Courage
.

Saudek's Harvard College roommate for all four years was James Agee, who wrote A Lincoln Portrait and other Omnibus scripts. Saudek hired Alistair Cooke to emcee the show. Among the artists appearing were Leonard Bernstein (seven shows), John F. Kennedy, Joseph Welch, Paul Robeson, James Dean, Orson Welles, Marion Anderson, Sugar Ray Robinson, Mickey Mantle, Frank Lloyd Wright, Nichols and May, Gene Kelly, Glen Gould, Igor Stravinsky and Agnes DeMille.

Over the course of his career, he was awarded eleven

Best Documentary Short.[4]

He served on the Carnegie Commission, which worked to establish both

.

Saudek founded the Museum of Broadcasting (now known as the

See also

References

  1. ^ James, Edwin H. (September 16, 1946). "ABC Airs Hersey Hiroshima Story" (PDF). Broadcasting. Retrieved August 4, 2019.
  2. . p. X13. Retrieved January 25, 2011.
  3. ^ a b Thomas, Robert McG. Jr. (March 17, 1997). "Robert Saudek Is Dead at 85; A Pioneer of Culture on TV". The New York Times. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
  4. ^ Federal Communications Commission Reports: Decisions, Reports, and Orders of the Federal Communications Commission of the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1969.

Further reading

  • Jim Robertson, Televisionaries In Their Own Words: Public Television's Founders Tell How it All Began (Charlotte Harbor, Fla.: Tabby House Books, 1993)
  • Omnibus: Television's Golden Age, 100 minutes, Washington D.C.: New River Media (produced for PBS), 1999, videocassette

External links