- Bill Beutel
Infobox Person
name= Bill Beutel
caption=
birth_date= birth date|1930|12|12|mf=y
birth_place=Cleveland, Ohio
death_date= death date and age|2006|3|18|1930|12|12|mf=y
death_place=Pinehurst, North Carolina Bill Beutel, born William Charles Beutel, Jr.ref|Name|1 (
December 12 1930 –March 18 2006 ) was an Americanjournalist . He was best known for working over four decades with theAmerican Broadcasting Company , spending much of that time anchoring newscasts forWABC-TV inNew York City .Early Life and Career
The son of a
dentist , Beutel had a lifelong dream of becoming a reporter. His boyhood idol was the legendaryCBS newsmanEdward R. Murrow . Beutel graduated fromDartmouth College inHanover, New Hampshire after a stint in the Army and studied law at theUniversity of Michigan Law School , though he left Michigan without obtaining his law degree. While Beutel was in law school, he wrote Murrow a letter saying, "I very much wanted to be a radio journalist." Beutel received a letter back advising him to go to theColumbia University Graduate School of Journalism .His first radio job was in
Cleveland before moving toCBS Radio in New York City in 1957.Television career
Beutel moved to ABC on
October 22 ,1962 as a reporter withABC News and as anchor at the network's New York flagship,WABC-TV . The station had just opened up its first newsroom and created a one-hour 6:00 p.m. newscast called "The Big News". WABC-TV was considered late to the game behindWNBC-TV andWCBS-TV . Beutel was doing both local and network news at a mere $20,000 a year. Among the hundreds of famous personages who were interviewed by Beutel was theAfrican American Muslim andblack nationalist leaderMalcolm X .ref|Haley|2Beutel left his WABC duties for two years in April 1968 to join
ABC News full time as theirLondon bureau chief. In 1970, he got a call fromAl Primo , who had taken over as news director at WABC after Beutel left. Primo had brought the "Eyewitness News " format, in which the reporters directly presented their stories, along with him fromKYW-TV inPhiladelphia . He wanted Beutel to return to New York as co-anchor alongsideRoger Grimsby , who had succeeded Beutel as WABC-TV's main anchor. Primo remembered Beutel's solo anchor run in the early '60s. Since Grimsby had already established a powerful presence after just two years in New York, Primo wanted a co-anchor "who could be his own man." Beutel assured Primo he could be.Beutel rejoined WABC-TV on
September 28 ,1970 as Grimsby's co-anchor on "Eyewitness News". Within three months, Beutel and Grimsby became two of the most influential personalities in television news history. Together they made "Eyewitness News" the most talked about news program in the country. The two worked together for 16 years, most of which was spent going back and forth with WCBS-TV for first place in the New York ratings.On
January 6 ,1975 , Beutel was reassigned by ABC News and became the co-host (along with Stephanie Edwards) of a new morning show called "AM America ". This show, ABC's first attempt at a morning news program to compete withNBC 's "Today" and CBS's combination of network news and "Captain Kangaroo ", lasted only eleven months on the air. "AM America" was replaced onNovember 3 ,1975 by "Good Morning America ", originally anchored by David Hartman andNancy Dussault . Beutel then returned to WABC-TV and "Eyewitness News", though he maintained a presence on the network as the anchor of its 15-minute late newscasts on Saturday and Sunday nights through the late 1970s.The reformed Grimsby-Beutel team kept "Eyewitness News" on top of the ratings through the middle 1980s, when it briefly fell to last place. Though the ratings drop was mostly associated with ABC-TV's poor primetime performance during that time, it led to Grimsby's firing in 1986. However, within a year, WABC-TV had shot back to first place and has been the ratings leader in New York ever since. After Grimsby's firing, Beutel was joined at 6 p.m. by
Kaity Tong and later John Johnson, followed by a lengthy stint anchoring alone before being paired withDiana Williams in 1998. WhenErnie Anastos left "Eyewitness News" in 1989, Beutel returned to the 11 p.m. newscast and worked with several co-anchors, includingKaity Tong , Susan Roesgen,Roz Abrams (periodically), and finally Diana Williams. Beutel was replaced at 11:00 and 6:00 in 1999 and 2001, respectively, by ABC News correspondent Bill Ritter. He spent the final two years of his career serving as a senior correspondent and occasional commentator. Beutel retired from television and ABC after 41 years on February 2003, having served as an anchor at WABC-TV for a total of 35 years, the last 31 of those continuously -- the longest run in New York television history. Bill's trademark sign off was "Good luck, and be well."Personal life
Beutel was married four times, first to Gail Wilder (now Gail Beutel) for twenty years. His second wife was "
Guiding Light " soap actress,Lynn Deerfield , in 1975, followed by a brief four month marriage to Cassie in 1977. In 1980, Beutel married Adair Atwell, a former lobbyist for the tobacco industry. He has four children (all from his first wife) and eight grandchildren.He has one sister, Marylou Henley, of
Iowa City, Iowa . His son, Peter, is the president of oil industry analysis firm Cameron Hanover. His daughter, Robin Gamble, works at Kraft Foods and is married to Scot Vee Gamble who works at "The Progressive " magazine, and lives inMadison, Wisconsin with their five children, Skye, Kier, Antigone, Montserrat and Atticus Gamble. His second daughter, Colby Beutel-Burns, lives in Chicago with her two children, and is married to Michael Burns, who works at the Chicago Field Museum, while his third daughter, Heather Fortinberry, lives in California with her son.Beutel died on the afternoon of
March 18 ,2006 , in his home inPinehurst, North Carolina from complications of Lewy Body Disease.References
* cite news | first=Bill | last=Ritter | title=Remembering Bill Beutel | date=2006-03-19 | publisher=WABC-TV | url=http://abclocal.go.com/wabc/story?section=local&id=3995643 | accessdate=2006-03-19 Note: When Beutel was hired at WABC-TV, the news director did not like the sound of his last name, IPAEng|ˈbjuːtəl. He asked him to change the pronunciation to IPA|/bjuːˈtɛl/.
* cite book | first=Alex | last=Haley | authorlink= | year=1965 | title=The Autobiography of Malcolm X | publisher=Grove | location=New York | id=ISBN 0-345-37671-4 | pages=414–415External links
*
* [http://abcnews.go.com/search?searchtext=time%20tunnel&from=0&to=9&type=video ABC News' "Time Tunnel" page containing clips of numerous newscasts on which Beutel appeared]
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