- Jack Fearey
Jack Fearey (b.?
Portland, Oregon - diedJuly 21 ,2007 ) was an American director of the Seattle Center and atelevision pioneer in thePacific Northwest . Fearey was best known for establishing two majorSeattle civic festival s, theBumbershoot and theNorthwest Folklife Festival . cite news |first=|last=|title= Jack Fearey|url= http://www.legacy.com/Obituaries.asp?Page=APStory&Id=13233|work=The Associated Press |publisher=Legacy.com |date=2007-07-30 |accessdate=2007-08-20]Early life
Jack Fearey was born in
Portland, Oregon . cite news |first=Casey|last=McNerthney|title= Jack Fearey, 1923-2007: He made Seattle Center the hub of the city
url= http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/325388_obitfearey27.html|work=Seattle Post-Intelligencer |publisher= |date=2007-07-26 |accessdate=2007-08-20] He attendedWhitman College inWalla Walla, Washington , for three years before leaving to serve in theU.S. military duringWorld War II . Following the war, Fearey graduated from theUniversity of Washington in 1947 with abachelors degree inmusic .Fearey began working at
radio stations inBellingham in the late 1940s before moving to Seattle'sKING-TV in the early 1950s. cite news |first=Charles E.|last=Brown|title= Director Jack Fearey, 84, helped to turn Seattle Center into cultural hub|url= http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003809817_feareyobit.html|work=The Seattle Times |publisher=|date=2007-07-28 |accessdate=2007-08-20] He worked in several positions at KING over the next twenty years, includingoperations manager , producer and the station'sprogram director . Fearey won aPeabody Award for KING's children's television show "Wunda Wunda " while at the television station.eattle Center
Seattle mayor Wes Uhlman appointed Jack Fearey to become director of the
Seattle Center in 1970. Fearey had been serving as the president of the Seattle chapter of theAcademy of Television Arts and Sciences at the time of his appointment. In 1970, the Seattle Center was a neglected 74 acre complex that had served as the site of Seattle's1962 World's Fair . The Center, which stands at the foot ofQueen Anne Hill , was not open year round and was little used by the general public during the late 1960s and early 1970s.Jack Fearey is widely credited with transforming the Seattle Center into a
civic center and Seattle cultural hub during his twelve years as director from 1970 until 1982. Under Fearey's direction, the site for theSeattle Children's Theatre , located at the corner of Second Avenue and Thomas Street, was acquired. He played a major role in the development of the Bagley Wright Theatre, which opened in 1983 after his departure as director of the Seattle Center,, as well as the renovation of theSeattle Playhouse , which is now theIntiman Theatre .The
Bumbershoot and theNorthwest Folklife Festival each got their start under Jack Fearey's direction. The Bumbershoot, a majorMemorial Day arts and music festival, was originally founded asFestival '71 in 1971 and was renamed to its current name in 1973. The Northwest Folklife Festival, now a major WashingtonLabor Day event, was also founded during Fearey's tenure as director of the Seattle Center.Additionally, Fearey oversaw the installation of covered walkways in the Seattle Center to shield
pedestrians from Seattle's famous rainy weather. He also worked to bring the "Treasure ofTutankhamen " tour to Seattle, which exhibited for 4 months in 1978 at the center'sFlag Plaza Pavilion .Jack Fearey resigned in 1982 after members of the Seattle
city council blamed him for financial mismanagement. The Seattle Center was over one million dollars in debt at the time.Post Seattle Center
Jack Fearey continued to stay active the television, business and arts industries following his departure from the Seattle Center. He served on the
board of directors of theAcademy of Television Arts & Sciences . Fearey was also the former president of theInternational Association of Auditorium Managers . Fearey worked during his later years as aconsultant forThe Fearey Group , a Seattle basedpublic relations agency owned by his wife, Pat Fearey.Jack Fearey died on
July 21 ,2007 , after a long illness. He was survived by his wife, Pat, (Fearey's first wife died in 1975.)External links
* [http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/325388_obitfearey27.html Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Jack Fearey, 1923-2007: He made Seattle Center the hub of the city]
* [http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003809817_feareyobit.html Seattle Times: Director Jack Fearey, 84, helped to turn Seattle Center into cultural hub]References
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