Baltimore Sun

Arnold C. Rifkin

Pioneering WJZ-TV engineer later embarked on second career as a chef

- By Frederick N. Rasmussen

Arnold C. Rifkin, a Korean War veteran and pioneering WJZ-TV engineer who late in life had a second career as a chef, died of complicati­ons from dementia May 4 at his Pikesville home. He was 93.

“He died in his library surrounded by thousands of cooking, engineerin­g and TV books and other mementos from his life,” said a son, Alan Rifkin, of Parkville. “He was a self-taught and self-made man.”

Another son, Dr. Scott Rifkin, who lives in Luthervill­e, described his father as “an honest, hardworkin­g guy who had a fascinatin­g life.”

“Arnold Rifkin was an engineer’s engineer and a pioneer in TV as we know it,” said Richard Sher, a longtime WJZ-TV news broadcaste­r and current host of the online show “Square Off.”

“He was the first in TV to mount a camera, and that was the beginning of mobile TV, There was nothing Arnold couldn’t fix, and he was very smart. He really was.”

Mr. Sher recalled with a laugh one example of Mr. Rifkin’s abilities.

“I remember we gave him a TV to fix, and it came back 2 ½ years later,” Mr. Sher said. “He really was the best of the best.”

Arnold Charles Rifkin, son of a Russian immigrant tailor, Isadore Rifkin, and his former wife, Sara, an immigrant from what was then Odesa, Russia, who was an office worker, was born in Baltimore and raised near Patterson Park by his single working mother after his parents divorced.

He was a 1947 graduate of City College High School and worked as an X-ray technician for the Baltimore City Health Department.

When Mr. Rifkin was 17, he met and fell in love with the former Sally Conn, who was 14. The couple married in 1949.

“I fell in love with Arnold on our first date. We danced and talked and gazed at each other,” Mrs. Rifkin wrote in a family memoir. “I could see the love in his eyes.”

“She couldn’t wait to turn 18 so she could marry my father,” Alan Rifkin said.

In 1949 Mr. Rifkin enlisted in the Marine Corps, where he studied radar engineerin­g, trained as a sharpshoot­er and took up photograph­y, becoming the camp photograph­er at Camp Lejeune.

Mr. Rifkin won an award for “being the best sharpshoot­er in the division,” his son said. “Because he enjoyed photograph­y, my mother made a sign that said, ‘We shoot Marines.’”

He was about to be shipped out to Korea when the armistice was signed.

The couple returned to Baltimore and Mr. Rifkin studied radio engineerin­g on the GI Bill. With the coming of commercial television, he began working in Baltimore at WAAM-TV, an NBC affiliate, that went on the air in 1957 and later became today’s WJZ-TV.

Throughout his three decades at the station, Mr. Rifkin covered gubernator­ial elections, sports events, storms, fires and President John F. Kennedy’s funeral in 1963. After a hostage crisis in 1978 at University Hospital, now the University of Maryland Medical Center, he was presented an award for helping ensure the safety of those around him.

Always an innovative thinker, in 1974 Mr. Rifkin had the idea of fixing a TV camera to the roof of a minivan.

“He had that idea in the early 1970s that you could [bring] news out into the streets because cameras were fixed in the studio and heavy,” said Alan Rifkin. “His idea was to bolt one to the top of a minivan that was also equipped with a videotapin­g equipment that could be driven to wherever news was breaking. The film was then driven back to the studio, where it was aired.”

Mr. Rifkin was recognized for creating the mobile TV minivan in 1980, when he was given an award by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers.

Mr. Sher recalled working with Mr. Rifkin at a noontime parade in downtown Baltimore that celebrated the Orioles winning the 1983 World Series after beating the Philadelph­ia Phillies four games to one.

“Arnold was a little quirky, and you never wanted to do anything that ticked him off because he’d stand his ground,” Mr. Sher said. “He was the engineer and I was reporting on the parade.

“Through our earpieces I could hear him screaming and cursing at the techs in the field. I mentioned it to him and he gave me the Rifkin treatment by screaming and yelling at me.”

In 1987, while working on equipment in a confined area, an explosion left Mr. Rifkin with a 95% hearing loss that led to his retirement the next year.

During his last night at the station WJZ-TV news anchor Denise Koch gave Mr. Rifkin a rousing tribute while he stood next to a mobile news truck that he had invented.

“A stirring retirement: Looks like Arnold Rifkin, cameraman extraordin­aire at WJZ-TV, will be trading in his Ikegami for a Cuisinart,” The Sun reported at the time. “But none of this sitting-around stuff for this sprightly 58-year-old.

“Rifkin has enrolled in the Culinary Arts Institute and plans a second career as a chef. Break a chicken leg, Arnold!”

For a man who loved talking to others and singing, the accident was a devastatin­g and life-altering event, but Mr. Rifkin had the resilience and resolve to reinvent himself.

He had always enjoyed cooking and decided, at the age of 58, to become a student at what was then known as the Culinary Arts Institute of Baltimore. The school became the Baltimore Internatio­nal College and was later acquired by Stratford University.

In 1989 his three sons sent Mr. Rifkin and his wife to Paris, where he enrolled and studied French cooking at the Institute Culinary De Paris, and where he developed his lifelong affection for the City of Light.

Each summer thereafter he and his wife returned to spend a month while exploring and experienci­ng the local restaurant scene, and he enjoyed quiet moments sitting in Luxembourg Park snapping photograph­s.

After graduating from culinary school, Mr. Rifkin worked as a line chef in various local Baltimore restaurant­s, including Linwoods in Owings Mills.

“He loved making anything French, especially crepes, and even brought home to Baltimore a crepe machine from Paris,” Alan Rifkin said. “He continued cooking profession­ally until retiring when he turned 70.”

Revered throughout his family for his culinary artistry, he could always be counted on to bring gourmet dishes to family events, his son said. Because of his situation growing up in a single-parent household, Mr. Rifkin’s family was the center of his life.

“He always wanted to have his own family. It was a lifelong quest,” Alan Rifkin said.

Family members said he took thousands of photograph­s of pictures “showing his pride in his wonderful family.”

Funeral services were held Friday at Sol Levinson & Bros. in Pikesville, with interment in the Hebrew Young Men’s Cemetery in Gwynn Oak.

In addition to his wife of 73 years, a public school educator, and two sons, Mr. Rifkin is survived by another son, David Rifkin of Jacksonvil­le, Florida; a stepbrothe­r, Leonard Rifkin of Boca Raton, Florida; 12 grandchild­ren; and three great-grandchild­ren.

 ?? ?? Arnold C. Rifkin created the mobile TV minivan.
Arnold C. Rifkin created the mobile TV minivan.

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