Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TV personalit­y Downs, 99, dies

He once held Guinness’ world record for broadcast hours

- DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — Hugh Downs, the genial, versatile broadcaste­r who became one of television’s most familiar and welcome faces with more than 15,000 hours on news, game and talk shows, has died at age 99.

Downs died of natural causes at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., on Wednesday, said his great-niece, Molly Shaheen.

“The Guinness Book of World Records” recognized Downs as having logged more hours in front of the camera than any television personalit­y until Regis Philbin passed him in 2004.

Downs worked on NBC’s “Today” and “Tonight” shows, the game show “Concentrat­ion,” co-hosted the ABC magazine show “20/20” with Barbara Walters and the PBS series “Over Easy” and “Live From Lincoln Center.”

“I’ve worked on so many different shows and done so many shows at the same time,” Downs said in a 1986 interview. “I once said I’d done everything on radio and television except play-by-play sports. Then I remembered I’d covered a boxing match in Lima, Ohio, in 1939.”

Downs began his broadcasti­ng career at the age of 18 as a $12-a-week announcer on a small Ohio radio station. When television came along, he at first looked on it as a gimmick, but quickly realized “it was probably a juggernaut, and I’d better be in on it.”

He was an announcer in Chicago, which was a television incubator in the 1950, for “Kukla, Fran & Ollie” and “Hawkins Falls,” which he said was television’s first soap opera. In 1954, he went to New York for “The Home Show.”

In 1961, Newsweek described him as “a gluttonous reader with a first-rate brain that he keeps curried and exercised like a prize poodle.”

His reputation was such that he even won the right to approve any commercial he was assigned to read, striving to keep dubious claims off the air.

“My loyalty was with the person tuning in,” he said. “It was expedient. If I lost my credibilit­y, what use would I be to a client?”

He showed his principled side again in 1997, when he took a vacation day on “20/20 rather than be part on a show that included an interview with Marv Albert after the sportscast­er was caught in a lurid sexual assault scandal.

Downs had a particular interest in science, once launching into a monologue on the Paar show on the science underlying water-skiing. It prompted Paar to quip, “Well, Hugh, when you drown, you’ll know the reason why.”

His interest in problems of the aging — he even earned a postgradua­te degree in gerontolog­y — was highlighte­d in his Public Broadcasti­ng Service series “Over Easy” as well as many of his “20/20” pieces.

“We all suffer in our culture from the idea … that youth was the big thing,” he said.

“There has been kind of a loss of respect for older people, and we lose gleaning wisdom from older people. We lose the ability to see that impairment and decrepitud­e don’t necessaril­y go along with age.”

His work on “20/20 also showed his adventurou­s spirit, such as the time he got to ride a killer whale, and another time he put on breathing apparatus to swim near a great white shark. There was a hazardous expedition to the South Pole in which one participan­t nearly fell to his death.

“I’m interested in science, the environmen­t, medicine and certain personalit­ies,” he said. “I just do the stories I want to do. I don’t want to be just the anchor.”

Downs began his work as Paar’s second banana in 1957, after a stint as host of NBC’s “The Home Show.”

In a highly publicized incident in February 1960, Paar stormed off the air in a dispute involving network cutting a Paar “water closet” (toilet) joke the censors disliked. Downs won praise for calmly telling the audience “I’d like to think this is not final” and keeping the live show running until signoff time.

Downs said later that he expected that Paar would at any minute return to the stage “with some punch line or something. He didn’t.” But Downs said he was eventually grateful for the boost the brouhaha gave his career.

Paar finally returned to the show a few weeks later.

Paar’s departure from “Tonight” in 1962 paved the way for Johnny Carson. Downs, meanwhile, began his nineyear run as host of the “Today” show. Walters was a “Today” colleague for part of that time. She was an admirer of Downs who praised his generosity and collegiali­ty.

He expressed his views modestly in the 1995 book “The Box: An Oral History of Television, 1920-1961”: “In a way the less talent you have or deploy, the less chance you have of overexposu­re. That may be why I have been on network television more than anybody in the world.”

 ?? (AP file photos) ?? Hugh Downs (left) on the “Today” show set in 1966 and at a 60th anniversar­y event for the show in 2012.
(AP file photos) Hugh Downs (left) on the “Today” show set in 1966 and at a 60th anniversar­y event for the show in 2012.

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