Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

NBC newscaster who became host of A& E’s ‘ Biography’

- By Matt Schudel

Jack Perkins, a longtime NBC newscaster who later served as the urbane, deepvoiced host of “Biography” on the A& E cable network, died Monday at his home on Casey Key, Fla. He was 85.

He had Parkinson’s disease, said a son, Eric Perkins.

Early in his career at NBC, Mr. Perkins was a foreign correspond­ent in Asia and helped cover many notable stories of the 1960s, including the Cuban missile crisis, the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy and the Vietnam War.

In 1968, as a California correspond­ent for NBC, Mr. Perkins covered the killing of the president’s brother, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, at a Los Angeles hotel.

He went without sleep for almost 36 hours, describing the chaotic events of June 1968, while Kennedy was campaignin­g for the presidency.

Mr. Perkins later obtained a two- hour jailhouse interview with Kennedy’s assailant, Sirhan Sirhan.

During his 21 years as a network correspond­ent, Mr. Perkins appeared on “NBC Nightly News,” the “Today” show and other programs. With a penchant for whimsical, well- crafted feature stories, he was sometimes described as NBC’s counterpar­t to Charles Kuralt at CBS News.

“Putting the mug on camera gets you recognized by strangers, and that’s not unpleasant,” Mr. Perkins said in 1986, “but the abiding gratificat­ion derives from the writing.”

He became a local news anchor at the Los Angeles NBC affiliate in 1982, then stepped away in 1986, moving with his wife to an island off the coast of Maine. He returned to broadcasti­ng in 1991, drawn by A& E’s early mission to provide serious arts- and- entertainm­ent programmin­g on cable.

At first, Mr. Perkins was host of “Time Machine,” a documentar­y series examining major historical events. After three years, he joined A& E’s “Biography,” sharing hosting duties with actor Peter Graves as the show expanded from one episode a week to five and eventually six.

In his white beard and wire- frame aviator glasses, Mr. Perkins was a genial presence on A& E’s flagship series, speaking in a deep, cultivated voice once described as a combinatio­n of James Earl Jones and Laurence Olivier. From week to week, he introduced hourlong segments on such diverse historical figures as George Washington, William Shakespear­e, Geronimo, Lucrezia Borgia, Eva “Evita” Perón and Baby Face Nelson.

“This was before A& E morphed into a home for reality TV,” Mr. Perkins said in 2012, “before it became the channel for ‘ Dog the Bounty Hunter’ and Gene Simmons’ family saga.”

“Biography” won numerous Emmy Awards and, for several years, was A& E’s top- rated show, drawing as many as 1.5 million viewers an episode.

“The ratings on that show were interestin­g,” Mr. Perkins told the Venice ( Fla.) Gondolier in 2015. “As many people watched the show about F. Scott Fitzgerald as watched the one on [ serial killer] Jeffrey Dahmer. Marilyn Monroe was popular, too.”

Mr. Perkins officially left “Biography” in 1999, but he continued as an intermitte­nt host until 2005. He was such a familiar figure to cable viewers that he was parodied on “Saturday Night Live” and other comedy shows.

Jack Morton Perkins was born Dec. 28, 1933, in Cleveland and grew up in Wooster, Ohio. His father was an electrical engineer, his mother a homemaker.

As a student at what is now Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Mr. Perkins studied political science and religion and worked for the college radio station. In 1954, he began covering the case of Sam Sheppard, an Ohio doctor convicted ( and later acquitted) of killing his wife.

Mr. Perkins’ work on the Sheppard story put him a year behind in his studies. After graduating from college in 1956, he joined an ABC- TV affiliate in Cleveland. He went to NBC in 1961, becoming a writer for and protege of David Brinkley, the Washington- based anchor of the network’s evening news show, “The HuntleyBri­nkley Report.”

“What Brinkley taught me was a master class in how TV news should be written,” Mr. Perkins told the Longboat ( Fla.) Observer in 2012. “Say less, mean more. If a story is dramatic, you don’t have to tell it dramatical­ly. Be simple. Direct. None of this, ‘ The nation suffered a great tragedy’ nonsense.”

From 1986 to 1999, Mr. Perkins and his wife lived on an island near Bar Harbor, Maine, in a house called Moosewood. He wrote poetry and books about nature and in 2013 published “Finding Moosewood, Finding God,” about his spiritual journey.

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