National Post

URBANE ANCHOR WAS PBS LEGEND

CANADIAN JOURNALIST CO-FOUNDED NIGHTLY NEWS SHOW

- Harrison smith

Robert Macneil, a Canadian-born broadcast journalist who built what is now PBS Newshour and served for two decades as its urbane, even-handed co-anchor, died Friday at a hospital in Manhattan. He was 93.

His daughter Alison Macneil confirmed the death but did not cite a cause.

Macneil, known as Robin, and Jim Lehrer, a former Texas newspaperm­an, formed one of television journalism’s most successful and enduring partnershi­ps in 1975, when they launched what became The PBS Newshour. As the news world transforme­d around them with the arrival of 24-hour cable news and combative political talk shows, they maintained a reputation for sober, straightfo­rward reporting and analysis.

The duo met in 1973 while anchoring public television’s gavel-to-gavel coverage of the Senate Watergate hearings. Teaming up again two years later, they decided to offer a sophistica­ted supplement to the network nightly news, focusing on a single issue each night.

“We decided to do a program for the curious, and the informed, and the interested,” Macneil later told the Toronto Star. “And it worked.”

Known early on as The Macneil/lehrer Report, the show anticipate­d network programs such as ABC’S Nightline and expanded from a 30-minute time-slot to become the country’s first national, hour-long nightly news broadcast in 1983.

Although it was accused at times of being boring and elitist, the program developed a loyal audience, with about five million viewers tuning in each night by the time Macneil retired as executive editor and co-anchor in 1995.

“In Mr. Macneil and Mr. Lehrer, ‘The Newshour’ has the only two major anchors on television who actually practice journalism,” New York Times media critic John Corry wrote in 1983. “They ask questions and then listen to the answers. Network anchors just read the news.”

Lehrer, who remained as the sole anchor after Macneil’s retirement, died in 2020.

Macneil had a distinctiv­e and reassuring baritone, with a cultivated accent that complement­ed Lehrer’s folksier delivery. He saw himself as a writer trapped in a broadcaste­r’s body — he and Lehrer were both novelists in addition to newscaster­s — and said that he turned to journalism in financial desperatio­n while struggling to make a living as a playwright in London.

He began writing for Reuters in 1955 and, five years later, joined NBC News as a foreign correspond­ent, covering fighting in the Belgian Congo, the Algerian war of independen­ce and the constructi­on of the Berlin Wall. After moving to the network’s Washington bureau, he was assigned to cover President John F. Kennedy’s November 1963 visit to Dallas, where he was sitting at the front of a press bus when shots rang out.

Macneil ran off the bus, followed police officers up a grassy knoll and searched for a phone to call his editor. Sprinting toward the Texas School Book Depository, the building from which Lee Harvey Oswald was later found to have shot Kennedy, he came face to face with a “young guy in shirt sleeves”

who suggested that Macneil “ask inside” for a phone.

“I didn’t register his face because I was obsessed with finding a phone,” Macneil told The Canadian Press in 2013. “Much later,” he added, “it occurred to me that I was going in just about the time Oswald had been going out.”

A decade later — while moderating Washington Week in Review, his first job at PBS — he started covering the Watergate hearings with Lehrer, with whom he bonded over shared literary interests. They spent more than 300 hours together in front of the camera, anchoring live coverage of the Senate hearings that helped lead to President Richard M. Nixon’s resignatio­n in 1974.

Macneil and Lehrer received an Emmy Award for their Watergate coverage and soon formed The Robert Macneil Report, initially broadcast by WNET in New York, with Lehrer serving as Washington correspond­ent. After a few months, the show was distribute­d nationally by PBS and renamed The Macneil/lehrer Report, with the two men as co-anchors.

The duo formed a production company in 1981, making Newshour the only major nightly news show to be independen­tly produced and owned by its anchors.

With their focus on informing rather than entertaini­ng, the anchors joked that the show’s motto was, “We dare to be boring.” Newshour left coverage of sensationa­l stories such as the 1995 O.J. Simpson murder trial to the major networks, gravitatin­g instead toward foreign conflicts, trade negotiatio­ns, nuclear arms deals and the like.

The oldest of three sons, Robert Breckenrid­ge Ware Macneil was born in Montreal on Jan. 19, 1931, and grew up in Halifax, Nova Scotia. His father served in the RCMP and commanded convoy escort ships during the Second World War, leaving his mother at home to raise Robin and his two brothers.

“The words of her own stories, and of the stories she read me, were the first words I drank in,” Macneil wrote in a 1989 memoir, Wordstruck.

Macneil was steered toward a naval career by his father but, after graduating from high school in Ottawa, failed part of the naval college entrance exam. “When that happened, the bottom dropped out of both my world and my father’s,” he later told People magazine.

He turned toward theatre at Dalhousie University in Halifax, where a CBC producer recruited him for radio acting after seeing an Othello production that featured Macneil as Cassio. Macneil played a farmhand on a radio soap, quit school, worked as an all-night DJ and left for the United States, where he failed to find success in the New York theatre scene.

Deciding that writing would be his creative outlet, he returned to school, receiving a bachelor’s degree in English in 1955 from Carleton College, now Carleton University in Ottawa. His plays were rejected by the Royal Court Theatre and BBC’S Radio Drama Co. in London before he began working as a journalist.

Macneil’s marriages to Rosemarie Copland and Jane Doherty ended in divorce. In 1984, he married Donna Nappi Richards, who died in 2015.

Survivors include four children, a brother and five grandchild­ren.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Robert Macneil, shown in 1978, created The Macneilleh­rer Newshour in the 1970s and co-anchored the show with his late partner, Jim Lehrer, for two decades.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Robert Macneil, shown in 1978, created The Macneilleh­rer Newshour in the 1970s and co-anchored the show with his late partner, Jim Lehrer, for two decades.

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