Master interviewer of the famous
LARRY KING was the suspenderwearing broadcaster whose interviews with world leaders, movie stars and ordinary people helped define American conversation for decades.
He died on January 23, aged
87.
No cause of death was given but King had been admitted to hospital earlier in January after contracting Covid19.
With his celebrity interviews, political debates and topical discussions, King wasn’t just an enduring onair personality.
He also set himself apart with the curiosity he brought to every interview on radio and on his Larry King Live nightly TV show.
King was remembered by celebrities and politicians as a master interviewer with a sense of humour and grace.
Former US president Bill Clinton said he enjoyed more than 20 interviews with King, who had a ‘‘great sense of humour and a genuine interest in people’’.
‘‘He gave a direct line to the American people and worked hard to get the truth for them, with questions that were direct but fair,’’ Clinton said.
King conducted an estimated 50,000 onair interviews with presidents, world leaders, Hollywood celebrities and sports stars during his radio and TV career that spanned more than 60 years.
He welcomed everyone from the Dalai Lama to Elizabeth Taylor, from Mikhail Gorbachev to Barack Obama, and Bill Gates to Lady Gaga.
His shows were frequently in the thick of breaking celebrity news, including Paris Hilton talking about her stint in jail in 2007 and Michael Jackson’s friends and family members talking about his death in 2009.
King boasted of never overpreparing for an interview, and his relaxed style helped his guests feel at ease and made him relatable to his audience.
‘‘I don’t pretend to know it all,’’ he said in a 1995 Associated Press interview.
King was born Lawrence Harvey Zeiger in 1933, a son of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe who ran a bar and grill in Brooklyn.
But after his father’s death when Larry was a boy, he faced a troubled, sometimes destitute youth.
King set his sights on a broadcasting career and in Miami in 1957 he landed a job sweeping floors at a tiny AM station.
When a host abruptly quit, King was put on the air — and was handed his new surname by the station manager, who thought Zeiger ‘‘too Jewish’’.
By the early 1960s, King had gone to a larger Miami station, scored a newspaper column and become a local celebrity himself.
At the same time, he fell victim to living large.
‘‘It was important to me to come across as a ‘big man’,’’ he wrote in his autobiography.
He was married eight times to seven women. He accumulated debts. He gambled, borrowed wildly and failed to pay his taxes.
A threepacksaday cigarette habit led to a heart attack in 1987, but King’s quintuplebypass surgery didn’t slow him down.
‘‘Work,’’ King once said. ‘‘It’s the easiest thing I do.’’ — AP