Los Angeles Times

Ex-publisher of L.A. Times

DAVID LAVENTHOL, 1933 – 2015

- By Doug Smith

David Laventhol, an editor and publisher who helped create the innovative style section of the Washington Post and launch New York Newsday and guided the Los Angeles Times during a period of expansion in the early 1990s, has died. He was 81.

Laventhol, who had in recent years been working on a book about the history of Times Mirror Corp. despite worsening symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, died Wednesday at his New York home, said former Times executive Steven Isenberg.

Colleagues who worked with Laventhol over decades and on both coasts remembered him as a newspaper man’s publisher and bold visionary in an era when newspapers were financiall­y ascendant and their leaders were household names.

“For me, Dave belongs in the pantheon of great American newspaper men, as an editor, as a publisher,” said Isenberg, a former executive vice president at The Times under Laventhol. “You’re talking about the people who were there in this moment when these papers cast a long shadow of achievemen­t and aspiration.”

As publisher of The Times from September 1989 until January 1994, Laventhol presided over the expansion of daily coverage in Orange County and the San Fernando Valley and the opening of a Ventura County edition.

Editors who oversaw The Times’ coverage of the first Persian Gulf war and the 1992 Los Angeles riots recalled him as a strong advocate for journalist­s.

Shelby Coffey III, editor of The Times during the riots, said Laventhol showed his strength in approving funding for five special sections.

“It was also a huge expenditur­e of newsprint,” Coffey said. “Given that it was a time of

recession in Southern California and tight cost controls, it was a big call on the publisher’s part to allow us to do that, and it had a key part in allowing us to get a Pulitzer Prize.”

Coffey recalled Laventhol as a relentless builder, always looking for opportunit­ies to expand — and able to secure funding to do it. The paper’s business side “sometimes complained good-naturedly that it was hard to know if Dave was the hard-fisted business publisher or was the editor in him still too sympatheti­c to the editorial side,” Coffey said. “There was still an editor inside him.”

Alvin Shuster, longtime foreign editor of The Times, recalled Laventhol as a publisher who took care of his foreign staff.

“As foreign editor I would send word to David we needed a bureau here or a bureau there, and those were the good old days when the answer came back, ‘Good idea,’” Shuster said.

After leaving The Times, Laventhol was editor of the Columbia Journalism Review and served on the Committee to Protect Journalist­s.

In recent years Laventhol had joined The Times’ retired New York bureau chief John J. Goldman on a project to write a book on Times Mirror and the decline of The Times over the last decade of decreasing newspaper advertisin­g.

“Dave’s style did not advertise the man,” Goldman said. “He was a very shy and gentle and wry person. But to know him well was to know how he had a spine of steel. He was a terrific competitor.”

He stepped down as president and publisher of The Times on Jan. 1, 1994, but remained on the board of directors.

“Laventhol is one of the few left at that level who is really from an editorial background,” newspaper consultant Gerald D. Reilly told the New York Times in December 1993, when Laventhol announced his resignatio­n.

David Abram Laventhol was born July 15, 1933, in Philadelph­ia.

He received his bachelor’s degree from Yale University in 1957 and his master’s from the University of Minnesota in 1960.

He began his newspaper career as a reporter at the St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times.

Over a career spanning 50 years, Laventhol became an editor at the St. Petersburg Times, an editor at the now-defunct New York Herald Tribune and the Washington Post, and publisher of Newsday, a Long Island daily newspaper owned by Times Mirror.

Isenberg said Laventhol considered his greatest achievemen­t to be the creation of New York Newsday as an offshoot of Newsday in Long Island.

“It was his idea to create New York Newsday,” Isenberg said, “to slip into a niche above the [New York Daily] News and below the New York Times because he saw the place for a paper that would register with a group that didn’t have an affinity with the other newspapers.”

Brought in by renowned Washington Post Executive Editor Benjamin Bradlee to remake the paper’s Style section, Laventhol created a new platform for distinctiv­e voices and literary journalism, Coffey said.

Though Bradlee created the innovative vehicle, Laventhol deserves credit too, Coffey said.

“Justifiabl­y one might say it was a joint effort. David was the first editor and had a lot to do with the conceptual­ization. He and Ben could take a joint bow on that.”

‘For me, Dave belongs in the pantheon of great American newspaperm­en, as an editor, as a publisher.’

— Steven Isenberg, former L.A. Times executive

“He was a wonderful, unlikely media mogul because he always had that charming set of witty asides that he would half mumble and half speak,” Coffey said. “Only if you were skilled at interpreti­ng the original Laventhole­se could you get that he was actually brilliant.”

Laventhol is survived by his wife, Esther, and children Sarah Laventhol and Peter Laventhol.

 ?? Leo Sorel ?? Three major figures in L.A. Times history — David Laventhol, left, Tom Johnson and Otis Chandler — pose at an event in 2000.
Leo Sorel Three major figures in L.A. Times history — David Laventhol, left, Tom Johnson and Otis Chandler — pose at an event in 2000.
 ?? Randy Leffingwel­l ?? VISIONARY David Laventhol, publisher of The L.A. Times from 1989 to 1994, led the paper through significan­t expansion.
Randy Leffingwel­l VISIONARY David Laventhol, publisher of The L.A. Times from 1989 to 1994, led the paper through significan­t expansion.
 ??  ?? NEW YORK NEWSDAY Laventhol, right, with New York Mayor Ed Koch in 1986.
NEW YORK NEWSDAY Laventhol, right, with New York Mayor Ed Koch in 1986.

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