Los Angeles Times

Your friend for the movies

Robert Osborne was a congenial film expert sans the ego, the ideal cinema companion.

- ROBERT LLOYD TELEVISION CRITIC

Let us now praise the dedicated television host, the person who turns a program into a place, who erases the screen and makes his house your house, and your house, his.

Robert Osborne, who died in New York on Monday at 84, was the face and voice of Turner Classic Movies from its 1994 debut, a man who knew his movies and had something to say about them. It was understood, given the cinema-centric nature of TCM, that you had come to listen and to learn.

Programmed with celebrator­y and educationa­l intent to highlight the work of actors and directors, or explore themes and genres, TCM feels “curated,” to use the popular word. It’s a revival house, sometimes an art house, of the air. It takes physical shape too at times, with a yearly Classic Film Festival — the next

is scheduled for April 6-9 in Hollywood — and the TCM Classic Cruise. Osborne, as the network’s human embodiment, took part in both.

Born in 1932, Osborne was alive for most all of the film history TCM covers. As a film historian, he knew his material from the inside, and the stories he told about the movies he showed felt like his own research and writing, not copy delivered to his desk. As an interviewe­r, he was an informed conversati­onalist and good listener who never sought to impress his guests, or viewers, with a display of his own knowledge.

You can find many of his introducti­ons and interviews posted unofficial­ly online; he had followers of his own.

Boyishly handsome into his 80s, he came across as cosmopolit­an and confidenti­al but also highly approachab­le. A journalism major turned actor turned journalist turned a television personalit­y that combined those pursuits, he was the fan as expert, the expert as fan, and as a Hollywood Reporter columnist from 1982 to 2009, a longtime member of Hollywood’s extended family.

He had been a host on the Movie Channel too, from 1986 to 1993. But TCM was something different, the public expression of an immense archive, the only surviving movie channel for people interested in film rather than just finding a movie to watch. (Though it performs that service as well.)

Strictly speaking, TCM could have gotten away without a host. All other movie channels do, and not every film on TCM comes with an introducti­on. (Or an introducti­on by Osborne — there are other hosts, notably Ben Mankiewicz, and guest hosts.)

But, as Osborne demonstrat­ed for more than two decades, there is much to be said for the expert voice.

The wisdom of the crowd or the algorithmi­c recommenda­tion machine only takes you so far. We want teachers and preachers, gurus and guides. We like to be prepared, warmed up, excited.

A man in a well-cut suit on a metropolit­an living room set, Osborne turned an airing into an event, but also into a kind of movie date: a special occasion, a little fancy, a little intimate — something between the two of you.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? TURNER Classic Movies host Robert Osborne died Monday at age 84.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times TURNER Classic Movies host Robert Osborne died Monday at age 84.
 ?? David S. Holloway ?? ON THE TURNER Turner Classic Movies metropolit­an living room set in New York, Robert Osborne, left, interviews fellow cinema historian Mark Cousins in 2013.
David S. Holloway ON THE TURNER Turner Classic Movies metropolit­an living room set in New York, Robert Osborne, left, interviews fellow cinema historian Mark Cousins in 2013.

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