Los Angeles Times

Folklore expert Ed Cray dies

ED CRAY, 1933 - 2019

- By Janet Kinosian

The L.A. journalist, 86, explored notables like Woody Guthrie and Earl Warren.

Ed Cray, a longtime L.A. journalist and prolific author who wrote about famous Americans as far-flung as Chief Justice Earl Warren and California serial killer Juan Corona, has died. He was 86.

Cray was battling congestive heart failure and Alzheimer’s disease when he died Oct. 8 in Palo Alto, his daughter Jennifer said.

“We were cantankero­us, opinionate­d journalist­s often at odds over some journalism course or curriculum idea or some administra­tive issue,” fellow USC journalism professor Joe Saltzman said in an online forum. “He was a wonderful colleague who really cared about journalism, about students, about what was right and what was wrong.”

Throughout his decadeslon­g teaching career at USC’s Annenberg School for Communicat­ion and Journalism, Cray inspired a generation of journalist­s, helping many land jobs at newspapers and television and radio stations.

During print journalism’s golden era over four decades starting in the 1960s, Cray wrote 500 freelance articles and reviews for the country’s leading newspapers and magazines, including the Washington Post and the New York Times. He was a longtime contributo­r to the Los Angeles Times.

He wrote 18 books including biographie­s about Depression-era folk singer Woody Guthrie and Warren. His Guthrie biography, “Ramblin’ Man: The Life and Times of Woody Guthrie,” served as the source material for the 2006 PBS “American Masters” documentar­y on the singer. In “Chief Justice,” Cray interviewe­d 45 of Warren’s former law clerks and won the American Bar Assn. award for best law book.

The Times praised Cray for his remarkable “dexterity” in handling the complexiti­es and contradict­ions of Guthrie’s life. The New York Times said the book “vividly conveys how difficult Guthrie’s life was and how heroic his achievemen­t.”

Cray’s book topics were diverse: He wrote a biography of World War II Gen. George Marshall, investigat­ed General Motors’ early history in “Chrome Colossus” and delved into the psyche of Corona, who murdered 25 migrant farmworker­s and buried their bodies in the peach groves along the Feather River. In “Levi’s,” he detailed the San Francisco clothing company’s history and mid-20th century challenges.

His 1990 book, “American Datelines” — a co-written analysis and collection of news stories about famous historical events — is still used as a textbook in many journalism schools.

In 2010, Cray received a Grammy nomination for the liner notes he wrote for “My Dusty Road,” Rounder Records’ four-CD compilatio­n of 60 long-lost Guthrie songs.

Cray, considered a folklore expert, in 2011 edited two volumes of “Bawdy Songbooks of the Romantic Period,” a four-volume set of songbooks with extensive margin notes on mid-19th century folklore.

Cray was born July 3, 1933, in Cleveland, and arrived as a young child in Los Angeles, growing up mostly in the Fairfax District. At 11, he sold the Los Angeles Mirror on city streets, rememberin­g mobster Mickey Cohen as a frequent customer. At 13, he inspected walnut crates in the San Fernando Valley as one of his first jobs.

He joined the Los Angeles Daily News in 1948 as a copy boy and later worked as a wire reporter for City News Service in Los Angeles. After serving in the U.S. Army in Korea, he graduated from UCLA in 1957 with an anthropolo­gy degree.

Cray worked and freelanced for numerous Southern California newspapers, including The Times and the Hollywood Reporter, and wrote books examining social issues of the period, such as “In Failing Health,” a look at the healthcare industry, and “The Big Blue Line” about police malfeasanc­e and corruption.

From 1965 to 1970, Cray was director of publicatio­ns for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. He also worked in the early 1970s as the publicist for the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.

Geoffrey Cowan, the former USC Annenberg dean, remembered the many friendship­s Cray nurtured as a mentor for the school’s faculty, staff and students. Cray retired from the school in 2014, as professor emeritus.

“He cared deeply about his students and about the fate of his craft and his school,” Cowan said. “Ed was a fine journalist and a first-rate biographer.”

In 2017, Cray moved from Santa Monica to Palo Alto, where he lived until his death.

Besides his daughter, Cray is survived by two granddaugh­ters, Emily and Tessa.

 ?? USC ?? PROLIFIC WRITER Ed Cray taught at USC, wrote for newspapers and penned biographie­s on Woody Guthrie and others.
USC PROLIFIC WRITER Ed Cray taught at USC, wrote for newspapers and penned biographie­s on Woody Guthrie and others.

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