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Mike Wallace, the
grand inquisitor of CBS's "60 Minutes" news show who once declared
there was "no such thing as an indiscreet question," has died at the age
of 93, the network said on Sunday.
Wallace died on Saturday
evening with his family by his side at Waveny Care Center in New Canaan,
Connecticut, where he spent the past few years, CBS said in a statement
and on its Sunday morning news broadcast. "His
extraordinary contribution as a broadcaster is immeasurable and he has
been a force within the television industry throughout its existence.
His loss will be felt by all of us at CBS," Leslie Moonves, president
and CEO of CBS Corporation, said in the statement. Wallace
left his full-time role at "60 Minutes" in 2006 after 38 years and was
given the title correspondent emeritus and a part-time contributor role.
His last interview was with Roger Clemens, the star baseball pitcher
accused of steroid use, in 2008. A special "60 Minutes" program dedicated to Wallace will be aired April 15. Just
about anyone who made news during the past six decades - in the United
States, but often abroad too - had to submit to a grilling by Wallace. As a part-time correspondent, his most notable interview was with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, president of Iran. It took place 27 years after his sit-down with that country's Ayatollah Khomeini, and earned Wallace his 21st Emmy. In
almost 40 years on "60 Minutes," the ground-breaking investigative
journalism program, he worked on some 800 reports and developed a
relentless on-air style that was often more interrogation than
interview. Wallace also drew
criticism for his go-for-the-throat style and the theatrics that
sometimes accompanied it. He also became caught up in a $120 million
libel suit that resulted in no judgment against him or CBS but triggered
a case of depression that led him to attempt suicide. 'FORGIVE ME FOR ASKING...' Wallace
interviewed every U.S. president since John F. Kennedy - with the
exception of George W. Bush - and dozens of other world leaders like
Yasser Arafat, Ayatollah Khomeini and Deng Xiaoping. Other
interview subjects included everyone from Malcolm X to Janis Joplin,
Martin Luther King Jr., Johnny Carson, Vladimir Horowitz and Playboy
founder Hugh Hefner. When Wallace
prefaced a question with "Forgive me for asking ..." or responded to a
dubious answer with "Oh, come on," "60 Minutes" viewers knew he was
about to get tough. His sometimes-abrasive manner resulted in the
nickname "Mike Malice," and some viewers will always remember him as the
man who made diva Barbra Streisand cry on camera. In
a 2006 retrospective of his "60 Minutes" career, Wallace summed up his
interviewing technique as: "Let's ask the questions that might be on the
minds of the people looking in ... 'If I were there in that chair where
Wallace is, here's what I would want to know.'" He
was more succinct in a 2005 interview with The Boston Globe when he
said: "I determined when I started back in 1956 ... there's no such
thing as an indiscreet question." Myron
Leon Wallace was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, on May 9, 1918. He
began calling himself Mike because he thought it was more manly than
Myron. After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1939, he
worked as a radio newswriter in Chicago and also on radio quiz shows,
talk shows, a soap opera and serials like "The Green Hornet." He also
acted on television and Broadway before joining CBS's radio department. In
1955 Wallace found his calling with a television show called
"Nightbeat," which featured Wallace asking pointed questions of writers,
gangsters, artists and movie stars in front of a stark black backdrop.
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