FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 3, 2006
Contact:
Terry Lynn Smith
The Museum of Television & Radio
310.786.1042
tsmith@mtr.org
Cassin Donn / Caitlin O'Neill
Dan Klores Communications
212.981.5144 / 212.981.5275
Cassin_Donn@dkcnews.com / Caitlin_O'Neill@dkcnews.com
The Museum of Television & Radio Presents
Leonard
H. Goldenson: The Gentleman Giant
Exhibit
Showing in
August 23 to
October 22, 2006
Offers visitors a walk through Goldenson’s
remarkable career
Exhibit will open at the Museum’s
While not as well known outside the
industry as his peers David Sarnoff and William Paley, Leonard H. Goldenson’s ability
to take the long view, to stand fast in the face of overwhelming odds—for
decades, at tremendous cost—to realize a vision, led to innovations that
transformed the landscape of network television and set a new template for the
ways networks operate that is followed to this day. His singular
combination of visionary ideas, preternatural business savvy, and sheer dogged
tenacity transformed a flailing broadcasting enterprise on the verge of
collapse into one of the world’s mightiest media empires. The name of this shoestring operation was ABC.
The Innovator
In an era when television programming
was almost entirely live and based out of
The Executive
Goldenson’s many innovations and
accomplishments would have been impossible without his keen business acumen and
his talent for getting the right people and inspiring them to perform to the
top of their potential: Roone Arledge, Barry Diller, and Michael Eisner are
among the executives that thrived at ABC under his mentorship. Goldenson’s
uncanny instincts and fortitude made possible the merger of United Paramount
Theatres and ABC; empowered him to broker unprecedented deals with Warner
Brothers and other studios; earned the trust of a board of directors in the
absence of immediate financial success; allowed him to fight off hostile
takeover attempts from the likes of Norton Simon and Howard Hughes; and ensured
the continued integrity of the network through its merger with Capital Cities
after his decision to step down. His
shrewd expansion into radio, publishing, and cable networks added depth and
breadth to his media empire.
The Philanthropist
Leonard H. Goldenson’s sense of civic
responsibility extended far beyond his role as a broadcaster. His most significant achievement in public
service was the establishment of the fifth largest health agency in the
Some Career Highlights:
1933: Goldenson starts work at Paramount Pictures.
1951: Orchestrates purchase of
ABC for $25 million.
1957: ABC wins a Peabody Award for
Prologue ’58 and other significant
news coverage
1961: ABC’s Wide World of Sports premieres, eventually becoming the longest-running
sports program in TV history.
1966: ABC broadcasts its entire
prime-time schedule in color.
1972: Goldenson is elected to the
newly created position of chairman of the board and
CEO of ABC, Inc.
1976: Barbara Walters becomes
network TV’s first prime-time female news anchor,
joining Harry Reasoner on ABC
Evening News.
1977: ABC’s eight-day telecast of
Alex Haley’s Roots becomes the
most-watched
program in TV history, with a 45.0
rating and 66 share.
1977: ABC wins the prime-time
season rating for the first time in its history, ending
CBS’s twenty-year reign, led by such programs as Charlie’s Angels and Gary Marshall’s Happy Days.
1978: ABC introduces multianchor
format for World News Tonight, with
Frank Reynolds
in
1980: ABC and Harvard’s John F.
Kennedy School of Government copresent “Voting for
Democracy,” a symposium on electoral reform that is attended by former
presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford.
1986: Goldenson, at age
eighty-one, resigns as chairman of the board upon completion
of merger of ABC with Capital
Cities.
1990: Goldenson
receives a Lifetime Achievement Emmy Award.
Admission
is free in
The
exhibit will be shown at the Museum’s
The Museum
would like to thank Loreen Arbus for opening the Leonard H. Goldenson Archive
to us, making this exhibit possible.
The Museum of Television & Radio, with locations in
###
The Museum of Television & Radio in New York,
located at 25 West 52 Street in Manhattan, is open Tuesdays through Sundays
from noon to 6:00 p.m. and until 8:00 p.m. on Thursdays. The Museum of
Television & Radio in California, located at 465 North Beverly Drive in
Beverly Hills is open Wednesdays through Sundays from noon to 5:00 p.m. Both
Museums are closed on New Year’s Day, Independence Day, Thanksgiving, and
Christmas. Suggested contribution: Members free; $10.00 for adults; $8.00 for
senior citizens and students; and $5.00 for children under fourteen. Admission
is free in Los Angeles. The public areas
in both Museums are accessible to wheelchairs, and assisted listening devices
are available. Programs are subject to change. You may call the Museum in New
York at 212.621.6800, or in Los Angeles at 310.786.1000. Visit the Museum’s website at www.mtr.org.
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