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Robert MacNeil

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Nationality
  
Canadian-American

Name
  
Robert MacNeil

Alma mater
  
Role
  
Novelist

Occupation
  
Journalist, novelist

Children
  
Ian MacNeil

Years active
  
1956–present


Robert MacNeil Robert MacNeil Biography Robert MacNeil39s Famous Quotes

Full Name
  
Robert Breckenridge Ware MacNeil

Born
  
January 19, 1931 (age 93) (
1931-01-19
)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Movies and TV shows
  
Awards
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Informational Programming - Writing

Books
  
Burden of Desire, Do You Speak American?, Wordstruck, The voyage, Portrait of Julia: A Novel

Similar People
  
Jim Lehrer, Robert McCrum, Ian MacNeil, Judy Woodruff, Margaret Warner

Autism now meet nick robert macneil s grandson


Robert Breckenridge Ware MacNeil, OC (born January 19, 1931), also known as Robin MacNeil, is a Canadian American novelist, and retired television news anchor and journalist who partnered with Jim Lehrer to create The MacNeil/Lehrer Report in 1975.

Contents

Robert MacNeil wwwnndbcompeople625000115280robertmacneil1jpg

Robert macneil on bumping into lee harvey oswald


Early life and education

MacNeil was born in Montreal, the son of Margaret Virginia (née Oxner) and Robert A. S. MacNeil. He was brought up in Halifax, Nova Scotia, went to boarding school at Upper Canada College, then attended Dalhousie University and later graduated from Carleton University in Ottawa in 1955.

Career

MacNeil began working in the news field at ITV in London, then for Reuters, and then for NBC News as a correspondent in Washington, D.C. and New York City.

Kennedy assassination

On November 22, 1963, MacNeil was covering President John F. Kennedy's visit to Dallas for NBC News. After shots rang out in Dealey Plaza, MacNeil, who was with the presidential motorcade, followed crowds running onto the Grassy Knoll (he appears in a photo taken just moments after the assassination). He then headed towards the nearest building and encountered a man leaving the Texas School Book Depository. He asked the man where the nearest telephone was and the man pointed and went on his way. MacNeil later learned the man he encountered at about 12:33 p.m. CST might have been Lee Harvey Oswald. This conclusion was made by historian William Manchester in his book The Death of a President (1967), who believed that Oswald, recounting the day's events to the Dallas Police, mistook MacNeil as a Secret Service agent because of his suit, blond crew cut, and press badge (which Oswald apparently mistook for government identification).

For his part, MacNeil says "it was possible, but I had no way of confirming that either of the young men I had spoken to was Oswald." On the phone, MacNeil relayed the first report of the shooting to Jim Holton of NBC Radio, who recorded MacNeil's account of what had happened. MacNeil then headed to Parkland Hospital where he arranged a phone connection with Frank McGee, who was anchoring continuous coverage with Bill Ryan and Chet Huntley from NBC-TV in New York. At approximately 1:40 PM CST, MacNeil relayed to McGee that White House acting press secretary Malcolm Kilduff had made the official announcement that President Kennedy had died at 1:00 CST. That evening, MacNeil went to Dallas police headquarters and saw Oswald twice at close range, including when Oswald said "... [T]hey’ve taken me in because of the fact that I lived in the Soviet Union. I'm just a patsy", but he did not recognize Oswald.

News anchor

Beginning in 1967, MacNeil covered American and European politics for the BBC. From 1971 to 1974, he hosted the news discussion show Washington Week in Review on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). MacNeil rose to fame during his coverage of the 1973 Senate Watergate hearings with PBS, for which he later received an Emmy Award. This helped lead to his most famous news role, when he joined with Jim Lehrer in 1975 to create the PBS daily evening news program, The Robert MacNeil Report. This was later renamed The MacNeil/Lehrer Report and then The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour.

After serving 20 years in the PBS flagship news program, MacNeil retired from his nightly appearances on October 20, 1995. The daily news program he co-founded continues today as the PBS NewsHour.

Post-retirement work

On September 11, 2001, after the terrorist attacks in New York City and Arlington County, Virginia, MacNeil called PBS and offered to help. He joined PBS in its coverage of the attacks and their aftermath, interviewing reporters and giving his thoughts on events.

In 2007, MacNeil hosted the PBS television miniseries America at a Crossroads, which presented independently produced documentaries concerning the "War on Terrorism". The series initially ran from April 15–20, with further episodes later that year.

In a Sesame Street Special Report, The Muppet Show parody of the Iran-Contra scandal, MacNeil investigated the "Cookiegate" incident involving the Cookie Monster.

MacNeil served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors of the MacDowell Colony.

Awards and honors

  • 1979: MacNeil received an LHD honorary degree from Bates College. In 1997, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada, one of Canada's highest civilian honors, for being "one of the most respected journalists of our time".
  • 1990: Paul White Award, Radio Television Digital News Association.
  • 1999: Television Hall of Fame.
  • 2008: Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism
  • Personal life

    MacNeil became a naturalized American citizen in 1997.

    He is the father of award-winning theatre scenic designer Ian MacNeil.

    References

    Robert MacNeil Wikipedia