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The original, early 1960s syndicated Biography was narrated by Mike Wallace, who won his first Peabody Award on the show, and launched his journalism career. Wallace left in 1963 to join The CBS Morning News with Mike Wallace, and later, 60 Minutes. [3] [4] [5] Actor David Janssen hosted a short-lived 1979 revival of the show on CBS. [3] [28]
Mike Wallace in Television in America: An Autobiography, a series by CUNY TV; The Mike Wallace Interview — Archives of his New York interview show from the late 1950s in the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin (68 in total, some are audio-only) Mike Wallace (archived 2009) in The Museum of Broadcast Communications
The 20th Century with Mike Wallace is a documentary television program produced by CBS News Productions in association with A&E Network. [2] It aired on The History Channel from approximately 1994–2005. [ 3 ]
The 20th Century with Mike Wallace (1994-2005) The Twentieth Century was a documentary television program that ran on the CBS network from 1957 until 1966. The series produced 112 historical compilation films and 107 "originally photographed documentaries" or contemporary documentaries, each running a half-hour.
The Hate That Hate Produced began with a narration by Wallace: . While city officials, state agencies, white liberals, and sober-minded Negroes stand idly by, a group of Negro dissenters is taking to street-corner step ladders, church pulpits, sports arenas, and ballroom platforms across the United States, to preach a gospel of hate that would set off a federal investigation if it were ...
Wallace in a 1957 promotional photo for the show. The Mike Wallace Interview is a series of 30-minute television interviews conducted by host Mike Wallace from 1957 to 1960. . From 1957 to 1959, they were carried by the ABC American Broadcasting Company television network, and in 1959–1960, they were offered by the NTA Film Netwo
Christopher Wallace (born October 12, 1947) is an American broadcast journalist. He is known for his tough and wide-ranging interviews, for which he is often compared to his father, 60 Minutes journalist Mike Wallace. [1] Over his 60-year career in journalism he has been a correspondent, moderator, or anchor on CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox News, and CNN.
The series was parodied on a segment of The Victor Borge Show which featured journalist Mike Wallace interviewing Franz Liszt (played by Borge) through a "time window". Wallace opened the interview by asking "Are you there?" in a similar style to the series' opening. The series was parodied on The Electric Company in a sketch titled You Weren't ...