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Chicago Icon 'Studs' Terkel Dies Pulitzer Prize-winning author was 96

Updated 8:25 AM CDT, Sat, Nov 1, 2008

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Once investigated by Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 50s, Studs Terkel voiced concern about the idiologies of vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin.
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Once investigated by Joseph McCarthy and the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 50s, Studs Terkel voiced concern about the idiologies of vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin.

 

CHICAGO -- Studs Terkel died Friday afternoon at his home on the North Side of Chicago.

Chicago Icon 'Studs' Terkel Dies

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The 96-year-old Pulitzer Prize-winning author, television pioneer, theatrical actor, radio host for nearly half a century, unrepentent leftie and friend...

The 96-year-old Pulitzer Prize-winning author, television pioneer, theatrical actor, radio host for nearly half a century, unrepentent leftie and friend of the little man passed away peacefully after a short time in home hospice care.

"He had a very full, eventful and sometimes tempestuous life ," said his son Dan. "It was very satisfactory."

Born in New York City in 1912, the son of a tailor and a seamstress, he was named Louis by his parents, but everyone called him Studs.

The family moved to Chicago when he was eight years old and opened a boarding house on Wells Street.

He received a law degree from the University of Chicago but never used it.

"The fact is, I wasn't cut out to be a lawyer," Terkel said during an interview with Carol Marin a couple of years ago.

He turned to radio in the 30s and appeared in bit parts on soap operas.

"I auditioned and got the job as a gangster. I remember the name. I was 'Butch Malone,'" Terkel said.

In 1949, Studs gravitated to something brand new: television.

And he was a star.

Despite success, his program was pulled off the air in the 50s. It was the peak of Sen. Joe McCarthy's anti-communist "Red Scare," and Terkel went on record deploring McCarthyism.

Just last week in an interview with Huffington Post columnist Edward Lifson, Terkel called out the Republican vice-presidential candidate, saying, "That Sarah Palin - you know, she's Joe McCarthy in drag!"

"I got in trouble because I signed all kinds of petitions. I always say, 'I never met a petition I didn't like.' I got in trouble and didn't work for a while," he recalled.

He returned to radio but it was as an author that he made his ultimate mark, becoming the country's pre-eminent oral historian.

In book after book he celebrated the quiet courage and hard work of ordinary Americans, celebrating the uncelebrated men and women of this country.
"What's it like to be a certain person in a certain circumstance at a certain time?" he told Marin.

He contrasted rich and poor along the same Chicago street in the 1966 novel "Division Street: America," explored the Depression in 1970's "Hard Times" and chronicled how people felt about their jobs in the 1974 novel, "Working."

His highly acclaimed book The Good War, chronicled the lives of American GI's.

"What's it like to be a little kid, who's a mama's boy, hitting the shores of Normandy in 1944?" Terkel said of the work.

Nearly 40 years later, in 1985, The Good War was awarded the Pulitzer Prize.

On his 90th birthday, the City of Chicago honored him.

"If you hang around long enough on this planet, anything is possible," Terkel said.

He wrote 18 books. His last, titled Touch and Go was his own memoir: a final chapter after a truly astonishing life.

"Here's my epitaph: Curiosity did not kill this cat."

His son, Dan Terkel issued a statement through colleague and close friend Thom Clark.

"My dad led a long full eventful, sometimes tempestuous, but very satisfying life," Terkell said, describing his father's death as "peaceful, no agony. This is what he wanted."

 In a piece on his Web site, movie critic Roger Ebert reflects on his relationship with Terkel. 

 

According to Amazon.com, Terkel's next book, P.S.: Further Thoughts from a Lifetime of Listening, is to be released on Monday.

Copyright Associated Press / NBC Chicago

Comments (8)

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  • lauren4372 Friday, Oct 31 at 8:20 PM FLAG COMMENT Studs, you enriched our city and world. THANK YOU
  • llinger Friday, Oct 31 at 8:02 PM FLAG COMMENT We enjoyed meeting Studs Terkel one delightful evening at the Chicago History Museum. We were seated as dinner guests with him and found him to be a living testimony to the everyday man in Chicago. He was full of vision and wisdom that was inspiring to us, as we were clearly 50 years his junior. He was an inspiration and reflective treasure of being true to one's self and living with true authenticity. We will never forge ... MORE >
  • Jan Valtin Friday, Oct 31 at 6:36 PM FLAG COMMENT Terkel was a terrific writer and the world has truly lost a marvelous chronicler of the little guy. The poignancy and brilliance which were uniquely his should be celebrated today. His literary genius will be missed tremendously. Yet perhaps the saddest aspect of the news of Terkel's passing is that, unlike former Communists and fellow travelers such as David Horowitz and Ronald Radosh, Terkel never owned up to the humanitaria ... MORE >
  • NBCChicago.com Friday, Oct 31 at 5:23 PM FLAG COMMENT This article previously and incorrectly mentioned Sen. Eugene McCarthy when referring to the 'Red Scare' and McCarthyism. It has been updated to attribute that period of time to Sen. Joe McCarthy. We regret the error.
  • Carlos Friday, Oct 31 at 5:17 PM FLAG COMMENT In Carol Marin's 5 o'clock news tribute to Terkel, she said his TV show was cancelled in the 1950s due to the anti-communist fervor begun by Senator Eugene McCarthy. Carol, of all people, should know better. It was Senator Joseph McCarthy who started the big red scare of the 50s, not Eugene McCarthy. What an insult to Eugene McCarthy to make such an error. Someone needs to tell her about this.

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