Joel Steven Siegel(July 7, 1943 – June 29, 2007) was an Americanfilm criticfor theABCmorning news showGood Morning Americafor over 25 years. The winner of multipleEmmy Awards,[2]Siegel also worked as a radiodisc jockeyand an advertising copywriter.[3]

Joel Siegel
Siegel in 2004
Born
Joel Steven Siegel

(1943-07-07)July 7, 1943
DiedJune 29, 2007(2007-06-29)(aged 63)
New York City, U.S.
EducationUniversity of California, Los Angeles
OccupationTelevision journalist/Film critic
Notable creditGood Morning AmericaEntertainment Editor (1981–2007)
Spouse(s)Karen Oshman (1969–1970; divorced)
Jane Kessler (1976–1982; her death)
Melissa DeMayo (1985–?; divorced)
Ena Swansea(1996–2007; his death; 1 child)
Children1
Notes

Early life and education

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Born to aJewishfamily ofRomaniandescent,[4]Siegel was raised in Los Angeles. He graduatedcum laudefrom theUniversity of California, Los Angeles.[2]His Romanian-born grandmother fromBotoşanisurvived theTriangle Shirtwaist Factory firein March 1911.[5]During college, Siegel worked to register black voters inGeorgiaduring theCivil Rights Movement,and he spoke frequently of having metMartin Luther King Jr.He also worked as a joke writer for SenatorRobert F. Kennedyand was at theAmbassador Hotelthe night the senator wasassassinated.According to some reports, he also led student opposition to the construction of a football stadium on campus.[6]

Career

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Early work

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Siegel worked at a range of jobs throughout the 1960s, often concentrating on the civil rights movement. In the late '60s, before moving to New York, he worked as an advertising agency copy-writer and producer. While working in advertising for Carson/Roberts Advertising, he invented and named ice cream flavors forBaskin-Robbins.[3]These flavors were: German Chocolate Cake; Peaches & Cream; Pralines & Cream; Blueberry Cheesecake; Strawberry Cheesecake; Green Cheesecake; Red, White and Blueberry; and Chilly Burgers.[7]

He began working in radio as adisc jockeyand newscaster, while continuing tofreelancein advertising. Through his freelance work, he was offered the book review position with theLos Angeles Times.

Siegel's essays in theLos Angeles Times Sunday Magazinewere spotted by a CBS executive, and Siegel was hired as a feature correspondent forWCBS-TVin New York. Joel created signature work teamed with a producer who later became an executive atWABC-TV'sEyewitness News.When Siegel's producer moved, he offered Siegel a featured on-air position, and Joel accepted. Siegel proposed toEyewitness Newsmanagement that he become a film and theatre critic. He suggested that he would innovate the form by using brief clips from the movie or show being reviewed as drop-ins into his reviews, working them into his scripts as gags to create a new, witty form of review. Siegel, during his years at WCBS-TV, also created features on the AM radio side forWCBS(880) known asJoel Siegel's New York.

In 1986,Spymagazine derided Siegel as "the poor man'sGene Shalit",who relied" heavily on alliteration. "[8]

Good Morning Americaand later career

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In 1981, he joinedGood Morning America(GMA) as a film critic.[2]While Siegel worked at his reviewing, he wrote thebookforThe First,a Broadwaymusicalbased on the story ofJackie Robinson,[9][10]for which he received aTony Awardnomination in 1982. This marks him as the only drama critic to receive this nomination.[3]In 1999, Siegel was also one of the many guest critics onRoger Ebert's showAt The Moviesas a replacement forGene Siskelfollowing his death. Siegel was also a good friend of Roger Ebert.

Personal life

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Marriages

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Siegel's second wife, Jane Kessler, died from a brain tumor in 1982. In 1991, he joined with the actorGene Wilderto foundGilda's Club,a nonprofit organization that provided social support forcancerpatients and their families in honor of Wilder's wife,Gilda Radner.[11]

On June 21, 1996, Siegel married his fourth wife, artistEna Swansea.In 1997, at 53 years, he was diagnosed with colorectal cancer. One week after being diagnosed, Siegel found out he would be a father for the first time. He wrote the bookLessons for Dylanwhich shares the ups and downs of his life with his young son, as he might not live long enough to relate those stories in person.[12]Siegel underwent surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. He welcomed his newborn son, Dylan Thomas Jefferson Swansea Siegel, home on the same day he completed his chemotherapy treatments. Two years later, a CAT scan revealed a lesion on Siegel's left lung. After a pulmonary lobectomy and additional chemotherapy, Siegel continued to work onGMA.

Activism

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He was outspoken on the subject of colon cancer, and in 2005, spoke at a meeting of C-Change, a group of cancer experts from government, business, and nonprofit sectors, chaired by former PresidentGeorge H. W. Bushand former First LadyBarbara Bush.[13]He testified before the Senate during Colorectal Cancer Awareness month, March 2005. "I came here from New York City this morning hoping that I would encourage someone to have a colonoscopy so that they would not have to go through what I went through", he told a Senate panel.[14]In June 2005, Siegel published a letter in the peer-reviewed cancer medicine journal,The Oncologistentitled, "One at a Time". It shares his cancer diagnosis and experiences to that date.[15]

On May 10, 2007, less than two months before his death, he spoke before the CEO Roundtable on Cancer,[16]an association of corporate executives that was formed when former PresidentGeorge H. W. Bushasked corporate America to do something "bold and venturesome" about cancer. Bush and his wife Barbara were in the audience when Joel spoke on May 10 at the Essex House in New York City. He began and ended his presentation by saying, "I want to thank you for what you are doing for cancer patients."[citation needed]

Death

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Siegel died frommetastaticcolon cancer on June 29, 2007, shortly before what would have been his 64th birthday.[17]Following his death, Roger Ebert wrote a tribute to Joel and stated in the tribute that Joel was "a brave man, and a hell of a nice guy."[18]

Awards

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Siegel received five New York Emmy Awards and a public service award from theAnti-Defamation Leagueof B'nai B'rith and the New York State Associated Press Broadcasters Association Award for general excellence in individual reporting.[2]

Works

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  • Siegel, Joel.Lessons for Dylan: On Life, Love, the Movies, and Me.PublicAffairs, 2003.ISBN978-1-58648-127-8

References

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  1. ^Chute, David (July 1, 2007)."Film critic Joel Siegel '65 memorialized in scholarship".UCLA magazine.Los Angeles, California.Retrieved2014-12-26.Siegel had in fact edited satirical campus humor magazines at both Hamilton High ( "The Iconoclast" ) and UCLA ( "Satyr" ).
  2. ^abcd"Movie critic Joel Siegel dies"CNN.com. Accessed 2007-06-29.
  3. ^abc"Joel Siegel: Entertainment Editor on Good Morning America".Archived fromthe originalon 2007-06-09.
  4. ^"Q&A With Entertainment Editor Joel Siegel",ABC News,June 30, 2003
  5. ^Joel Siegel, "Lessons for Dylan: From Father to Son",PublicAffairs Books,2003
  6. ^Crowe, Jerry. "Who would have guessed? Rick Neuheisel has UCLA playing as well as USC."Los Angeles Times.November 18, 2009
  7. ^"NNDB: Joel Siegel".Retrieved2007-07-02.
  8. ^"Spy".April 1987.
  9. ^"1982 Tony Award Winners".
  10. ^"Joel Siegel" on WABC-TV New York website.Accessed 30 June 2007.
  11. ^Dennis McLellan,"Joel Siegel, 63; film critic on ABC morning news show",Los Angeles Times,June 30, 2007.
  12. ^"Lessons for Dylan" (excerpt from Siegel's 2003 book)
  13. ^e-collaborating (and communicating) to battle cancer issue #3 summer 2005
  14. ^ABC News: Siegel Passionate About Cancer Awareness- Accessed 2 July 2007
  15. ^Siegel, Joel."One at a Time",The Oncologist10 (7): 558.
  16. ^CEO Roundtable on Cancer
  17. ^"Joyful Critic Joel Siegel, Gone at 63".ABC News.Retrieved2022-04-23.
  18. ^"Joel Siegel: In Memory".2007.
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