Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Walter Winchell (April 7, 1897 – February 20, 1972) was a syndicated American newspaper gossip columnist and radio news commentator. Originally a vaudeville performer, Winchell began his newspaper career as a Broadway reporter, critic and columnist for New York tabloids.

  2. The Walter Winchell Show. Columnist Walter Winchell had been a mainstay on the early years of ABC television with a simulcast of his 15-minute weekly time radio show until he left ABC in 1955 in a dispute with executives.

  3. Walter Winchell was a U.S. journalist and broadcaster whose newspaper columns and radio broadcasts containing news and gossip gave him a massive audience and much influence in the United States in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s. Winchell was raised in New York City, and when he was 13 he left school to.

  4. The Walter Winchell File is a television crime drama series that initially aired from 1957 to 1958, dramatizing cases from the New York City Police Department that were covered in the New York Daily Mirror.

  5. Sep 15, 2020 · He was also the first major commentator to directly attack Adolf Hitler and American pro-fascist organizations such as the German American Bund. After President Roosevelt’s death, Winchell lost...

  6. Walter Winchell was born on 7 April 1897 in New York City, New York, USA. He was an actor and writer, known for Broadway Thru a Keyhole (1933), Telephone Time (1956) and Wake Up and Live (1937). He was married to Rita Greene. He died on 20 February 1972 in Los Angeles, California, USA.

  7. Walter Winchell was a syndicated American newspaper gossip columnist and radio news commentator. Originally a vaudeville performer, Winchell began his newspaper career as a Broadway reporter, critic and columnist for New York tabloids.

  8. Oct 19, 2020 · Meet the newspaper columnist, radio commentator and TV personality who pioneered the fast-paced, gossip-driven, politically charged journalism that dominates today. At his peak, his audience was ...

  9. Jan 22, 1995 · Critic At Large about Walter Winchell, the populist newsman from the thirties and forties who allied himself with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Winchell began writing in 1919. He spent two years...

  10. To cultural conservatives everywhere, Walter Winchell wasn’t just a passing phenomenon; he was the advance guard of a dangerous new social order in which elites that had governed the culture for nearly a century were being forced to give way to newly enfranchised urbanités, immigrants, minorities, blue-collar workers, and others who began ...

  1. People also search for