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Marilyn Beck

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Marilyn Beck
Born
Hanna Marilyn Mohr

(1928-12-17)December 17, 1928
DiedMay 31, 2014(2014-05-31) (aged 85)
Occupation(s)Journalist
TV interviewer/commentator
Years active1961 – 2014
Spouse(s)Roger Beck (div.)
Arthur Levine (1980-Death)
ChildrenMark E. Beck, Andee Beck Althoff

Marilyn Beck (December 17, 1928 – May 31, 2014) was a syndicated Hollywood columnist who rose to prominence on the heels of such predecessors as Hedda Hopper and Louella Parsons. Beck's hard news reporting approach to celebrity journalism arrived in sharp contrast to newspaper and fan magazine celebrity stories of the 1950s and 1960s, and served as a precursor to such current-day celebrity news publications as PEOPLE and US .

Early life

Born Hanna Marilyn Mohr in Chicago, Beck moved with her parents, older brother and younger sister to Los Angeles as a young child and studied journalism at the University of Southern California.

She married a newspaper reporter, Roger Beck (later divorced), and they became parents of a son and a daughter, Mark (now an attorney) and Andrea (Andee, a former journalist, who worked alongside Beck in the late 1970s). Beck started writing stories professionally following Andee's entry into kindergarten.

Career

Beck began working as a newspaper and magazine writer in the early 1960s. One of her first interviews was with notorious “Red Light Bandit” serial rapist Caryl Chessman on San Quentin's death row, shortly before he was executed. She wrote her first column for Bell McClure syndicate in 1967. Three years later, she was named Sheilah Graham's successor for the North American Newspaper Alliance.

Beck’s Hollywood column moved to the New York Times Special Features in 1972 as she reported on the doings of stars the likes of Elvis Presley, Natalie Wood, Robert Redford, Jane Fonda, Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. She became affiliated with Tribune Media Services in 1980, and a decade later moved to Creators Syndicate.[1]

Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, her column was seen in papers with a combined readership upwards of 25 million, maintaining a large print readership through the evolving Internet era of the ‘90s and ‘00s. Beck established an early-day web presence in the mid-‘80s, via Prodigy and CompuServe, and later on E! Online and AOL. She authored the Grapevine column in TV Guide from 1989 to 1992.

Beck began her partnership with newspaper and magazine writer Stacy Jenel Smith, a former protégé, in 1990. The column became Beck/Smith Hollywood Exclusive. Among Beck/Smith’s innovations (under the auspices of CompuServe and Entertainment Drive) was live online reporting with user questions being relayed to winners at the Academy Awards, beginning at the 1994 Oscars show.[2] They did regular on-camera streamed video reports on the web via AENTV beginning in 2000.[3]

Beck’s five-decade run has seen her and Smith’s column featured in hundreds of outlets ranging from France and Mexico to Cleveland and Milwaukee.[4] Beck/Smith Hollywood Exclusive continues through Creators Syndicate.

Other media

Beck was heard regularly on local Los Angeles radio station KFI, and was seen regularly on local (KABC) and national television. She appeared on programs including "Nightline" and shows hosted by Barbara Walters, Dinah Shore, Mike Douglas and Merv Griffin. She hosted NBC “Marilyn Beck’s Hollywood Outtakes” specials in 1977 and 1978 which featured the likes of Sylvester Stallone, William Holden and Robert Evans providing commentary for amusing outtake footage from their films. George Burns co-hosted the second special.[4]

She was the featured Hollywood interviewer on the syndicated "PM Magazine" show from 1983 to 1988, logging on-air chats with such celebrities as Farrah Fawcett, Harrison Ford, Lucille Ball, Michael Landon, George Burns, Warren Beatty, Dustin Hoffman, Christopher Reeve and Luciano Pavarotti.

Beck and Smith were among the media personalities reporting their celebrity stories on E! Entertainment’s 1993-1999 “The Gossip Show,” occasionally squaring off in lighthearted Point-Counterpoint-style debates.

Beck authored "Marilyn Beck's Hollywood," a 1972 hard-cover book [5] about the industry; also the 1988 Berkeley novel about Hollywood, "Only Make Believe".[6] She is one of the authors of the 1995 book, "Unfinished Lives...What if?"

Awards and recognition

Beck won honors from the Los Angeles City Council, the Southern California Motion Picture Council and the ICG Publicists Guild of America [7] She is listed in Who's Who in the World, Who's Who in America, Who's Who of American Women and Who's Who in Entertainment.

Brigham Young University features a collection of Marilyn Beck works,[8] including published columns from 1963 to 1993, videotapes, photographs, research files, celebrity correspondence, publicity material and drafts of her books.

Personal

A grandmother of four, Beck headquartered for 30 years from her home in Beverly Hills, where she often interviewed the stars for her column and for TV. She resided till her death in the Ocean Hills area of Oceanside, Ca, with her husband since 1980, Arthur Levine, a former Beverly Hills mediator. Marilyn Beck died from lung cancer on May 31, 2014.[9] She was 85.

References

  1. ^ Creator's Syndicate Biography
  2. ^ March 16, 1994 Oscars Online Announcement
  3. ^ AENTV Streamed Video Show announcement
  4. ^ a b Milwaukee Journal Mar. 21, 1978 featuring Marilyn Beck's Hollywood/"Hollywood Outtakes"/George Burns
  5. ^ Marilyn Beck's Hollywood, New York, Hawthorn Books, 1973
  6. ^ Only Make Believe, New York, Berkeley/Jove Publications, 1988
  7. ^ Marilyn Beck 1974 recipient ICG Publicists Guild Press Award (4)
  8. ^ Marilyn Beck Collection, Brigham Young University
  9. ^ "Marilyn Beck, longtime TV and Hollywood newspaper columnist, dies at 85". NY Daily News. Retrieved 2014-06-02.