Morley Safer, Mainstay of ‘60 Minutes,’ Is Dead at 84
He was not on the list.
Morley Safer, a CBS television correspondent who brought the
horrors of the Vietnam War into the living rooms of America in the 1960s and
was a mainstay of the network’s newsmagazine “60 Minutes” for almost five
decades, died on Thursday at his home in Manhattan. He was 84.
His wife, Jane Safer, said he died of pneumonia.
Mr. Safer was one of television’s most celebrated
journalists, a durable reporter familiar to millions on “60 Minutes,” the
Sunday night staple whose signature is a relentlessly ticking stopwatch. By the
time CBS announced his retirement on May 11, Mr. Safer had broadcast 919 “60
Minutes” reports, profiling international heroes and villains, exposing frauds
and corruption, giving voice to whistle-blowers and chronicling the trends of
an ever-changing America.
Mr. Safer joined the program, created by Don Hewitt, in
1970, two years after its inception. His tenure eventually outlasted those of
his colleagues Mike Wallace, Dan Rather, Harry Reasoner, Ed Bradley and Andy
Rooney, as he became the senior star of a new repertory group of reporters on
what has endured for decades as the most popular and profitable news program on
television.
But to an earlier generation of Americans, and to many
colleagues and competitors, he was regarded as the best television journalist
of the Vietnam era, an adventurer whose vivid reports exposed the nation to the
hard realities of what the writer Michael J. Arlen, in the title of his 1969
book, called the “Living-Room War.”
With David Halberstam of The New York Times, Stanley Karnow
of The Washington Post and a few other print reporters, Mr. Safer shunned the
censored, euphemistic Saigon press briefings they called the “5 o’clock
follies” and went out with the troops. Mr. Safer and his Vietnamese cameraman,
Ha Thuc Can, gave Americans powerful close-ups of firefights and
search-and-destroy missions filmed hours before airtime. The news team’s
helicopter was shot down once, but they were unhurt and undeterred.
In August 1965, Mr. Safer covered an attack on the hamlet of
Cam Ne about 10 miles west of the port city of Da Nang. Intelligence had
identified Cam Ne as a Vietcong sanctuary, though it had been abandoned by the
enemy before the Americans moved in. Mr. Safer’s account depicted Marines,
facing no resistance, firing rockets and machine guns into the hamlet; burning
its thatched huts with flamethrowers, grenades and cigarette lighters as old
men and women begged them to stop; then destroying rice stores as the villagers
were led away sobbing.
“This is what the war in Vietnam is all about,” he reported.
“The Vietcong were long gone. The action wounded three women, killed one baby,
wounded one Marine and netted four old men as prisoners. Today’s operation is
the frustration of Vietnam in miniature. To a Vietnamese peasant whose home
means a lifetime of backbreaking labor, it will take more than presidential
promises to convince him that we are on his side.”
Broadcast on the “CBS Evening News,” then anchored by Walter
Cronkite, and widely disseminated, the report and its images stunned Americans
and were among the most famous television portraits of the war. They provoked
an angry outburst from President Lyndon B. Johnson, who excoriated Frank
Stanton, the president of CBS, in a midnight phone call and ordered Mr. Safer
investigated as a possible Communist. He was cleared.
For three weeks in 1967, Mr. Safer toured China, then in the
throes of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution, posing as a Canadian tourist (he
was born in Canada) because Western reporters were barred. Then, as CBS London
bureau chief, he covered a war in the Middle East, the Soviet invasion of
Czechoslovakia, strife in Northern Ireland and civil war in Nigeria, where he
was expelled for reporting thefts from relief supplies intended for Biafran
refugees.
In 1970, he swapped the foreign correspondent’s fatigues for
the dapper suits and silk handkerchiefs of “60 Minutes,” American TV’s first
news and entertainment hybrid with a magazine format. He was soon contributing
celebrity interviews and stylish essays to complement the investigative exposés
of Mr. Wallace, the veteran CBS inquisitor, who died in April 2012.
Over the next four decades Mr. Safer profiled writers,
politicians, opera stars, homeless people and the unemployed, and produced
features on shoddy building practices, strip mining, victims of bureaucracy,
waterfront crime, Swiss bank accounts, heart attack treatments, problems of
sleeplessness, cultural nabobs and other subjects, many suggested by staff
members and viewers.
In contrast to the often abrasive Mr. Wallace, Mr. Safer
produced witty pieces on the lighter side of life: the game of croquet,
Tupperware parties, children’s beauty pageants, experiments in communication
with apes, and oil-rich Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates — “a
place,” as he put it, “with free housing, free furniture, free color
television, free electricity, free telephones, no property taxes, no sales
taxes — no taxes, period.”
His serious journalism included a 1983 investigative report
in which he cited new evidence that helped free Lenell Geter, a black engineer
wrongly convicted of an armed robbery and sentenced to life in prison in Texas.
Mr. Safer’s report was not the first on the case, but it drew national
attention that led to its official reconsideration.
In the studio or reporting on the road — he often traveled
200,000 miles a year for “60 Minutes” — Mr. Safer was an affable interviewer,
asking questions the man in the street might if he had the chance. He was well
aware of television’s power to exploit emotions and was typically moderate, if
persistent, in his commentaries.
Still, Mr. Safer sometimes raised hackles, as when he
questioned the basic premise of abstract art in a 1993 report, calling much of
it “worthless junk” destined for “the trash heap of art history” and saying it
was overvalued by the “hype” of critics, art dealers and auction houses. The art
world recoiled, but Mr. Safer, who described himself as a “Sunday painter,”
stood his ground.
In 2012, he aired another blast at modern art, visiting a
Miami Beach show that he called “an upscale flea market” and complaining that
“the art trade” was a “booming cutthroat commodities market.” In a commentary,
the New York Times art critic Roberta Smith called Mr. Safer’s performance “a
relatively toothless, if still quite clueless, exercise,” adding:
“Basically, he and his camera crew spent a few hours last
December swanning around Art Basel Miami Beach, the hip art fair, and venturing
nowhere else, letting the spectacle of this event, passed through quickly and
superficially, stand for the whole art world.”
Suave, casual, impeccably tailored, with a long, craggy
face, receding gray hair and a wide, easy smile, Mr. Safer was something of a
Renaissance man. He baked pies and cakes (but swore he did not eat them),
played pétanque (a French version of bocce), pounded out scripts on a manual
typewriter long after computers became ubiquitous, and painted watercolors of
the interiors of countless hotel and motel rooms he had occupied.
In 1980, he even had a show at a SoHo gallery.
Why, he was asked in 1980, create still lifes in a transient
world?
“It’s 11:30 at night,” he replied. “I turn on Johnny Carson,
I pick up my paints, and it wipes my mind out.”
Morley Safer was born in Toronto on Nov. 8, 1931, the son of
Max and Anna Cohn Safer. His father owned an upholstery shop.
Mr. Safer studied at the University of Western Ontario, now
Western University. He was a reporter for two small newspapers in Ontario and
worked for Reuters in London before joining the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation in 1955.
As a CBC correspondent over the next three years, he covered
conflicts in the Middle East and Cyprus and the Algerian revolution. In 1958,
he produced and appeared on “CBC News Magazine.” Sent to CBC’s London bureau in
1961, he covered major events in Europe, the Middle East and Africa in the
early 1960s.
He joined the CBS London bureau in 1964. In 1965, he went to
Vietnam and soon began filing reports that changed the way many Americans
perceived the war.
In 1968, he married Jane Fearer, an anthropologist and
author. He is also survived by their daughter, Sarah Safer; a brother and
sister; and three grandchildren. He had homes in Manhattan and Chester, Conn.
In 1989, Mr. Safer went back to Vietnam for a “60 Minutes”
report and interviewed people whose lives had been touched by the war. He also
wrote a best-selling book, “Flashbacks: On Returning to Vietnam” (1990), with a
chapter on Pham Xuan An, a Time magazine war correspondent who had secretly
spied for Hanoi. Mr. Safer held no grudges. “He has done his best to follow his
conscience,” he wrote.
Mr. Safer won many awards, including Emmys, Peabodys and the
George Polk Award for career achievement. In recent years, he worked part time
for “60 Minutes.” Still, his 2009 profile of the legendary Vogue editor Anna
Wintour, who rarely gave interviews, was the talk of the fashion world.
When he retired, CBS broadcast an hourlong special, “Morley
Safer: A Reporter’s Life,” in which he revealed that he had not really liked
being on television.
“It makes me uneasy,” he said. “It is not natural to be
talking to a piece of machinery. But the money is very good.”
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