Obituaries

Pioneering Talk Show Host Phil Donahue Dies At 88

  • Television host Phil Donahue died on August 18 at the age of 88.
  • His family reported that he had suffered from a long illness.
  • As host of ‘The Phil Donahue Show,’ he pioneered the first talk show that heavily featured audience participation.

 

On August 18, Phil Donahue died. He was 88 years old when he died, with no official cause of death currently confirmed, though his family said he had been suffering from a “long illness.” In a statement, his family also shares that he died “peacefully.”

Donahue was the host of The Phil Donahue Show, later known simply as Donahue. The program marked the very first time a talk show included audience participation—and it was even encouraged by Donahue, who would reach out to audience members about a variety of topics. Winfrey categorized the genre of television that Donahue pioneered as “issue-driven straight talk.”

The passing of Phil Donahue, a television pioneer

DONAHUE, Phil Donahue (host),1967-1995 / Everett Collection

“Groundbreaking TV talk show journalist Phil Donahue died Sunday night at home,” reads a statement from his family, which goes on to say he was “surrounded by his wife of 44 years Marlo Thomas, his sister, his children, grandchildren and his beloved golden retriever Charlie. Donahue was 88 years old and passed away peacefully following a long illness.”

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Donahue was born on December 21, 1935, in Cleaveland, Ohio, and began his career as a production assistant at KYW radio and television. One day, the usual announcer failed to show up, throwing the door wide open for Donahue to step in and begin that leg of his career.

Revolutionizing television

The future television pioneer started off on radio and gained rapid traction on the airwaves, landing important interviews / © AVCO Embassy Television /Courtesy Everett Collection

After relocating to Daytona, Donahue hosted Conversation Piece, where he interviewed Malcolm X, Johnny Carson, and John F. Kennedy, when the latter was a presidential candidate. During his time in Chicago and New York City, Donahue would add Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, Noam Chomsky, and Elton John to his list of interviews.

His series was picked up for syndication in 1969, and would reach over 200 stations across the U.S. While others in the genre would heavily feature celebrity chatter, notes Variety, Donahue conducted himself first and foremost as a journalist. After Donahue left WHIO in 1967, he brought The Phil Donahue Show to television, and while its reach was limited upon its televised premiere, by 1970, it was up for national syndication.

The Phil Donahue Show would run for 29 seasons and air almost 7,000 episodes before ending in 1996. Before his program ended, he and Soviet journalist Vladimir Posner co-hosted a program of their own called the U.S.–Soviet Space Bridge, in which they interviewed citizens from the U.S. and Soviet Union; this was the first program of its kind in television history—a statement that can be attributed to a lot of what Donahue did. In the spirit of making the Cold War less frosty, “We reached out instead of lashed out.”

In 2008, Donahue was presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award. In a speech presenting the honor to him, Oprah Winfrey praised, “He may not have invented talking to people on television, he just did it better than anyone who came before him. All of us who came after Phil Donahue owe him a tremendous debt of gratitude.”

Donahue is survived by his second wife, Marlo Thomas, to whom he was married since 1980, along with five children from his first marriage.

Rest in peace, Phil Donahue.

Armed with a wireless mic, the host would approach audience members to get their input on a variety of hot-button issues / Everett Collection

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