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Monday, April 25, 2022
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Media|Jim Hartz, NBC Newsman and Former ‘Today’ Co-Host, Dies at 82

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/24/business/media/jim-hartz-dead.html
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JIM HARTZ, NBC NEWSMAN AND FORMER ‘TODAY’ CO-HOST, DIES AT 82

His role as Barbara Walters’s on-air partner lasted only two years, but viewers
knew him for three decades as a correspondent, anchor and TV host.

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Jim Hartz in 1976 covering the New Hampshire Democratic Primary. He was 34 when
he joined the “Today” show in the mid-1970s.Credit...NBC News/NBCU Photo
Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images


By Anita Gates

April 24, 2022

Jim Hartz, the low-key, folksy newsman who hosted the “Today” show with Barbara
Walters in the mid-1970s, less than halfway through his three-decade television
career, died on April 17 in Fairfax County, Va. He was 82.

The cause was chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, his wife, Alexandra Dickson
Hartz, said, adding that he had chosen to be removed from the ventilator that
was keeping him alive.

Mr. Hartz may have looked boyish when he started the “Today” show job, at 34,
succeeding Frank McGee, who had died a few months before at 52, but he was no
beginner. He had already spent a decade in New York at WNBC, covering local
stories, from John V. Lindsay’s mayoralty through Robert F. Kennedy’s funeral
and well into the Watergate scandal.

The news stories he covered while on “Today” included President Richard M.
Nixon’s resignation, the end of the Vietnam War and the American Bicentennial.
But his “Today” career wound up lasting only two years.



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Both on “Today” and in other broadcast jobs, Mr. Hartz covered numerous space
missions. He and the broadcast-news pioneer John Chancellor were co-announcers
in 1971 during the Apollo 15 launch, which led to a three-day lunar visit by
astronauts. He was co-author of “Worlds Apart: How the Distance Between Science
and Journalism Threatens America’s Future” (1997), with Rick Chappell, a former
astronaut.

In a 1974 interview with The Christian Science Monitor, Mr. Hartz admitted that
a NASA event was so overwhelming for him that afterward he would have no memory
of what he had said on the air.

Recalling the first time he saw a Saturn rocket lifting off at Cape Kennedy on
an Apollo mission, he said, “I was just not prepared for that 36-story building
walking right off the platform into the air.”

James Leroy Hartz was born on Feb. 3, 1940, in Tulsa, Okla., to the Rev. Marvin
Dillard Hartz, an Assembly of God minister, and Helen Elvira (Potter) Hartz. He
was their fifth child.

When Jim entered the University of Tulsa, his plan was to go to medical school,
but it was a halfhearted ambition. “I was under a lot of pressure from one of my
brothers to become a doctor,” he told The Tulsa World half a century later.
Around his junior year, he said, he had to admit that he was much more
interested in journalism.



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His early career progress was meteoric. By the time he graduated, in 1962, he
had already done internships at local television and radio stations. He was
hired as a reporter for KOTV in Tulsa that year and became a host of “Sun Up,”
the channel’s morning show.

He was promoted to news director in 1964 (he was 24) and hired away by NBC that
same year. In New York, he became anchor of the evening newscasts on WNBC, the
network’s flagship local station, and was, several sources said, the youngest
correspondent ever hired by the network.

The “Today” job came along in 1974, when executives chose him to replace Mr.
McGee, passing over Tom Brokaw and Tom Snyder, who were both considered more
dynamic personalities and both better known nationally. But Mr. Hartz’s
laid-back style seemed to be a better fit with Ms. Walters, who had been
promoted to co-host after 13 years with the show and was determined, she made
clear, not to take a back seat to anyone.


Image

Mr. Hartz with his co-anchor, Barbara Walters, on the set of the “Today” show.
They worked together on the program for two years.Credit...NBC Newswire/NBCU
Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

Image

Ms. Walters and Mr. Hartz were together again for the “Today” show’s 60th
anniversary episode in 2012.Credit...Getty Images


When she announced in the spring of 1976 that she was leaving to become ABC’s
evening news co-anchor, however, NBC officials had to re-evaluate.

They hired Jane Pauley, a relatively unknown 25-year-old whose voice happened to
sound much like Ms. Walters’s. Fearing that she and Mr. Hartz — two unassuming
hosts — might have less than scintillating chemistry, NBC went back to Mr.
Brokaw and persuaded him to take the co-host job.

But Mr. Hartz wasn’t exactly fired; it was announced that he would be given a
new job, as the roving host of “Today,” reporting from across the nation. That
arrangement, too, was short-lived.



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From 1976 to 1979, he was news anchor at WRC, the NBC affiliate in Washington.
He later worked with PBS, co-hosting “Over Easy,” a celebrity talk show,
alongside the actress Mary Martin, and “Innovation,” a weekly science show. In a
1985 review of “Innovation,” John Corry, of The New York Times, called the show
“vaguely, but never unintelligently, cheerful.” Much like its host.

In the early 1990s, Mr. Hartz was a host of “Asia Now,” a PBS co-production with
NHK, Japan’s public broadcaster, originating from Tokyo. In 1993, he became
chairman of the Will Rogers Memorial Commission, headquartered in Oklahoma. It
oversees the Will Rogers Memorial in Claremore and the Will Rogers Birthplace in
Oologah.

In 1960, while still in college, he married Norma Tandy, his Tulsa high school
sweetheart who died in January, and they had three children. A year after their
1979 divorce, he married Alexandra Dickson, a social worker in Alexandria, Va.

She survives him, as do his two daughters, Jana Hartz Maher and Nancy Hartz
Cole; six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. His son, John Mitchell
Hartz, died at 52 in 2015.

The space program remained a fascination to Mr. Hartz. At a 20th-anniversary
gala for the Apollo 11 project in Houston, he described the 1969 moon landing in
lofty terms, calling it “the grandest thing we could think to do” at the time
and lauding “what man can do with a singleness of mind and a clearly defined
goal.” But even that accomplishment could sound almost down to earth when he
fell back on his folksy manner in talking about it.

“The truth is,” he said, “we went there just to check it out — friendly-like.”

Livia Albeck-Ripka contributed reporting.







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