2006 Lifetime Achievement Award
Studs Terkel
Studs Terkel�s multifaceted life has produced an equally rich and varied
legacy. After graduating from University of Chicago�s Law School in 1934,
Terkel pursued acting and appeared on stage, on radio, and in the movies.
He has been a playwright, a radio news commentator, a sportscaster, and a
film narrator, and has worked as a jazz columnist, a disc jockey, and a music
festival host. He even served briefly as a civil service employee but is best
known as a radio network personality and as a Pulitzer Prize-winning author
of books. His award winning books are based on his extensive conversations
with Americans from all walks of life that chronicle the profound and
often tumultuous changes in our nation during the twentieth century.
On �The Studs Terkel Program,� which was heard on Chicago�s fine arts
radio station WFMT from 1952 to 1997, Terkel interviewed Chicagoans and
national and international figures who helped shape the past century. The
program included guests who were politicians, writers, activists, labor organizers,
performing artists, and architects among others. Terkel is remarkable
in the depth of his personal knowledge of the diverse subjects explored
on his program and his ability to get others to talk about themselves and
what they do best.
Studs Terkel�s work has been highly praised and recognized in the world
of arts and letters. He is the recipient of numerous book awards including the
Pulitzer Prize for The Good War (1985), the Irita Van Doren Book Award,
and two National Book Award nominations. Terkel received the Presidential
National Humanities Medal (1999), the National Medal of Humanities (1997),
the Illinois Governor�s Award for the Arts, the Clarence Darrow Commemorative
Award, and he has been cited by the Friends of Literature for his �unique
contributions to the cultural life of Chicago.� His radio programs have been
honored with the Prix Italia, three Ohio State Awards, three Major Armstrong
Awards, and the George Foster Peabody Award for �The Studs Terkel Program�
(1980). He is currently Distinguished Scholar in Residence at the Chicago
Historical Society.
Nov. 3, 2008:
We are saddened to report that Studs Terkel died on Friday afternoon, October
31, 2008, in his home on the North Side of Chicago.
Reprinted from the Chicago Historical Society�s website:
Studs Terkel: Conversations with America, copyright 2002
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