Gene Shalit, beloved longtime film critic on the โ€˜Todayโ€™ show, dies

Gene Shalit, beloved longtime film critic on the โ€˜Todayโ€™ show, dies


Gene Shalit, the fast-talking funnyman who reviewed films, plays and books for NBCโ€™s โ€œTodayโ€ show has died. He was 100.

Shalitโ€™s family confirmed the longtime criticโ€™s death Friday, telling NBC that he โ€œpassed away peacefully after 100 years of an amazing life.โ€

According to a 2010 interview with Guy Ludwig, Shalitโ€™s producer for more than 20 years, Shalit was hired as a contributor at โ€œTodayโ€ in 1968. He reviewed books once a month or so, but audiences were so fascinated by his eccentric personality and equally unconventional looks that NBC ramped up the criticโ€™s on-air appearances.

In January 1973, on the same day he was promoted to arts editor, Shalit debuted โ€œCriticโ€™s Corner,โ€ the segment that would ultimately make him a household name. In 2010, Shalit retired as one of the last regular film critics on a major network.

Ludwig referred to Shalit as the โ€œfoxy grandpaโ€ of the โ€œTodayโ€ show.

Shalit cut his teeth in media as an entertainment columnist for McCallโ€™s magazine, eventually landing the role of senior film critic for Look magazine in 1968 and writing a humor column for Ladiesโ€™ Home Journal. His quick wit, punchy puns and unique voice came through even on the page, and NBC took notice.

โ€œNo one at NBC had seen him. Theyโ€™d only read his stuff. So he walked into this executiveโ€™s office and the executive took one look at him and said, โ€˜Mr. Shalit, have you ever thought of radio?โ€™โ€ Ludwig told โ€œToday.โ€

โ€œThey didnโ€™t know how the public would react to someone who looked so different from people who were typically on TV in 1967.โ€

On โ€œCritics Corner,โ€ Shalit favored humor over the highfalutin. He was an everymanโ€™s critic. Of 1997โ€™s action-thriller โ€œFace/Off,โ€ he said, โ€œNow, โ€˜Face/Offโ€™ is a literal title, because both of their faces are taken off. Then each face is put onto the otherโ€™s head. Even their voices are switched with microchip implants. In other words, this is an entirely reasonable, rational movie!โ€

โ€œMany critics will give so much of the plot of a movie away that they destroy the movie for the viewer … I just donโ€™t give away the story,โ€ he told the Associated Press in 1993.

During his tenure, he was known to bust up his colleagues, and โ€œTodayโ€ anchors ranging from Edwin Newman, Barbara Walters and Jane Pauley to Tom Brokaw, Bryant Gumbel, Katie Couric, Al Roker and Meredith Vieira.

But not everyone appreciated Shalitโ€™s style. In 1989, a leaked in-house memo from โ€œTodayโ€ show co-host Bryant Gumbel to Marty Ryan, the former executive producer of the NBC program, complained that Shalitโ€™s film reviews โ€œare often late and his interviews arenโ€™t very good.โ€

Eugene Shalit was born March 25, 1926, in New York City and grew up in Morristown, N.J. He launched his elementary schoolโ€™s first newspaper, โ€œThe Spotlight,โ€ and purchased a fedora to seal his fate as a journalist. In Morristown High School he wrote the school newspaperโ€™s humor column โ€œThe Broadcaster.โ€ In 1949, he graduated from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

Shalit was married to Nancy Lewis for 28 years until her death in 1978 and never remarried. The couple had six children: Peter, Willa, Emily, Amanda, Nevin and Andrew. Emily died from ovarian cancer in 2012.

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