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MCKAY, JIM
 Jim McKay Photo courtesy of Jim McKay JIM
MCKAY. Born James Kenneth McManus in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
U.S.A., 24 September 1921. Educated at Loyola College, Baltimore,
Maryland, B.A. 1943. Married: Margaret Dempsey, 1948; children:
Mary Edwina and Sean Joseph. Served in U.S.Navy, 1943-46. Reporter,
Baltimore Evening Sun, 1946-47; writer-producer-director,
Baltimore Sunpapers' WMAR-TV, 1947-50; variety show host, sports
commentator, CBS-TV, 1950-61; host, ABC Wide World of Sports,
1961-80; television commentator, all Olympiads, 1960-88; founder
and chair, "Maryland Million" Horse Racing Program, from 1986. H.H.D.,
Loyala College, 1981. Recipient: 13 Emmy Awards; George Polk Memorial
Award, 1973; Federal Republic of Germany Officer's Cross Order of
Merit, 1974; Olympic Medal, Austria, 1977; Thoroughbred Breeders
of Kentucky Engelhard Award, 1978, 90; honorary; Maryland Racing
Writers Humphrey S. Finney Award, 1985; named to Sportscasters Hall
of Fame, 1987; National Turf Writers Award, 1987; Peabody Award,
1989; U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame, 1989. Address: ABC Sports, 47 West
66th Street, New York, New York 10023, U.S.A.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1950 The Real McKay
1955 Make the Connection (moderator)
1957-60 The Verdict Is Yours (actor)
1958-59 This Is New York
1961- ABC's Wide World of Sports
TELEVISION SPECIAL
1992
Athletes and Addiction: It's Not a Game
PUBLICATIONS
My
Wide World. Macmillan, 1973.
U.S. Sportscaster
There
are few commentators with accolades to match those of Jim McKay,
or whose career is marked by an equally impressive list of broadcasting
"firsts." In 1947, McKay's was the first on-air television broadcaster
seen and heard on the airwaves of Baltimore, Maryland. Twenty-one
years later, in 1968, McKay earned distinction as the first sports
commentator honored with an Emmy Award. McKay built on his reputation
of excellence and went on to receive a total of thirteen Emmy Awards,
and further distinguished himself as the first, and only, broadcaster
to win Emmy Awards for both sports and news broadcasting as well
as for writing.
McKay's
first reporting job was with the Baltimore Evenin Sun. In
1947, the Sun's leadership invested in Baltimore's first
TV station, WMAR-TV, and McKay was chosen as that station's first
on-camera personality. McKay did everything but run WMAR-TV--functioning
as the station's producer, director, writer, and news and sports
reporter. His reputation as a hardworking and skillful journalist
earned him an opportunity to host a New York City based CBS variety
show and McKay became a strong presence in the largest media market
in the world. Although CBS gave McKay his broadcasting break, it
was ABC Sports, under the leadership of Roone Arledge, that provided
McKay the opportunity to flourish. During the 1950s, McKay covered
events ranging from international golf and horse racing events to
college football. McKay, and ABC colleague Howard Cosell, gave ABC
the most comprehensive sports programming available on television.
In
fact, McKay's assignment as an Olympic commentator would make McKay
one of the most recognizable sports personalities throughout the
world. His most memorable Olympic games were those at Munich, where
his experience as a seasoned reporter was put to the test. While
preparing to take a swim on his first day off at the games, McKay
received word that gunshots were fired in the Olympic Village. He
ran to the ABC studio, threw clothes on over his swimsuit, and for
the next 16 hours delivered to the world award winning coverage
of the Black September terrorists' attack on Israeli athletes in
Munich's Olympic Village.
McKay received two Emmy Awards for his work during the 1972 games,
one for his coverage of the games and the other for his reporting
on the terrorism. He was also the 1972 recipient of the George Polk
Memorial Award, given annually to the one journalist whose work
represents the most significant and finest reporting of the year.
The Munich coverage was also recognized with his receipt of the
Officer's Cross of the Legion of Merit, bestowed by the former West
German Federal Republic.
McKay
is perhaps best known for his role as host for ABC's Wide World
of Sports, which began with McKay as its host in 1961. Now,
some 35 years later, ABC's Wide World is the most successful
and longest running sports program in the history of television.
Through his work with ABC's Wide World, McKay became the
first American television sports reporter to enter the People's
Republic of China during China's policy of isolationism.
His pioneering work in the field has not gone unrecognized. His
multiple Emmy Awards are a tribute not only to his excellence, but
also to his versatility. In fact, among his most impressive Emmy's
is that from 1988, given for his opening commentary scripts of ABC
Sports' coverage of the 1987 Indianapolis "500," the British Open
and the Kentucky Derby; a 1990 Award, another first, for Lifetime
Achievement in Sports; and a 1992 Emmy for his sports special, Athletes
and Addiction: It's Not a Game.
In
addition to his role on Wide World, McKay anchors most major
horse-racing events such as the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes,
and the Belmont Stakes. In 1987, McKay was chosen as a member of
the Jockey Club, horse racing's governing body. McKay and his wife,
Margaret, reside in Monkton, Maryland and are steadfast supporters
of Maryland's horse-racing industry and culture. He is founder of
the "Maryland Million," a million-dollar horse racing spectacular
for Maryland thoroughbreds. They are also part owners of the Baltimore
Orioles baseball team.
-John
Tedesco
FURTHER
READING
Considine, T. The Language of Sport. New York: World Almanac
Publications, 1982.
Spence,
Jim. Up Close and Personal: The Inside Story of Network Television
Sports. New York: Atheneum, 1988.
Sugar,
Bert Randolph. "The Thrill of Victory": The Inside Story of ABC
Sports. New York: Hawthorn, 1978.
See
also Arledge,
Roone; Sports
and Television; Sportscasters
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