From WABC�s Star Search To
�Today� On NBC
by Scott Benjamin
Les Marshak on the air at Musicradio WABC
1969
Les in 2005
(photos courtesy Les Marshak)
After five years at Radio NY Worldwide � a huge commercial shortwave operation �
and at WRFM locally, in 1969 Les Marshak wanted to come home to Musicradio77
WABC.
Famed WABC night air personality Scott Muni called to formally notify Les that
he had won the station�s Star Search air personality contest in 1961, when Les
was a student at Columbia University.
Soon, Les was assisting Scott during his appearances at Freedomland in the
Baychester section of the Bronx and reading high school sports scores on his
show. A short time later he became best friends with WABC air personality Cousin
Bruce Morrow � a relationship that has continued to this day. Les worked with
Brucie on his shows at Palisades Amusement Park in New Jersey. He also served as
WABC�s Youth Director.
In 1969 Les applied to be a summer ABC relief staff announcer.
�I
admired and followed the 27 staff announcers that were the signature of ABC,� he
said in a May 19, 2021 phone interview with Musicradio77.com.
That roster included Fred Foy, who had been the announcer for �The Lone Ranger�
and by then was the announcer for Dick Cavett�s ABC television show, and Joel
Crager, who for years was the voice for E.F. Hutton, the ABC Movie of the Week
and Ivory Soap.
�I didn�t know where this would lead to, but since most of my staff assignments
were on local radio, it couldn�t hurt to get closer to my dream to be back on
WABC,� Les explained.
The staff announcers had a variety of assignments: WABC, WABC-FM, WABC-TV
Channel 7, the American Contemporary Radio Network and ABC television.
ABC staff announcer Milton Cross � who was best-known for his work since 1931 on
the weekly Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts � walked by as Les was preparing
for his audition.
Les was struggling with a �classical music script for WABC-FM, which was then
playing classical and jazz.�
Mr. Cross said, �Could I help you with the
pronunciation?�
.Les remarked,
�This was the iconic voice that my dad listened to on the
radio on Saturday afternoon.�
Crager told
Musicradio77.com in 2006 that the first four years he worked there he always
called him, �Mr. Cross,� noting that Milton was �very charismatic.�
However, in a 2006 phone interview
with Musciradio77.com, former CNBC anchor Ted David, who was an ABC Page in the
late 1960s, noted that Milton �came and went and did his job as though he was
the janitor or the mailman."
With help from �Mr. Cross,� Les landed
the job, and got noticed by 77 WABC program director Rick Sklar, who made him
the Sunday morning 2 to 5 o�clock air personality.
One of his staff announcer duties was
doing the newscasts on WABC during the final weeks of Charlie Greer�s overnight
show.
After Charlie left in August, Roby
Yonge was assigned to the overnight show which included six live commercials per
hour for the sponsor, Denison's, the mean�s clothier
in Union, New Jersey.
Roby Yonge�s
WABC career was in decline after he was moved off the Monday through Saturday 1
to 3 p.m. show in early January after a year in that slot.
However, after being informed that his
contract wasn�t being renewed, Roby discussed the �Paul Is Dead� rumors about
Beatle Paul McCartney on Tuesday morning, October 21, 1969, and Sklar summoned
Les to the station, had a security guard remove Roby from the studio and had Les
complete that show. He continued on the overnights until Jay Reynolds arrived in
February 1970.
A month later Les was on the air at
WPIX-FM, which led to many �major ramp-ups.�
Since Les is the
most proficient archivist this side of
Doonesbury
cartoonist
Garry Trudeau � he still has the telegram informing him about being selected as
the WABC Star Search winner - Robyn Stecher, a vice president at Don Buchwald &
Associates, his
agent,
recommended that he do a �museum piece
for all his followers.�
�Les
Marshak�s Career Highlights� (21-mintesu, 29-seconds) was posted at YouTube in
2019 and has footage on him announcing the Tony Awards, the Academy Awards, the
Emmys, holiday shows, commercials for NBC Sports, and Sam Goody�s, and the
regional Emmy-nominated report he did for WNBC-TV New York in 2008 on the videos
he had of New York Yankees players and announcer Mel Allen departing the
ballpark from the 1950s.
There also is a photograph of him standing along with other production crew
members and the president and first lady from the January 2001 farewell party
for Bill Clinton, which featured a performance by Fleetwood Mac.
Currently, his highest-profile gig is as the announcer for the �Today� show on
NBC. In September he will celebrate 15 years there.
It is Les, via a digital recording, who introduces Savannah Guthrie and Hoda
Kotb each weekday morning on �Today.� Previously, he had been the announcer on
�Weekend Today� and got the Monday through Friday assignment after they
auditioned a raft of voice-over announcers based in New York City.
He also announces six annual holiday shows combined for PBS and NBC.
As a result of the pandemic, an NBC technical engineer came to his weekend home
in Southhampton, Long Island about a week before the 2020 Macy�s Thanksgiving
Day Parade and �installed a huge amount of gear in my sound studio� so he could
announce the parade remotely.
Les related, �It was quite overwhelming, but it worked beautifully.�
He said the PBS National Memorial Day Concert, which he has been announcing
since the late 1990s, is �emotionally rewarding,� since it �gives a huge focus
on so many thousands who lost their lives and whose lives were changed
dramatically defending our country. It is beautifully produced and directed.�
As for voice-over work on commercials, Les said with the pandemic subsiding that
he hopes he will again get some spots for Broadway productions. The first major
show that he did a commercial for was �The Wiz� in 1977.
However, he said that the voice-over market over the recent years has changed,
as there is more work being assigned to people who are not members of the Screen
Actors Guild.
For example, Les said the late Fred Collins, the famed NBC staff announcer, was
always working.
Collins reportedly over the years was a spokesman for 300 of the Fortune 500
companies.
Regarding radio,
Les noted that over generations some formats become obsolete and the ultimate
result is there is more radio. Soap operas gave way to Top 40 AM, which was
overtaken by FM stereo. Sports talk blossomed, which filled part of the void on
AM. About 20 years ago the new innovations were the Sirius and XM satellite
channels and over the recent years podcasting has grown.
Said Les, �it is not the way it
was when you took your AM/FM transistor radio to the beach. But radio today is
vibrant.�
Last
September, after a 46-year hiatus, Cousin Brucie
returned
to 77 WABC with a Saturday night show.
Les said he got to meet in person
recently with Brucie for the first time in a while, and that �he is loving the
new show.�
�I think he feels more freedom
since he is able to talk more than the way it was under the format years ago at
WABC,� he added.
Air personality Ron Lundy used to
open his Musicradio77 WABC midday show by referring to New York as, �The
greatest city in the world.�
Following the pandemic, can the
�greatest city in the world� again become �the greatest city in the world?�
Wall Street
Journal columnist Peggy Noonan wrote in February that �The Old New York Won�t
Come Back.�
�The closed shops
in and around train stations and office buildings, they�re not coming back. The
empty towers�people say, �Oh, they can become luxury apartments!� Really? Why
would people clamor for them, so they can have a place in the city and be near
work? But near work has changed. So you can be glamorous? Many of the things
that made Manhattan glamorous�shows, restaurants, clubs, museums, the opera�are
wobbling,� she stated.
Les disagreed.
He remarked,
�New York is a city that is unique in the world.
You have Broadway, the museums and Wall Street.�
�It is very different now,� Les said. �If you walk along Madison Avenue or the East Side or West Side, of Manhattan about 80 percent of the retail stores are closed.�
�People
may be initially reluctant to walk in a big crowd,� he explained. �But
eventually, they will come back. The tourists will want to be here.�
Les Marshak on WABC: October, 1969
(aircheck courtesy Les Marshak)
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