Current:Home > reviewsEchoSense:'The voice we woke up to': Bob Edwards, longtime 'Morning Edition' host, dies at 76 -Prime Capital Blueprint
EchoSense:'The voice we woke up to': Bob Edwards, longtime 'Morning Edition' host, dies at 76
Burley Garcia View
Date:2025-04-06 22:24:12
Bob Edwards,EchoSense the veteran broadcaster and longtime host of Morning Edition who left an indelible mark on NPR's sound, has died. He was 76 years old.
NPR's Susan Stamberg says Edwards' voice became part of the morning routine for millions of Americans.
"He was Bob Edwards of Morning Edition for 24 1/2 years, and his was the voice we woke up to," she says.
When listeners first heard that voice, they might have imagined a figure of great authority, an avuncular newsman dressed in a pinstripe suit. But that was not Bob Edwards.
He was the consummate newsman
Margaret Low started at the company in 1982 as a Morning Edition production assistant. Now CEO of WBUR in Boston, she served for three years as NPR's senior vice president for news. She says Edwards always walked in the door right at 2:30 a.m., but he was casual.
"He was tall and lanky and wore jeans, and I think, if I remember right, was sort of pretty much always in an untucked flannel shirt."
Low says Edwards' seeming casualness belied a seriousness — about radio, about the news and especially about the art of writing. Like several of his contemporaries at NPR, he studied writing at American University with former CBS journalist Ed Bliss.
"He used to say that Ed Bliss sat on his shoulder as he wrote," Low recalls.
In fact, Edwards' Washington, D.C., office overlooked CBS News.
"I have this total image of Bob sitting in his office on M Street and it would be dark outside because it would be the middle of the night, and he faced the window over CBS News," Low says. "And he would be typing on his manual typewriter with these really, really big keys, and they would go click, click, click, and behind him you would hear ... the AP and Reuters wires."
Edwards, Low says, was the consummate newsman.
"He was a total news guy, and I think understood the news deeply," she says. "And in some ways he sort of set the bar for how we approach stories, because he would convey these stories with a kind of simplicity but also with real depth, and make sure that they somehow resonated. And that's lasted."
'Mr. Cool' and Red Barber
Edwards started his career at NPR as a newscaster and then hosted All Things Considered with Susan Stamberg. She says their styles sometimes clashed.
"We had five good — if rocky — years together, until we sort of got one another's rhythm, because he was Mr. Cool, he was Mr. Authoritative and straight ahead. I was the New Yorker with a million ideas and a big laugh. But we really adjusted rather well."
Stamberg remembers Edwards for his humor, a quality that was often on display in his hundreds of interviews with newsmakers, authors, musicians and singers.
One of Edwards' longest-running radio relationships was also one of his listeners' favorites: his weekly conversation with sports broadcasting legend Red Barber.
Edwards eventually wrote a book about his radio friendship with Barber, the first of three he authored, including a memoir, A Voice in the Box: My Life in Radio.
Edwards' approach helped set the tone for NPR
Edwards left NPR after the company decided to remove him as host of Morning Edition. Though his many fans protested mightily, Edwards closed out his last show on April 30, 2004. He ended his tenure just as it started, by interviewing one of his radio heroes, Charles Osgood.
"You were the first person I interviewed for Morning Edition, and I wanted you to be the last," Edwards told Osgood on air.
Edwards went on to host his own interview show at Sirius XM Radio and continued to be heard on many public radio stations on Bob Edwards Weekend. But Margaret Low says his contribution to NPR will never be forgotten.
"He sort of set the tone and the bar for all of us," she says. "He understood the power and the intimacy of our medium and captured the attention of millions and millions of people who are still with us today."
veryGood! (51186)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Souvenir sellers have flooded the Brooklyn Bridge. Now the city is banning them
- Holiday week swatting incidents target and disrupt members of Congress
- Missouri GOP leaders say LGBTQ+ issues will take a back seat to child care, education policy in 2004
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- California begins 2024 with below-normal snowpack a year after one of the best starts in decades
- These jobs saw the biggest pay hikes across the U.S. in 2023
- Soccer stars Crystal Dunn and Tierna Davidson join NWSL champs Gotham FC: Really excited
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- West Virginia GOP delegate resigns to focus on state auditor race
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Lisa Rinna Bares All (Literally) in Totally Nude New Year's Selfie
- Brooke Hogan confirms marriage, posts 'rare' photo of husband Steven Oleksy: 'Really lucky'
- Christina Hall Responds to Speculation She's Pregnant With Baby No. 4
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Fiery Rochester crash appears intentional, but no evidence of terrorism, officials say
- Elections head in Nevada’s lone swing county resigns, underscoring election turnover in key state
- Prosecutors recommend six months in prison for a man at the center of a Jan. 6 conspiracy theory
Recommendation
'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
Cause still undetermined for house fire that left 5 children dead in Arizona, authorities say
Harvard president Claudine Gay resigns amid controversy
EU targets world’s biggest diamond miner as part of Russia war sanctions
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Halle Berry Ushers in the New Year With Risqué Pantsless Look
US intel confident militant groups used largest Gaza hospital in campaign against Israel: AP source
Holiday week swatting incidents target and disrupt members of Congress