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By Barbara Williams Perry, 2005 Silver Circle Production Chair
On April 29, 2005, the Chicago/Midwest Chapter of the Television Academy
inducted five news members into the SilverCircle. And, just
like the
previous 13 induction ceremonies — this year’s ceremony was
the
best.
To see photos of the event go to:
http://www.chicagoemmyonline.org/component/option,com_gallery2/Itemid,70/?g2_itemId=1641
The Silver Circle honors our colleagues who have worked in
television for 25 years or more. But it takes more than longevity. Each
year we
honor people whose work has had an impact on our industry and
changed
it for the better. Members of the Silver Circle are our peers, our
mentors, and our pioneers. They are also our friends. Bring them
together, and you have a great celebration of the Chicago television industry.
This year the Silver Circle got five new members:Roger
Ebert: ABC7 film critic and host of “Ebert & Roeper”
Bill Jackson:
children’s television puppeteer and pioneer
Mike Torchia: cameraman, now
freelance; Linda Yu: ABC7 anchor Linda Mancuso: posthumous award given for
work in network
programming
Chicago’s historic Drake Hotel was the
site of our celebration. As friends and colleagues gathered for cocktails,
it became a reunion
for people who may not have seen each other for years,
but remembered working together like it was yesterday.
Dinner
followed in the Grand Ballroom, and then our program got underway.
Our
host for the evening was Jim Tilmon of CBS2. Tilmon has
helped the academy
with the Silver Circle dinner in the past, when he
prepared a presentation
for Miss Francis in 2001. He gave a gracious and moving acceptance when he
was honored with the Silver Circle in
2000. As host of this evening, he was
extraordinary.
Tilmon told our new inductees and their guests how
important this award has been in his life, because it is these particular
colleagues
— those who work in Chicago — who recognize his and all the inductees’ contributions. Tilmon repeated that he believes
Chicago is
without question the best market to work in.
Each of our honorees had
chosen someone to present them for the Silver Circle, and these presenters
each gave a full picture of their
friend and colleague. Prior to accepting
their honors, our new inductees each enjoyed a video showcasing their work.
This was the
fun part.
The fun started when Jim Engel presented Bill
Jackson for the Silver Circle. Engel, a cartoonist and curator at the
Museum of
Broadcasting, talked about the zaniness of Jackson’s programs,
like
“B.J. Gigglesnort Hotel,” that inspired Engel to have fun in life.
Engel’s video caught that silly, playful fun. And in his acceptance,
Jackson talked about the perfect professionalism of the producers and crews
he worked with over the years at WBBM, WFLD, WGN, and WLS.
Janet
Davies presented her friend and cameraman Mike Torchia for induction into
the Silver Circle and told the audience their
friendship is the bond that
made their work so good. Torchia worked for WSNS, ESPN, and On-TV and spent
most of his
career at ABC7. Torchia is now a respected freelance cameraman
and director.
In his acceptance speech, Torchia thanked his friends
with whom he
has had the privilege to work over the years. He said he
shares the honor with all of them.
Peter Engel, president of Peter
Engel Productions, joined us from Los Angeles to present the late Linda
Mancuso for the Silver Circle. Members of Mancuso’s family and many of her
Chicago-area friends
joined Engel in celebrating her career as a producer
and programmer
for WMAQ and NBC, and remembered Mancuso’s work as
programming chief
at the ABC Family Channel. In accepting the award on
behalf of his
late sister, who died in 2003, Rob Mancuso thanked the
academy for
recognizing Mancuso’s high professional standards and her love
for her work.
Thea Flaum, who joined the Silver Circle in 2001 and
is president of Thea Flaum Productions, created “Sneak Previews” with the
late Gene
Siskel and Roger Ebert. She
presented Ebert for the Silver
Circle, citing his love of the movies and the honesty of his criticism.
Ebert’s video reviewed his career, and his acceptance stories reminded the
guests that movies take us to
people and worlds and real life we might not
see anywhere else.
That’s why he wants them to be so good.
Silver
Circle member Joel Daly, who was inducted in 2002, presented his
ABC7
co-anchor Linda Yu for her honors. He told the audience Yu has been a
colleague and friend to him, and added that her professionalism and
support for colleagues at NBC5 and ABC7 have made her a great anchor in
television news. In her acceptance, Yu said that as a young
immigrant from
China, she wanted to see people who looked like her on
American television.
Yu is proud to be a member of the community of Asian-American journalists,
and proud to work in Chicago, where high
standards make great
journalism.
Tilmon ended the evening by repeating congratulations to the
new
members of the Silver Circle and closed with a pilot’s story. He said
that when two jets fly at high altitudes on late-night flights, they
acknowledge and honor each other by blinking their landing lights. It
is a special salute, Tilmon said, and it is what we did that evening
with the Silver Circle.
2005 HONOREE BIOS
For the past 25 years
*Roger Ebert has been host of the most influential program on film aired on
American TV. He created the format
with the late Gene Siskel when they
co-hosted "Siskel & Ebert" for 23
years. His current program, "Ebert
& Roeper," is syndicated on more than 2000 stations nationwide. The
native of Urbana, Ill., won the
Pulitzer
Prize for his film criticism in
the Chicago Sun-Times. Ebert's column is syndicated in more than 200
newspapers, and he is the film critic for
ABC7.
The credits of *Bill
Jackson, children’s show host and puppeteer
include “Cartoontown,” “Here
Comes Freckles,” and “Gigglesnort Hotel.” He has worked with WBBM-Channel 2,
WGN-Channel 9, and
WFLD-Channel 32 and, in syndication, on Channel
7.
*Linda Mancuso, inducted posthumously, was senior vice
president
and head of programming for ABC Family Channel. Before that,
she was President of Peter Engel Productions and also spent more than
20
years at NBC in prime-time series production, series development,
and
executive roles.
*Michael Torchia was a director, camera operator,
and production engineer at WLS Channel 7, WSNS-Channel 44, ESPN,
and the
former ON-TV.
*Linda Yu, a veteran news anchor, joined WLS in 1984 after
five years at WMAQ. She currently anchors the WLS 11 a.m. and 4
p.m.
weekday newscasts. Yu has been honored with three local Emmy
Awards.
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