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Charles Wheeler (Read 37121 times)
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Charles Wheeler
Jul 4th, 2008, 1:06pm
 
This is taken from The Guardian:

Charles Wheeler
by Harold Jackson
Friday July 4, 2008


For more than four decades Charles Wheeler, who has died aged 85, reported for radio and television from most of the world's trouble spots, becoming in the process the BBC's longest-serving foreign correspondent.

Though his craggy features and shock of white hair were his most obvious trademarks, they were incidental to an investigative skill and sense of judgment which made him one of the most authoritative reporters of his generation.

Wheeler was the son of an RAF wing commander who by the late 1920s was an expatriate employee of a Bremen shipping company. Moving to Hamburg, one of Wheeler's early formative experiences was to observe the violence that brought the Nazis to absolute power. He was sent to Cranbrook school in Kent and by the time he left at 17, Britain was at war with Germany. While waiting to join the services, Wheeler took a job in 1940 as a copy boy at the tabloid Daily Sketch, sparking off a lifelong taste for journalism.

In 1942 he went into the Royal Marines and with the rank of captain was assigned to a special unit created by the author Ian Fleming to gather advance intelligence for the D-day landings in June 1944. He was selected because of his fluent German but made such an impression on his unit commander, Patrick Dalzel-Job (on whom Fleming reputedly based James Bond) that he was rapidly promoted to second-in-command. His fellow officers described him as cheerful, efficient and very brave. After the war he was posted to Berlin, helping some of Germany's submarine commanders flee the eastern provinces.

On demobilisation in 1947, he joined the BBC's External Service, initially as a sub-editor and later as its Berlin correspondent. From there he reported on the gradual emergence of West German democracy, and the parallel clampdown on dissidence in the east of the communist German Democratic Republic. But, after three years and over his own protests, he was brought back to London to serve as a talks writer.

Increasingly frustrated by this desk work he decided to move to television in 1956, when Panorama offered him a job as a producer. But, as he was the first to acknowledge, the nitpicking imperatives of production did not enthral him (he was notorious for his indifference to deadlines) and, after two years, he moved to New Delhi as the BBC's South Asia correspondent.

Among the stories he covered was the Dalai Lama's flight from Tibet in 1959. But these were the closing years of the rule of prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, whose capacity to handle his turbulent nation was diminishing rapidly. Though Wheeler's reporting was generally sympathetic, the robust terms in which it was sometimes couched drew periodic official protests. The greatest furore came after a trip to Ceylon (which became Sri Lanka in 1972), where the government threatened to leave the Commonwealth after Wheeler had called its prime minister "an inexperienced eccentric at the head of a cabinet of mediocrities". The British prime minister, Harold Macmillan, was forced to issue a public apology to defuse the crisis.

In 1962 Wheeler went back to Berlin, by now more concretely divided by the wall erected by the GDR. Once again, he had arrived for the closing years of an ancien regime, and the architect of West Germany's postwar recovery, Konrad Adenauer, had been allowed to remain in the post at the age of 86 on the bizarre condition that he retire by the time he was 90. During the old man's frantic final attempts to complete his political monument, Wheeler did his best to convey the significance of what was happening to a British mass audience.

It was hard material for any reporter to shape and the absence of background knowledge generated a complete lack of interest among most listeners: it usually needed something like a spectacular escape across the wall to rouse a flicker of attention, so it was probably with some relief that Wheeler packed his bags in 1965 to move to Washington.

As in most professions, luck played its part. Wheeler took up his new posting just as America was becoming the world news centre. President Lyndon Johnson's civil rights legislation, having raised black expectations, seemed unable to meet them at anything like an acceptable pace.

Wheeler found himself criss-crossing the country — from voting protests in Alabama, to anti-segregation marches in Chicago, to the devastating riots in the Watts area of Los Angeles in which 34 people died. In a succession of memorable reports he not only dealt with the spot news but sent interviews and background research which gave a British audience a much clearer understanding.

He also found himself in the midst of the rapidly accelerating opposition to the Vietnam war and the radicalisation of America's universities. Night after night he chronicled first the protest movement that drove Johnson from the White House and then the divisive campaign that irreparably split the Democratic party and brought Richard Nixon to the presidency in the 1968 elections. It made him one of broadcasting's best-known names and voices.

His observation of Nixon in office tended to confirm the view he had formed of him as vice-president years before: when guiding him on a tour of Berlin he found him "weird and totally mad". This judgment was confirmed during the 1972 Republican convention when Wheeler was inadvertently given a copy of the minute-by-minute stage management of the President's renomination, even down to the length of the spontaneous applause. Firmly resisting all official efforts to stop him, he gave a hilarious precis of the arrangements to that evening's viewers.

It should have been a warning of the sequence of dirty tricks and illegalities that was to become the Watergate scandal. News desks in Britain and the rest of Europe were curiously late waking up to the dimensions of the issue, and to a degree their attention was eventually caught by the reports Wheeler sent back. Not least of his professional skills was to hone what was, even for Americans, a fairly incomprehensible issue into a pithy summary.

But Wheeler did not stay to see Nixon forced from office. With Britain's accession to the European Economic Community in 1973 he became European correspondent. In February 1974 Harold Wilson's Labour party was returned to power and Wheeler found himself trying to explain the government's endless haggling over the size of Britain's contribution to the community budget. After a massive affirmative vote in the 1975 referendum, public interest in Europe soon dwindled, and Wheeler rejoined Panorama in 1977.

This was the format best suited to his journalistic style. It allowed him sufficient preparation and a long enough segment to give the viewer a carefully considered and stylish perspective. And Wheeler's on-screen presence, simultaneously professorial and incisive, was perfectly suited to this more analytical approach. He could, at times, be a ferocious interviewer, politely refusing to let the victim evade or obfuscate.

It may have been this quality that persuaded the BBC he would be the ideal presenter for Newsnight when it started in 1980. It was hopeless, and his distaste for the apparent omniscience required of a frontman was evident. The assignment ended in tears when, in the middle of some mammoth technical disaster, Wheeler told the audience he had no idea what was going on and simply sat mutely while it was sorted out. He was, as he later acknowledged, quite rightly sacked.

This was to the benefit of both BBC and viewers. It put him back on the road for Newsnight, among others. His reports soon came rolling in from the disintegrating Soviet Union, the Berlin Wall, the Gulf War, Kurdistan, and almost anywhere that suffering humanity needed a concerned and effective witness. Over the years his documentaries included the Kennedy Legacy (1970), Battle for Berlin (1985), the Legacy of Martin Luther King (1993) and Coming Home (2006). In 1955 his book, The East German Rising, co-written with Stefan Brant was published.

As the reports accumulated so they attracted well-earned professional recognition. His many awards included Journalist of the Year (1988) from the Royal Television Society, its International Documentary Award (1989) and a special commendation (1992). The Broadcasting Press Guild presented him with its Harvey Lee Award (1995) and made him television journalist of the year in 1996. He became an honorary doctor at the Open University and in 2006 he was knighted.

He was twice married. In 1962 he married Dip Singh, who survives him, as do his two daughters, Marina, a barrister married to Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, and Shirin, who works for the BBC.

Charles Wheeler, journalist, born March 26, 1923; died July 4, 2008
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #1 - Jul 5th, 2008, 7:26am
 
This is taken from The Times, July 5, 2008:

Sir Charles Wheeler: veteran BBC foreign correspondent

The doyen of BBC foreign correspondents, Charles Wheeler earned a permanent niche in television history through his coverage of the Watergate scandal during his years as the corporation’s chief correspondent in the United States. Often ahead of the American press corps, he exploited the contacts he had built up during seven years in Washington to provide the fullest and most comprehensive reporting available in the British media — and more than matching in quality, though not in quantity, that of the American networks.

When he returned to Britain in 1973 — the BBC pulled him out before the denouement of the story — he was taken aback and not entirely gratified to discover that he had become a national celebrity. A modest, diffident, wiry man, Wheeler never had any desire to be a TV personality, seeing himself first and foremost as an old-style reporter who happened to work in the visual medium.

Significantly, the efforts that the BBC regularly made to transform him into an omniscient studio presence as the anchorman of such programmes as Panorama and Newsnight ended in failure. Wheeler had no appetite for such work, regarding the role of a presenter with its built-in smiling geniality as essentially fraudulent. He was always happiest working with a film crew in the field — which he continued to do, latterly for Channel 4.

Selwyn Charles Cornelius-Wheeler was born in 1923 in Germany, where his father, who had served with the Canadian Army in the First World War, worked as a shipping agent in Hamburg. His early years in Germany meant he had excellent German, which was to be useful both in broadcasting and to British Intelligence (his first foreign posting was a BBC External Services one to Berlin in the year after the airlift).

Before that, he had had a conventional enough education, being sent home to school at Cranbrook in Kent, which he left in 1940 at the age of 17. Too young to join the Forces, he took a job as a copyboy with the Kemsley-owned Daily Sketch, progressing from there (after his elder brother had been killed with Coastal Command in 1940) to enlist in the Royal Marines.

Wheeler talked very little about his war service but he was engaged in some of the bloodier engagements in the North West Europe campaign, rising to the rank of captain and being mentioned in dispatches. He was also used for intelligence and interrogation purposes in postwar Berlin.

Demobilised at the age of 23, he found it impossible to get a job, as he had hoped, in newspapers and in desperation turned to the BBC External Services, which initially put him to work as a sub-editor in its Latin American section (the fact that he had a fluent command of German and pretty good French as well clearly counted for nothing). Eventually, however, he was transferred to the German service and it was this department in Bush House that eventually had the sense to send him back to his old stamping-ground of Berlin.

Wheeler stayed there until 1953, covering the Soviet repression of the East Berlin uprising of that year before, to his regret, being summoned home to write talks scripts for the European service. Entombed once more in Bush House, he not surprisingly got itchy feet and in 1956 made the first of a number of unorthodox moves by switching, at the invitation of an old friend Michael Peacock, to join current affairs television and Panorama as a producer.

It was the golden age for that old BBC warhorse, and Wheeler found himself a member of a classic company which included such figures as Richard Dimbleby, Robin Day, Ludovic Kennedy and Woodrow Wyatt. His place, of course, at that time was behind the camera rather than in front of it — and it was probably in part a desire to reverse that position which led Wheeler in 1958 to apply for a post with BBC News.

At the time such an action was tantamount to treason — those working in current affairs regarded news reporters as their deadly enemies and vice versa. Despite efforts to intimidate him into staying with Panorama, Wheeler insisted on leaving and was rewarded with the post of South Asia correspondent, based in Delhi.

His principal work there was for radio — television stories outside Europe at that stage had to be filmed, placed in a canister and then flown home. But the BBC’s new South Asia correspondent soon proved himself a master of words, always taking great pains, quite incapable of writing a dull script and rather tending to show up his lazier colleagues on programmes such as From Our Own Correspondent. Wheeler remained in India until 1962, before returning to Berlin, after the building of the Wall, this time for the mainline BBC domestic services.

The year 1965 first brought Wheeler to Washington, initially to join Gerald Priestland (later the BBC religious affairs correspondent) in what was not always an easy partnership. But from 1969 onwards, with his appointment as chief American correspondent, Wheeler came very much into his own. Active, energetic and ubiquitous, he soon became one of the best known members of the overseas Washington press corps.

He enjoyed a particular triumph at the 1972 Republican convention which renominated President Nixon, getting hold of the convention chairman’s teleprompter script which covered everything down to the meticulously timed pauses for “spontaneous applause” — and resisting all the efforts from the party high command to make him surrender it. It was just the kind of coup that Wheeler enjoyed. It was not at all that he disliked politicians — merely that he thought it was a journalist’s duty to expose humbug whenever it surfaced.

That made him particularly qualified to cover the Watergate scandal. Wheeler stuck with the story tenaciously, and now that satellites (beginning with Early Bird in 1965) had started transmitting instant images across the Atlantic neither the various BBC news desks nor the differing audiences of BBC viewers for particular programmes could get too much of him. For the British public he became not just the reporter but the arbiter — his authority, if anything, enhanced by the obvious rights of access he enjoyed, even to such a figure in the eye of the storm as the Nixon White House aide, John D. Ehrlichman, with whom he obtained the first exclusive interview.

Wheeler left Washington with reluctance in 1973, though probably not foreseeing that the curtain would fall on the Nixon presidency within nine months. The blandishment that had tempted him to leave was the knowledge that the new Director-General, Charles Curran, had formed a high opinion of him (he had never, for some strange reason, got on with Hugh Greene) and wanted to apprentice him to the corporation’s executive ladder.

In 1973 he was sounded out about the BBC controllership in Northern Ireland but eventually (he had not only a wife but two young daughters) turned the idea down. Instead, and perhaps not so wisely, he fell in with Curran’s suggestion that, now that Britain had joined the European Economic Community, Brussels was bound to become the fulcrum for meaningful political and economic news. Wheeler and his family went to live in Brussels for three years but it cannot be said that even he succeeded in producing much in terms of palatable coverage of the essentially rarefied and arcane procedures of the EEC.

By the end of 1976 — and before even Roy Jenkins had formally taken up office as the first (and so far only) British President of the Commission — Wheeler had prudently decided to cut his losses. He returned to Britain, first to take up a fireman’s role with BBC Television News and then, in 1977, to take over from David Dimbleby as the frontman for Panorama. It was he himself who said at the time that he was the last person who should have been given the job — and that proved a prophetic utterance.

For all his facility in doing a 40-second piece to camera in the course of a news report from some far-flung danger spot, Wheeler never felt or looked at home sedately addressing a camera in a studio. And that went, too, for his experience a few years later with Newsnight, where originally he was meant to be, along with Peter Snow, one of the programme’s anchormen holding the show together.

Newsnight, however, did get extremely good value out of Wheeler, who rapidly became the star among its reporters, covering all the top stories ranging from Ronald Reagan over Irangate to the Gulf War. Having long since left the BBC’s staff and gone freelance, Wheeler continued working for Newsnight well past the normal BBC retiring age of 60, only ending his association with the programme at the age of 72 in 1995 (and even after that returning to do occasional reports on such events as the US presidential conventions).

In the latter part of his career he concentrated more and more on doing special series, of which his 1989 eight-part The Road to War commemorating the start of the Second World War in 1939 was perhaps the best known. But there were a number of others, including his memorable D-Day: The Battle for Normandy (1994) and his one-off programme for Channel 4, Hello, Mr President (1997), vividly covering, with the aid of presidential tapes, LBJ’s first hundred days.

Wheeler himself would probably have seen his major series as his five-part Charles Wheeler’s America (1996) but this, in fact, was disappointing, largely because of his modest refusal to give pride of place to his own personality. (Not for nothing was he one of the harshest critics of Alistair Cooke and his 1972 megaseries on America.)

Charles Wheeler was essentially an old-fashioned gum-shoe reporter who thought it was the business of preachers or teachers — and not of journalists — to pontificate or philosophise. That did not stop him from being an excellent stylist and, as he grew older, he took great delight in book reviewing, something he did (often covering events which he himself had lived through) with considerable distinction.

His relations with the John Birt BBC were never cordial — he was once forced by the then deputy director-general to apologise for something he had written about him in The Listener — but he was idolised by most active practitioners of his own craft. He received virtually every professional award open to a broadcast journalist — including the accolade of TV Journalist of the Year at the hands of the Royal Television Society in 1988 — and, in 2001, highly unusually for a journalist, was appointed CMG. His knighthood came five years later in 2006, an official tribute all the more striking because while still remaining very active particularly in BBC Radio, he was already 83.

Wheeler was twice married, first in 1958 to Catherine Dove, a fellow BBC producer when he was on the staff of Panorama. The marriage was dissolved and he married in 1962, while he was still in India, Dip Singh, from a distinguished Sikh family, by whom he had two daughters — the elder, like her father, working for the BBC and the younger, a solicitor specialising in European law, being married to Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London.

Wheeler is survived by his wife and daughters.

Sir Charles Wheeler, CMG, journalist and broadcaster, was born on March 26, 1923. He died on July 4, 2008, aged 85
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #2 - Jul 5th, 2008, 7:31am
 
This is taken from the Daily Telegraph:

Charles Wheeler
Last updated: 9:02 PM BST 04/07/2008
BBC correspondent whose authoritative reporting from America, Berlin and Asia made him a household name


Sir Charles Wheeler, the BBC foreign correspondent who died on Friday aged 85, was the last working member of the stylish post-war school of television reporting and one of the few British television journalists to whom the term distinguished could properly be applied.

Wheeler’s craggy, birdlike features, well-brushed sweep of grey hair, glistening spectacles and laconic delivery may have seemed out of place in a medium increasingly obsessed with youth and good looks; but his dispassionate air of world-weary integrity and soundness of judgment were indispensable whenever there were serious and complicated issues to be investigated. He soldiered on at the BBC well into his seventies, and was considered by many of his colleagues to be one of the most elegant and authoritative correspondents the Corporation ever produced.

Anti-establishment by instinct and modest by nature, Wheeler preferred to rely on direct experience and refused to have anything to do with the inside track of off-the-record briefings beloved of diplomats, ministers and many of his fellow journalists. As a general rule he held politicians in low esteem and avoided meeting them socially. His reports on such programmes as Panorama and Newsnight, as well as countless BBC news bulletins, seemed to suggest that all political motives are flawed and that information must be judged accordingly.

He was particularly effective as a commentator on the American political scene, as the BBC’s Washington correspondent from 1965 to 1973. His reports on the assassination of Martin Luther King, the Johnson and Nixon presidencies, the anti-Vietnam war protests and the civil rights movement cut through the spin and made him a household name. Long after he had left America Wheeler found that many people retained an image of him delivering his piece against the backdrop of the White House.

Slim and somewhat Napoleonic in temperament, Wheeler set high standards for himself and for those around him. Though he was always generous to colleagues and never cut the ground from under the feet of his opponents, he was known to administer withering dressings-down to those he considered had not come up to scratch. Yet he himself was not entirely flawless: producers found it difficult to get him to take deadlines seriously when he was on to a good story, and he had an astonishing knack for getting up the noses of officialdom.

He was also surprisingly camera-shy, a quality which denied him the stardom which came to contemporaries such as Alan Whicker. “Dear Mr Wheeler,” a viewer once wrote, “you always look so miserable. Can we have a smile for Christmas?” He was unable to relax on camera and his inherent honesty made him uneasy about sustaining the illusion of the omniscient anchorman and incapable of spouting flim-flam.

Thus when, in 1980, he was invited to present the new BBC current affairs programme Newsnight, it soon became clear he was a disastrous choice. One night he was on duty during one of the BBC’s technical meltdowns. The director took the usual precaution of cutting back to the presenter, only to hear Wheeler telling his audience he had no idea what was going on, then twiddling his fingers until the problem was sorted out. The moment the programme was off the air the editor stormed down to the studio and sacked him. Wheeler returned with relief to life on location.

Charles Cornelius-Wheeler was born on March 26 1923 in Bremen, Germany, where his father was working for the British Council. He grew up in Hamburg, witnessing the rise of the Nazis, and was sent to Cranbrook School in Kent.

On leaving school at 17 he joined the Daily Sketch as an office boy, which, he claimed, “mostly involved slipping out to the pub at night and buying quarter bottles of whisky for alcoholic sub-editors”.

The following year he volunteered for the Royal Marines and, as a fluent German speaker, was assigned to 30 AU, a team formed by Ian Fleming to forage for intelligence ahead of the main allied invasion force after D-Day. Assigned to Team 4, led by the dashing Patrick Dalziel-Job (on whom Fleming is supposed to have modelled James Bond), he served as second-in-command and was mentioned in dispatches. In 1945 he found himself among the ruins of Berlin, smuggling U-boat commanders out of the Soviet zone before the Russians could acquire their technical expertise.

Unable to return to the overmanned world of Fleet Street in an era of post-war paper rationing, Wheeler applied in some desperation for a job at the BBC where, “since I spoke fluent German, they put me in the Latin American service at Bush House”. There he wrote news bulletins in English for translation into Spanish. After 18 months he was transferred to the newsroom to cover the 1948 Olympic games and in 1950 was posted at short notice to the German service to take over from the BBC’s man in Berlin, who had a bad case of the DTs. Initially assigned for three months, he stayed three years.

With an audience in East Germany, Wheeler’s role verged on the propagandist and he was deeply affected by the tragic struggle of the East German Democrats against Communist rule. Following a tip-off from a Foreign Office contact, he was in East Berlin during the East German uprising and its brutal suppression by Soviet troops. He co-wrote, with Stefan Brant, an account of the rising, and was unhappy when the BBC brought him back to a desk job in London in 1953.

In 1956 Wheeler moved from radio to television as a producer on Panorama, then in its infancy. His knowlege of eastern Europe proved invaluable during the Hungarian uprising with its consequent effects on East-West relations, and within two years he had been offered the editorship, a job that offered him a fast-track to the top echelons of the BBC. Disliking office politics and longing to return to life in the field, he turned it down.

In 1962 he was posted to New Delhi as Asia correpondent. It was his first posting as a foreign correspondent, and sometimes his inexperience showed. On one occasion he described the prime minister of Ceylon as “an inexperienced eccentric at the head of a cabinet of mediocrities”, a comment which provoked a row with the Ceylonese, who threatened to leave the Commonwealth. Wheeler’s editor stood by him, though Harold Macmillan, the prime minister, had to express his regrets before things calmed down.

Wheeler then returned to Berlin for a second stint, reporting on the construction of the Berlin Wall and a series of spectacular escapes to the West. But, never a one to flog a story after its time had passed, in 1965 he recommended the closure of the Berlin office on the grounds that the wall was old news and the Russians had become far less aggressive. He was promptly posted to Washington and spent the next eight years in America.

In one of his most memorable reports, during the 1972 Republican convention in Miami — the night of Nixon’s renomination — Wheeler informed the viewers: “I was going to tell you what happened today. Instead I’ll tell you what will happen tomorrow. Nixon will enter the hall. There will be two and a half minutes of applause. He will speak for 15 minutes, when there will be a further standing ovation of 10 minutes”. Wheeler had got hold of the plan for how the Republicans were going to stage-manage the whole event and turned it into an ironic commentary on the American political system.

When he was posted in 1973 as the BBC’s chief Europe correspondent, it seemed that Wheeler’s career might be drawing to a close; but at the age of 55, he resigned his job at the BBC and went freelance, thus avoiding compulsory retirement at 60. He worked for BBC News and Panorama before joining Newsnight, first as a presenter and then as a roving correspondent. He also featured regularly on radio in From Our Own Correspondent.

Though Wheeler’s reporting was dispassionate to a fault, he cared deeply about the suffering he saw on his travels. In 1980, after a visit to Poland where he had seen many people going barefoot, he instigated a campaign through his local paper in West Sussex to send thousands of shoes there by lorry.

In the aftermath of the first Gulf War, Wheeler spent nights sleeping out in the open with Kurdish Peshmurga guerrillas; his reporting of Saddam Hussein’s campaign against the Kurds was widely believed to have persuaded the Allies to establish “safe havens” for the Kurds in Iraq.

Wheeler won numerous awards for his reporting and presented many one-off documentaries and two series, The Road to War (1989) in which he traced events leading up to the war from the different standpoints of the main participants, and Charles Wheeler’s America (1996) in which he reflected on America’s experience in the post-war period.

On his 68th birthday, which he spent in a burnt-out hotel in Kuwait City, Wheeler was heard to remark: “I can’t believe how lucky I am to be here. Something awful might have happened to me — like retirement”. He made a radio documentary series Coming Home, about the end of the Second World War, in 2005 and was at work on a programme about the Dalai Lama until his last weeks. It is to be broadcast on July 30.

Charles Wheeler was appointed CMG in 2001 and knighted in 2006. His first marriage ended in divorce, and he married, secondly, Dip Singh, by whom he had two daughters.
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #3 - Jul 5th, 2008, 7:36am
 
This is taken from the Independent:

Sir Charles Wheeler: Distinguished foreign correspondent who exemplified the best in BBC reporting for more than 60 years
Saturday, 5 July 2008


In the comparatively brief history of broadcasting, only a handful of news correspondents have become household names. Charles Wheeler, knighted in 2006, was incontestably one of them. In a career with the BBC that lasted more than 60 years, he reported from the most troubled and significant parts of the world with measured judgement and sometimes laconic aplomb that listeners and viewers found reassuring, however dire the story he was obliged to tell.

He seldom employed superlatives, believing fervently that the reporter's job was to remain a detached observer on the sidelines. It was for this reason that a 2004 BBC profile of him was subtitled "Edge of Frame". Richard Tait, a former editor of BBC2's Newsnight – a programme with which Wheeler was associated – said in 1993: "Charles is one of the greatest broadcasting journalists of the television age." Yesterday Mark Thompson, director-general of the BBC, praised "his integrity, his authority and his humanity". John Tusa, another former colleague, commented: "He didn't tart it up with fancy words and didn't strike postures. . . He wanted you to know and hear and see what was going on."

Wheeler's career spanned what many now regard as the golden ages of both radio and television news. He was equally at home on both, distinguished by his silvery voice – clipped, precise but in no way affected – and, in later years, by his shock of thick, white hair.

He was born Selwyn Charles Cornelius-Wheeler in Germany in 1923. His father was a shipping agent in Hamburg and he spent much of his boyhood there, watching the inexorable rise of the Nazis. He was educated at Cranbrook School in Kent, leaving at 17 because he was attracted by what he saw as the glamour of journalism.

His first job was on the tabloid Daily Sketch, where his principal task was to rip news-agency reports from teleprinters and rush them to the editors' desks. In 1943 he joined the Royal Marines and, because he spoke fluent German, was soon recruited by the special intelligence unit formed by Ian Fleming (later the creator of James Bond), playing an important role in the preparations for the D-Day landings. Sixty years later he went back to the Normandy beaches to take part in a BBC documentary commemorating the anniversary.

In the aftermath of the Allied victory he was assigned to Berlin, where his job was to make sure that German officers with technical know-how, such as U-boat commanders, did not end up in the Soviet zone. In 1947 he joined the BBC Overseas Service as a sub-editor on the Latin American desk and after three years he was given his first reporting assignment, as a correspondent for the German service in Berlin.

There, as he revealed to The Independent in 1997, he continued his relationship with the security services. They would give him information gained from sources in the east, which he would use in his broadcasts, and in return he would share snippets from his own sources. "It was all done on an old boys' basis," he said. "I knew that the stuff I was sending back was being used in the propaganda broadcasts into eastern Europe. That was the job in those days. That didn't mean it was lies. . . I suppose I was a Cold War warrior."

In 1956 he moved to television as a producer on Panorama, the long-running current affairs programme. Almost as soon as he arrived, he was involved in a controversy when he arranged a studio interview with Brendan Behan, the Irish playwright, who was palpably drunk after an extended visit to the hospitality room. Wheeler was threatened with disciplinary action but was reprieved when he explained that he had prevented a worse fiasco by pouring the reserve stocks of whisky and gin down the sink.

One of his earliest successes on Panorama was to get a camera into Hungary to cover the ill-fated anti-Soviet uprising, sending the film back to London every day through Austria. But as Michael Peacock, his fellow producer, recalled in 1993: "Producers are midwives and he is not a natural midwife. He was put on earth to be a reporter, to make sense of the world. He wanted to get as close as he could to events."

So in 1958 he left the programme to return to his more natural role. His first assignment was as South Asia Correspondent, based in Delhi. There he met Dip Singh, whom he married in 1962 after the failure of his first marriage, which he was always reluctant to discuss. He and Dip had two daughters – one of whom, Marina, is married to Boris Johnson, the Mayor of London.

The year of his marriage saw him posted back to Berlin – with the Cold War at its height – and in 1965 he went to Washington, which was in many respects the high point of his career. He stayed there until 1973, embracing turbulent times that included the assassinations of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King, civil-rights campaigns and protests against the Vietnam war, culminating in the Watergate affair. His cool, reflective coverage of these sensational events cemented his reputation and contributed greatly to Britain's understanding of our seemingly headstrong transatlantic cousins.

Wheeler became European correspondent in 1973 and for the next 30 years he enjoyed what was in effect a wandering brief, making countless series and single programmes about the world's most important people and places, collecting numerous industry awards along the way. His reporting of the plight of Kurdish refugees from Iraq, during and after the 1991 Gulf War, won particular acclaim.

Although for the most part a man of modesty and courtesy, he did not mince his words when it came to issues on which he had strong feelings. He was famously out of sympathy with the guidelines for news coverage promulgated by John Birt, the future director-general of the BBC, when he was deputy director-general in 1990. Wheeler was then working on BBC2's Newsnight, and the techniques employed by its interviewers were singled out by Birt for criticism.

"You would have thought they would have consulted some of us before drawing it up," Wheeler complained in an interview. "We don't need to be told to be polite. We don't need to be told to be searching. Anyone who did need to be told those things wouldn't have done more than one interview."

And in a fractious meeting with Birt and his colleagues, who were calling for more analysis in Newsnight, Wheeler fumed: "Can you spell out precisely what form your idea of analysis would take and how it would contrast with what we are now doing?" Any other BBC employee might have thought twice before making such an assault on the senior management, but such was Wheeler's reputation that he was effectively unassailable, and he continued to snipe away at the Corporation's changing culture, saying in 2000 that the news agenda was far too influenced by personalities and the tabloid culture. He was still making superb programmes in his eighties .
Michael Leapman

Charles Wheeler was, quite simply, the best news correspondent the BBC has employed during its 85 years of existence; which was only fitting, given that he and it were almost exactly the same age, writes John Simpson.

He possessed in large measure the finest qualities of a first-rate foreign correspondent: clarity and calmness of judgement, sharpness of vision, breadth of understanding, and a lively interest in the world. An instinctive radicalism of approach, too. This had nothing to do with his personal politics (whatever they might have been; after working alongside him for years, I still have no idea how he voted), and everything to do with an instinctive alignment with the poor and weak against the powerful.

The grandeur of his reputation made ambassadors and cabinet ministers of many different countries rise deferentially when he came into the room, yet he never turned into an establishment figure. He was always an outsider, looking quizzically at the world from under those expressive bushy eyebrows of his. The magnitude of the events he reported on never interested him as much as the effects on ordinary people.

Some of his finest reporting was done in 1991, when he was in his late sixties. He went to northern Iraq and then on to Kuwait for Newsnight in the final stages of the first Gulf War. On a bitterly cold hillside he interviewed two Kurdish refugees, whose articulate, bitter, bewildered plea for help made people in the BBC newsroom weep openly when it was broadcast.

A second unforgettable broadcast came soon afterwards, when he went to Kuwait to investigate reports that some Kuwaiti doctors, returning from exile, were using their medical skills to torture people who had collaborated with the Iraqi invaders. Charles and his crew headed for the ward where these things were happening, and, in the finest foot-in-the-door tradition, he refused to go away until the doctor who had answered his knocking admitted, on camera, that prisoners were indeed being tortured there.

Charles Wheeler's judgements could be very fierce, but that was in private. "I think you could afford to leave that last sentence out," he once said to me when I shared an office with him in Brussels in the 1970s, and showed him a despatch on something I felt strongly about. "The audience will come to the same conclusion without needing to be told."

He was the last, best exemplar of a magnificent tradition.

Selwyn Charles Cornelius-Wheeler (Charles Wheeler), journalist and broadcaster: born Bremen, Germany 26 March 1923; sub-editor, Latin American Service, BBC 1947-49, German Service correspondent 1950-53, Talks writer, European Service 1954-56, Producer, Panorama 1956-58; South Asia Correspondent 1958-62, Berlin Correspondent 1962-65, Washington Correspondent 1965-68; Chief US Correspondent 1969-73, Chief Europe Correspondent, 1973-76, Chief Correspondent, BBC Television News 1977, Chief Correspondent, Panorama 1977-79, Chief Correspondent, Newsnight 1980-95; CMG 2001; Kt 2006; twice married, secondly 1962 Dip Singh (two daughters); died London 4 July 2008.
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #4 - Jul 5th, 2008, 7:38am
 
This report on the BBC News web site contains some clips from Charles Wheeler's reports:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7489591.stm
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #5 - Jul 9th, 2008, 9:18pm
 
This is taken from Ariel, w/c July 7 2008:

Obituary: Charles Wheeler
tribute by: David Sells


Charles was a jewel in the crown of the BBC. He hated fuss, so would have snorted in disbelief at such a statement, but he was a journalist and broadcaster of true distinction.

And how the trumpets have sounded at his demise - a fanfare of praise for his achievements, particularly in foreign reporting over long years with the corporation.

National newspapers, both serious and tabloid, have printed obituaries.  Charles would simply have shrugged, but his decades in the field of broadcast journalism had made him a national celebrity. He accepted his knighthood two years ago with some reluctance, for he believed that working journalists should not be seen to receive state honours. His family and friends helped to persuade him. Some colleagues made the point that he was our doyen, so we felt his knighthood in a way honoured us all.

When I told a BBC journalist recently about Charles's fatal illness, he was shattered. I know, I said, I feel the same: he is our doyen. 'No,' came the reply, 'he is our icon.'

Yet with all his achievements, awards and celebrity, he was always one of us. A down-to-earth, no-nonsense, working journalist. A reporter's reporter.

Charles was ever his own man. Tough as a boot, silver-haired and craggy-faced in his final years, but tenacious and humane. He had a magic voice and was a master of words, so radio and television grew to love him. This didn't stop him lashing out at BBC management when he felt the need arose, as it sometimes did. He stopped John Birt in his tracks on one famous occasion. Producers occasionally had a hard time too, because where stories and scripts were concerned Charles was boss.

For years he smoked like a chimney, so no surprise really that it was lung cancer that got him in the end. But what a survivor! He was 85 and still working. He recorded a radio documentary on the Dalai Lama just a month ago, with his daughter Marina giving him oxygen at intervals.

Schooled in Nazi Germany in the 1930s, Charles the youngster slipped bread to Jewish neighbours hiding in the woods. This sympathy for the underdog was to colour much of his reporting. Charles Wheeler remained fearless and anti-authoritarian.

The current BBC masters have summed up his journalistic qualities. 'Simply a legend,' said Mark Thompson, speaking of 'his integrity, his authority, and his humanity' that had graced the BBC's airwaves. Mark Byford termed him 'the greatest broadcast journalist of his generation', while Mark Damazer, Radio 4's controller, said that 'everything he did was shot through with his compassion and wisdom. He was magnificent'.

And, what is more, to some of us he was also a dear friend.
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #6 - Jan 21st, 2009, 4:29pm
 
A memorial service for Charles Wheeler was held at Westminster Abbey, on January 20th, 2009.  There were an estimated 1,000 people present.  Muisc at the beginning and end came from the Band of the Royal Marines - Charles had been a Marine in the War.  Among the tributes was one from the Director General, Mark Thompson.  This is what he said:

On the 10th September 1953, the German Service of the BBC received a letter from Berlin from someone who used the enigmatic code name Sixtus II.  It was a momentous time in the city, but the point of the letter was to praise one man – the BBC’s departing Berlin correspondent, Charles Wheeler.  His courage.  His ‘youthful ardour’.  His qualities not just as a journalist, but as a human being.  

‘He had time,’ the letter says, ‘for every visitor and always had the necessary understanding and the right word for their cares and worries….If the free world now looks with greater attentiveness at conditions in Eastern Germany, it is Charles Wheeler whom we have to thank for this.’

Charles Wheeler was the finest reporter in the BBC’s history. Whether on the streets of East Berlin or Budapest in the 1950s, in post imperial Delhi, or Capitol Hill in Washington – how much he would have enjoyed reporting today, by the way! – whether in the burning ghettos of Los Angeles, the hospitals of Kuwait or on the freezing mountains of Kurdistan - or even on the streets of this city – Charles told so much of the story of the 20th century – and of the first decade of the present one.

But his genius was not simply that he had an acute reporter’s feel for place and drama – nor that he had the most perfect voice for broadcasting, nor that he was blessed with that wonderful silver mane – nor even that he wrote the most beautiful, spare English prose.  The more there was to say, the fewer words Charles seemed to need to say it.

All this was good.  Very good.  But what made Charles unique was his insatiable interest in people, his palpable compassion, and his hatred – that is not too strong a word – of injustice and prejudice.  There wasn’t a trace of party political bias in Charles, but he was never impartial about human suffering or wickedness.  He’d seen prejudice and fear in the country where he had been born, Germany, and he never got over it.  Later, he would report the failed Hungarian revolution of 1956, the creation of the Berlin Wall in 1961 as well as its fall in 1989, the riots in American cities after the assassination of Martin Luther King in 1968.  And for Newsnight and Panorama, the plight of the Palestinians mistreated in Kuwait during the first Gulf War and the desperation of Kurdish refugees after Saddam Hussein’s defeat.

I remember seeing him myself in Kuwait City, hammering out a story – the very picture of a glamourous foreign correspondent.  But Charles’s focus was never on glamour.  It was on human decency and its opposite.  And somehow his passion and the BBC’s tradition of dispassion and objectivity, rather than constantly colliding, coalesced over time into something potent and unforgettable.

And then a glorious autumn in radio – where he had started – talking to the powerless, the young and old, the victors and vanquished, about how they had endured in the face of war and dislocation. Because if Charles was unflinching about what was cruel and unfeeling – he also showed how the human spirit can survive in the worst of circumstances.

He was not, let it be said, the easiest man to work with.  He couldn’t tolerate or comprehend mediocrity.  But he was hugely appreciative of good work done by producers, researchers, camera operators, engineers and studio managers.  Many of us admired him far more than he would let us tell him.

But he was quite happy to have a row with anyone – at any time of day or night – whether in the broiling sun in the desert or in the freezing snow of Russia, if he felt something was wrong.  And he rowed with the thrilling physical and intellectual intensity he brought to his work.  Perhaps there is someone here today who won an argument with Charles Wheeler –  if so I’d love to met them.  

His disgruntlement was all the greater if the object of his disapproval was in authority – any authority. Almost his last piece for Radio 4 involved Charles and the aged director of a museum in St Petersburg trading fierce verbal  blows about the Russian looting of art during World War Two.  The woman had expected only sympathy.  Charles however had evidence.  It was, as usual, an uneven match.

Charles didn’t do short-cuts. He valued every word. Scripts were written, balled up and thrown away time and again, as he strove to be true to the experience he was trying to convey.

Even in his 80s – when working on his radio documentaries – he would labour for hours on end, sustained by an ocean of caffeine and adrenaline, coiled up in a chair, arguing with, inspiring and teaching people 50 years younger than he was.  His charisma was based not on longevity or reputation, but on pride and care.

He wasn’t a religious man, he wasn’t comfortable with fame or grandeur.  The thought of this event in this magnificent setting I think would have surprised someone who in many ways lived a modest life.

But it is an appropriate place and way to celebrate a unique achievement.  The BBC’s journalism consists of many things.  But at its heart is the reporter – the man or woman who wants to tell you what’s going on – from where it’s going on.  In the BBC’s whole history, we have never had anyone better at that than Charles Wheeler.
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Re: Charles Wheeler
Reply #7 - Jan 21st, 2009, 4:44pm
 
Another tribute came from Tim Gardam, who had worked with Charles on Panorama and Newsnight, among other programmes.  This is the text of his remarks:


To remember Charles Wheeler here in Westminster Abbey must be to acknowledge him as a national figure, but I would like to recall him close up, as he was to those many of us who knew him as a colleague, and then as work crossed into friendship.

Whenever I see Charles in my mind’s eye, he is poised in motion- a blue striped shirt, open at the neck, his sleeves rolled up, that gnarled, wiry body, just like his mind, his hands darting across a key board. Beneath his sweep of hair, very bright eyes focused, behind his glasses, on the script in front of him. The commentary emerging in sharp bursts. And then his stillness before the microphone as he prepared to deliver each wild track crystal clear.

And of course I hear his voice – first, his broadcasting voice; for a man whose magnetism, when you worked with him, came from his restlessness, the authority of his voice on air came from how measured and calm it was, each sentence as tight as it was  clear; no journalist I have ever known was more concise. The cadence softened in later years but its signature never changed.  I never missed it more than on Election Night in Washington last November. Amidst all the images and the noise, there was this absence, the one reporter whose insights would have connected us directly back to Martin Luther King and LBJ and would have placed the night in history.

And his voice will be in our heads later this afternoon.
 
Charles’s broadcasting voice was known to millions; but then there was the slightly different voice of Charles, the colleague in the news room, chipping in at a morning meeting, coming on the phone just before a deadline - more exercised, more challenging, the edginess of a reporter with a story that he was not going to let some editor back in London second guess.

And then there was Charles outside work; the sheer zest of seeing him enter the room at a party, with his wife Dip alongside him, hearing that “Hi” as he saw you, and knowing now what fun the evening would be; his delight in the gossip, his tart judgements on the latest political blunder, curious about who was up to what, and what was new.

People say that Charles was fierce - fierce with his producers, and fierce with his editors when fighting for a story; and indeed he was. But he was above all fierce in friendship and in solidarity. He once told me that he turned down being Editor of Panorama in 1959 – he was offered it again some fifteen years later and still said No- and the reason was, he said, “because I never really wanted to be responsible for anybody but myself.” Maybe so; but, in demonstrating that independence, Charles treated all those around him as equals; in a BBC culture so often defined by authority and hierarchy, Charles was the most egalitarian man I ever knew. His was a tough generosity but you never felt better than when you knew you had his respect.

He was the least sentimental of men, but, in the tough moments of a life, the most kind.

Charles was a radical – passionate about racism, state authoritarianism and petty injustice; it was part of the richness of his career that in the last ten years he brought his uncompromising belief in civil rights, forged first in Eastern Europe and then in the United States, back to Britain. The humanity that was at the core of his work, was shaped, I always supposed, by the sights he saw as a young man in the War but seldom talked about. On this part of his life he had the reticence of the soldier, and it was courage I think that he admired most as a virtue. Charles was a great interviewer of the powerful; one remembers the gravity of his engagement with Helmut Schmidt and his somewhat scary, combative flirting with Margaret Thatcher, but at the centre of his most memorable reporting were people whose everyday existence had been wrenched out of joint by the events he was covering. Dip, of course worked at Amnesty International, Charles often spoke of what she was working on, and I do not think you can understand Charles’s moral view of the world that is at the heart of his programmes without understanding how, with Dip, there was a profound, shared sense of the dignity owed to human beings whoever they are. I always remember a different edge and urgency that was in his voice when he rang me from Kuwait to brief me on what he had uncovered about the torture of Palestinians there. “Tim, it is really very bad out here”.  One only had to see Charles in the quiet of his garden in Sussex, the care he took pruning his roses, to know how deeply he valued the calm security of a home as a fundamental human right.

No-one can forget him as he faced the camera, but look at the most memorable of Charles’s reports and you will find at the critical moment he has absented himself from the screen; he knew when to let the witnesses speak for themselves. At the centre of the story, there was so often someone unknown, under stress, but given dignity by the way Charles talked to and listened to them.

Once many years ago, in a Newsnight cutting room, Charles and I, his producer, were arguing with the programme editor about the length of a film. The editor had allocated it 10 minutes. Our version was 18; after an hour of heated dispute, we had reluctantly given way on one cut of 23 seconds. Charles, much enjoying the chaos we were causing, scribbled me a note. It read: “Fight the big ones”.  

And, when I remember him now, it seems to me that through all the great events of history which he reported, “Fighting the big ones” was the principle by which Charles Wheeler lived out his life, and he never stopped.
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