Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

Born in 1930 in “Diddlin’ Dora’s” establishment on the banks of Rapid Creek and carried by the Madam herself to a social worker at the Alex Johnson Hotel in Rapid City, Ron Hull was destined from the outset to live an interesting life. And interesting it has indeed been, at the very least. A well-known and much-loved figure after six decades in television, Hull sets out in Backstage to tell his story—from playing a bellhop in a junior class play in South Dakota (and meeting his “real” mother backstage) to initiating the American Experience series for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Before he even owned a television set, Hull produced a military TV show at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. But it wasn’t until he got a job in public broadcasting in Lincoln, Nebraska, that he truly found his medium. Hull has a lifetime of fascinating anecdotes to tell: working as a producer and director, encountering celebrities like John Wayne and William Shatner, befriending famous Nebraskans like writers Mari Sandoz and John Neihardt and actress Sandy Dennis, moving to Saigon in 1966 to bring television to embattled Vietnam, and working in Washington as director of the program fund for the CPB. Through it all, though, Hull’s story is a tribute to his adopted Nebraska, a celebration of the people—stars and unsung heroes—he’s known, and a moving memoir of the dramas of life, large and small.

1110854250
Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

Born in 1930 in “Diddlin’ Dora’s” establishment on the banks of Rapid Creek and carried by the Madam herself to a social worker at the Alex Johnson Hotel in Rapid City, Ron Hull was destined from the outset to live an interesting life. And interesting it has indeed been, at the very least. A well-known and much-loved figure after six decades in television, Hull sets out in Backstage to tell his story—from playing a bellhop in a junior class play in South Dakota (and meeting his “real” mother backstage) to initiating the American Experience series for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Before he even owned a television set, Hull produced a military TV show at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. But it wasn’t until he got a job in public broadcasting in Lincoln, Nebraska, that he truly found his medium. Hull has a lifetime of fascinating anecdotes to tell: working as a producer and director, encountering celebrities like John Wayne and William Shatner, befriending famous Nebraskans like writers Mari Sandoz and John Neihardt and actress Sandy Dennis, moving to Saigon in 1966 to bring television to embattled Vietnam, and working in Washington as director of the program fund for the CPB. Through it all, though, Hull’s story is a tribute to his adopted Nebraska, a celebration of the people—stars and unsung heroes—he’s known, and a moving memoir of the dramas of life, large and small.

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Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

by Ron Hull
Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

Backstage: Stories from My Life in Public Television

by Ron Hull

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Overview

Born in 1930 in “Diddlin’ Dora’s” establishment on the banks of Rapid Creek and carried by the Madam herself to a social worker at the Alex Johnson Hotel in Rapid City, Ron Hull was destined from the outset to live an interesting life. And interesting it has indeed been, at the very least. A well-known and much-loved figure after six decades in television, Hull sets out in Backstage to tell his story—from playing a bellhop in a junior class play in South Dakota (and meeting his “real” mother backstage) to initiating the American Experience series for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Before he even owned a television set, Hull produced a military TV show at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. But it wasn’t until he got a job in public broadcasting in Lincoln, Nebraska, that he truly found his medium. Hull has a lifetime of fascinating anecdotes to tell: working as a producer and director, encountering celebrities like John Wayne and William Shatner, befriending famous Nebraskans like writers Mari Sandoz and John Neihardt and actress Sandy Dennis, moving to Saigon in 1966 to bring television to embattled Vietnam, and working in Washington as director of the program fund for the CPB. Through it all, though, Hull’s story is a tribute to his adopted Nebraska, a celebration of the people—stars and unsung heroes—he’s known, and a moving memoir of the dramas of life, large and small.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780803240667
Publisher: Bison Original
Publication date: 10/01/2012
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author


Ron Hull is senior advisor to Nebraska Educational Telecommunications and professor emeritus of broadcasting at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

1 Where the West Begins in the Middle of 1

2 The Mystery in Grandmother's Trunk 5

3 The Stranger in the Night 14

4 The Hulls and the Kayes 23

5 On Becoming a Storyteller 32

6 Front and Center 47

7 With Thanks to the GI Bill 56

8 Our Town 60

9 We Had a Dream 73

10 Shapers of the Dream 79

11 My Two Friends John Neihardt and Mari Sandoz 91

12 Bringing Television to Vietnam 111

13 Actors, Politicians, and Airplanes 129

14 Like Dragons Take to Maidens 136

15 Brief and Memorable Far East Encounters 139

16 Programming the Vietnamese Way 153

17 Goodbye, Saigon 159

18 The House that Jack Built 164

19 Back to Vietnam 174

20 David and Goliath 178

21 The Big Time 183

22 Sandy, Jean, and Phil 195

23 The Gang of Seven 205

24 The Missed Opportunity 214

25 Exciting Times, Stimulating People 237

26 Feeling the "Old Washington Squeeze" 247

27 The Peace Tree 251

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