Michele Marsh (reporter)

Michele Marie Marsh (March 9, 1954 October 17, 2017) was an American broadcast journalist, best known for her work at two network-owned television stations in New York City from 1979 to 2003.

Michele Marsh
Born
Michele Marie Marsh

(1954-03-09)March 9, 1954
DiedOctober 17, 2017(2017-10-17) (aged 63)
Alma materNorthwestern University
OccupationTelevision journalist
Years active1976–2003
Notable credit(s)
WCBS-TV
WNBC-TV
Spouse(s)Paul Henri Nargeolet
ChildrenJohn Paschall

Early life and career

Marsh grew up in suburban Detroit into a military family.[1] Her parents were Howard Marsh, an insurance salesman, and the former Gloria Gadd.[2] She had two brothers, Ronnie, who died at age 6 and John, who died at 21, who were both hemophiliacs, as was Marsh.[3] She was partly raised in Philadelphia and in the San Diego area. She graduated from Grossmont High School in El Cajon, California[4] and later from Northwestern University, where she majored in what has been described as radio and television production[5] or theater.[6]

After her graduation from Northwestern in 1976, Marsh started her career as a reporter/anchor at WABI-TV, the CBS affiliate in Bangor, Maine.[5][7] She reported in the field and anchored the 11 p.m. Monday-Friday newscasts, and the 6 p.m. Saturday newscast. She did much of the news gathering herself and ran the teleprompter with a foot pedal during broadcasts. Marsh was one of only three women at the time appearing on-camera on television news in Maine.

She then moved to San Antonio, Texas, where she worked at ABC affiliate KSAT-TV for about a year.[8] In October 1978, she served as parade marshal for the Western Days Celebration in Yorktown, Texas.[9]

Career in New York

Marsh made the leap to New York City in August 1979, when she began working at WCBS-TV as a reporter and then as co-anchor of the Saturday night editions of Channel 2 News. Only two months later in October, Marsh was promoted to co-anchoring the 11:00 pm weeknight program alongside Rolland Smith. An article published in the New York Times shortly after her promotion described Marsh as part of a wave of anchorwomen in New York television news, along with Sue Simmons, Rose Ann Scamardella, Judy Licht and Pat Harper. At age 25, Marsh was the youngest of this group and was sometimes called "the baby of the newsroom" at her station.[1][10]

In January 1981, Marsh was demoted from her anchor position to make way for her predecessor Dave Marash, who was rehired by WCBS-TV after a stint at ABC News. Upon learning of her demotion Marsh reportedly became distressed, causing the station to call in reporter John Tesh as an emergency standby in case Marsh was unable to work that evening.[6]

After regaining this position in January 1982 she stayed as co-anchor of the late weeknight newscasts until 1993 and worked alongside Smith, Mike Schneider and Ernie Anastos; she was anchor of both of the station's 6:00 pm evening newscasts for several years with Jim Jensen, Anastos and John Johnson. Her on air image was sultry, glamorous and self-possessed.[6][11] In June 1995, Marsh returned to anchoring the late newscast with Johnson, replacing Dana Tyler. Her salary by this time was close to $1 million per year.[12]

Marsh was one of several personalities abruptly fired by WCBS-TV in October 1996 as part of a management-ordered shakeup of the station's news department due to declining ratings.[12][13] Along with John Johnson, she was quickly hired by WNBC-TV to anchor a new midday newscast for the station.[14] Upon joining WNBC, she also began co-anchoring the 6:00 pm newscast with Chuck Scarborough. In August 2003, WNBC removed Marsh from her anchor chair as the station intended to promote Lynda Baquero, thirteen years Marsh's junior, to work alongside Scarborough.[13] The station discussed possible alternate positions, but came to no agreement with her. She left the station and ended her television career.[13]

Family

Marsh has a son, John, from her first marriage, to Nathaniel Price Paschall, which ended in divorce. She was survived by her second husband, Paul Henri Nargeolet.[15]

Death

Marsh died on October 17, 2017 from complications of breast cancer at the age of 63 at her home in South Kent, Connecticut.[15]

gollark: Well, if they want to, I think they should for whatever stupid reason.
gollark: ++exec```pythonfrom itertools import chainÜ = ["ðdDÐ", "ÆÄAaæä", "włWŁ", "nN", "ØOÖøoö", "§sßs"]def þ(ŧ): ø = [""] for Ö in ŧ: ŋ = [] for Ä in Ö: for Ø in ø: ŋ.append(Ø + Ä) ø = ŋ return øprint("".join(þ(Ü)))```
gollark: You can't stop people from doing stupid things when drunk. Just don't get drunk if you're worried about it.
gollark: Also, I have made a script to generate all the DawnOSes:
gollark: Also, you would end up with some authority judging all these procedures which is too much power and bad and uncool.

References

  1. Klemesrud, Judy (January 22, 1980). "Anchorwomen: Late Break in Local News" (PDF). The New York Times.
  2. Roberts, Sam. "Michele Marsh, Longtime New York TV Anchor, Dies at 63". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  3. Gay, Verne. "Michele Marsh dead; longtime New York TV news anchor was 63". Newsday. Newsday. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  4. "Michele M. Marsh, Class of 1972 - Grossmont High School Museum". Foothillermuseum.com. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  5. Willette, Jan (December 19, 1976). "Michele Marsh gains fans as she goes". Bangor Daily News. p. 3.
  6. "Anchor Switch Jerks Tears". New York. February 2, 1981. p. 10.
  7. "Longtime New York news anchor with ties to WABI has died". WABI-TV. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  8. Jakle, Jeanne (October 19, 2017). "Former San Antonio TV anchor star dies at 63". San Antonio Express-News. San Antonio, Texas. Retrieved October 21, 2017.
  9. "Yorktown Celebration Underway". The Victoria Advocate. October 20, 1978. p. 2D.
  10. "Michele Marsh to Co-Anchor" (PDF). The New York Times. October 9, 1979.
  11. Schwartz, Tony (May 21, 1984). "The Natural". New York. pp. 76–91.
  12. Mifflin, Lawrie (October 4, 1996). "At WCBS, Ratings Were Bottom Line". The New York Times.
  13. Huff, Richard (August 30, 2003). "Anchor's Away At WNBC News". New York Daily News.
  14. "2 Ex-WCBS Anchors Are Hired by WNBC". The New York Times. October 10, 1996.
  15. Michele Marsh, Longtime New York TV Anchor, Dies at 63, The New York Times, October 17, 2017
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