Wanda Ramey (born 18
February 1924 in Terre Haute, Indiana
- died 15 August 2009 in Greenbrae,
California
) was a pioneering American
television
news reporter. She was married to Richard Queirolo and
assumed his name, but continued to use her maiden name in her
professional life.
Early life and education
Ramey was born in Terre Haute, Indiana, to parents Hiram and May
Ramey.
She
attended school (graduated high school in 1941) and college in
Terre Haute, receiving a BA degree in radio journalism from
Indiana State
Teachers College
in 1945.
After
college graduation, she moved with her family to Oakland,
California
, due to a transfer in her father's company
(American Express). She lived there for a while, then moved to
Los Angeles,
California
, and began working, first at a recording studio and
then in the movie theater division of Warner Brothers.
Broadcasting career
Ramey's
first post-college radio employment was at radio station KPIK in
San Luis Obispo,
California
. After that, she returned to the Bay area
and worked at several stations.
In 1947, her job (for KSFO
) was to
interview celebrities at the Hearst Ranch
near Pleasanton, California
.
In 1948, Ramey was hired as secretary to the program director of
radio station KWBR in Oakland. She assumed the duties of program
director (although with no increase in pay) when that post became
vacant. After a year there, she moved to KROW, where she was able
to be on the air.
By 1952,
she was working at KGO-TV
in San Francisco,
California
. She first hosted
Midday with
Wanda, a short-lived news and interview show, then in 1954 she
hosted
The Woman Behind the Man (interviewing the wives of
famous Bay-area men).
The KGO job did not last long. Vince Francis, KGO general manager,
fired her by telling her that women did not do a good job as
newscasters.
It took her several months to find another
broadcasting job, this time at KCBS
radio in San
Francisco. On that job, her on-air name was
Jane
Todd. She hosted the program
Meet Me at Mannings,
which featured interviews with women.
In 1957,
Ramey was hired as a newscaster by KPIX-TV
, San
Francisco's first television station. The station was one of
the first to create a half-hour news program at mid-day, and they
made further history by casting one of the first female newscasters
(Ramey) on the program. She was variously referred to as "Channel
5's Gal on the Go", "Girl on the Beat", and "Woman on the Beat".
She left KPIX in 1967.
Ramey estimated that she had interviewed some 1,200 personalities
in the course of her career, including several US Presidents and an
astronaut. Her most memorable interview was with
Eleanor Roosevelt, who was Ramey's own
inspiration as a girl.
After 1967 Ramey avoided further full-time broadcasting work.
She
served as a Bay-area correspondent with the Voice of America, worked part-time at local
PBS station KQED-TV
, and volunteered with Bay-area charities and
projects. During the late 1960s, she worked as a reporter on
KGO-TVs
Newsbeat nightly newscast.
Work with prisons
On New
Year's Eve 1960, Ramey and her husband visited San Quentin
State Prison
to film a story about conditions there. The
visit led to their setting up a local television station within the
prison (SQTV), prison-sponsored with much of the production work
performed by inmates.
Honors and awards
In 1958, Ramey received an
Emmy Award for
television journalism. She was inducted into the Marin Women's Hall
of Fame in the 1990s.
In 1965, Ramey was named "Honorary Inmate" by the residents of San
Quentin State Prison.
In 1968, Ramey received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Indiana
State University.
In 1982, Ramey received a commendation from the San Francisco Board
of Supervisors for her outstanding contributions to broadcasting.
That same year SF Mayor
Diane
Feinstein issued a proclamation commending Ramey for "her
dedication and invaluable contributions to the broadcasting
industry and . . . on her truly impressive and distinguished
achievements." She also received the
Outstanding Achievement in
Broadcasting Award from the American Women In Radio and
Television, Golden Gate Chapter, and several other awards from
professional societies.
Personal
Ramey entered the broadcast world at a time when women were not
often considered for serious reporting slots. Describing the young
Ramey in San Francisco, TV personality
Terrence O'Flaherty said "Miss Ramey, an
intelligent and attractive young woman, is single and also very
serious about her work."
In 1958, Ramey married Richard "Dick" Queirolo (Q-Rolo), a
sheet-metal contractor and artist. She assumed her husband's last
name after marriage, but remained Wanda Ramey in her professional
life, and that is how she was known nationally.
They had a daughter,
Kristi Queirolo Steadman (born 1962) of Novato,
California
married to Dan Steadman and son Richard Jr. (from a
previous marriage of Richard Queirolo) of Highlands
Ranch, Colorado
. Queirolo developed an interest in the
mechanics of his wife's career, and after their marriage developed
a vocation as TV cameraman, often working with and for his
wife.
In 1963, Ramey was featured in a newspaper article titled "From
Fashion Shows to Fires, Wanda Ramey Is KPIX's Woman-on-the-Beat".
The article described Ramey as calm and reserved, petite and
mild-mannered.... one of the few women in broadcasting who
successfully manages to polish the rough corners off the hard
news". It stated Ramey was chosen because of her flexibility and
her ability to interview celebrities and political figures.
Ramey died of
cancer at her home in Greenbrae
on 15 August 2009. Upon her death her family established a
scholarship fund in her name (
Wanda Ramey Scholarship in
Communication) at Indiana State University.
Longtime friend (and godmother of Ramey's daughter)
Phyllis Diller said of Ramey:
- "Having Wanda for a friend is like having a million dollars in
your checking account."
References
-
http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/localnews/ci_13152204?source=rss
Oakland Tribune website, accessed 6 Sept. 2009
- http://www.broadcastlegends.com/ramey.html Wanda Ramey:
KPIX's Girl on the Beat, Broadcast Legends website, accessed 5
Sept. 2009
- "I majored in speech, radio and the emerging television
industry. I worked at the local radio station and at the college
radio station where we did everything, announced, wrote and so on."
She was "the Story Princess" on-air during that time. (from
Broadcast Legends)
- http://www.indstate.edu/archives/daa/alumni/Queirolo.html
Indiana State Teachers College website, Alumni Section. Accessed 6
Sept. 2009
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- "I loved that station . . I was on the air and set up
interviews and such." Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
-
http://cdn.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=c/a/2009/08/21/BACG19A2JO.DTL
John King, Wanda Ramey, trailblazer news anchor, dies at
85, San Francisco Chronicle, 21 August
2009
- Stephen Miller, "TV's 'Woman on the Beat' Broke Newsroom
Barriers", Wall Street Journal, 26 August 2009, p.
A12
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- the first broadcast of Noon News was on Monday 16 Feb.
1959 (from Broadcast Legends)
- Broadcast Legends
-
http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/localnews/ci_ci_13152204?source=rss
Jim Staats, "Pioneering Bay Area woman news anchor dies at 85",
Oakland Tribune website
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- Broadcast Legends
- Jim Staats
- Jim Staats
- Indiana State University
- Broadcast Legends
- John King
-
http://goddesschess.blogspot.com/2009/08/broadcaster-wanda-ramey-breaking.html
- Jim Staats
- Broadcast Legends
- Jim Staats