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- <text id=90TT2222>
- <title>
- Aug. 20, 1990: Profile:Jane Pauley
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 20, 1990 Showdown
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 76
- Surviving Nicely, Thanks
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>When she thought NBC wanted her out, Jane Pauley prepared to go
- quietly, but the public uproar provided revenge she is too
- ladylike to savor
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> The morning after the second episode of her new series, Real
- Life with Jane Pauley, TV's newest prime-time star sits in her
- office, heating a cup of coffee in her microwave oven and
- fielding compliments from colleagues. One of them, NBC News
- president Michael Gartner, is in the hall outside her door.
- "What'd you think?" Jane calls out. "Liked it," says Gartner,
- a squarish, soft-spoken executive badly in need of some peace
- and quiet. Pauley senses there might be more on his mind: "You
- talking about anything...?" Gartner saunters toward her and
- offers one suggestion for the show in a conspiratorial half
- whisper: "More Jane."
- </p>
- <p> More Jane? Sounds impossible. No one in TV has been harder
- to avoid, either on the tube or in the press, over the past few
- months than Jane Pauley. For 13 years, she was the perky,
- professional, largely taken-for-granted co-anchor of NBC's
- morning show Today. When turmoil in the person of a blond,
- eager-to-please interloper, Deborah Norville, 32, engulfed the
- show last fall, Pauley bowed out--and suddenly found herself
- the most in-demand news personality in America. She got her own
- prime-time show, which has drawn good ratings this summer and
- is almost certain to return on a weekly basis in January. She
- was anointed No. 1 substitute for Tom Brokaw on the NBC
- Nightly News--and then had to fend off rumors she would be
- made permanent co-anchor. (The job wasn't offered, nor does she
- want it.) She has, moreover, won the applause of millions for
- her artful balancing of family and career: this is a woman who
- quit one of the highest-profile jobs in TV so that she could
- be home mornings when her kids went off to kindergarten.
- </p>
- <p> It is these familial, regular-Jane instincts that have made
- Pauley shine brightest in a galaxy of female TV news
- superstars. Diane Sawyer has the beauty and brains but neither
- the warmth nor a program that shows her off to much advantage.
- Connie Chung's recent announcement that she is taking time off
- to get pregnant seemed a bizarre blurring of the line between
- public and private selves, just the sort of thing Pauley has
- so gracefully avoided.
- </p>
- <p> Her co-workers praise Pauley as generous, without
- pretension, easy to work with--in short, a nice human being.
- "I think she is the most civil and least neurotic person I've
- ever met in television," says David Browning, who was hired
- from CBS to produce her new show. "What I always admired about
- her," says Brokaw, "was that she was absolutely determined not
- to be seduced by bright lights, big city." Cynthia Samuels, a
- former Today producer who now runs Channel One, the schoolroom
- newscast, enthuses, "She is emblematic of the best of this
- generation."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, Pauley's TV career has served as a mirror for the
- evolving self-image of the baby-boom generation. Plucked from
- local TV to co-anchor the Today show in 1976, when she was just
- 25, Pauley at first was the precocious overachiever. With the
- arrival of a family (twins, a boy and girl, were born in 1983;
- another son came in 1986), she became that icon of
- thirtysomething maturity, the Woman with Her Priorities
- Straight. Then, during the Norville affair, she acted out a
- secret nightmare for a generation approaching mid-life: the
- fear of being supplanted by someone younger, of being put out
- to pasture by a cold, bottom-line bureaucracy. And she emerged
- victorious. No wonder Pauley has been canonized, and Norville
- can't shake her image as the town vixen; whatever their TV
- skills, their symbolic roles are fixed.
- </p>
- <p> Fittingly, Pauley's new series is another reflection of
- baby-boomer concerns: stories on such topics as parents who
- don't have enough time for their kids and the trauma of turning
- 40. These are Pauley's concerns as well. In a round-table
- discussion of the 40-year milestone, Jane (who turns 40 on Oct.
- 31) noted she became aware of growing older "when I started
- listening to old Beach Boys records and felt like I was
- grieving for someone who had died."
- </p>
- <p> America's late-blooming adulation for Jane Pauley has its
- ironic side. For years, she seemed the epitome of a TV
- newswoman who knew her place. On Today, she always played a
- second-fiddle role: first to Brokaw, then to Bryant Gumbel.
- Even to the end, Gumbel was listed as the show's anchor; Pauley
- was merely co-anchor. Some women at NBC News were distressed
- that Pauley did not fight harder for equal status. She was, for
- example, absent from some of the program's newsmaking trips,
- like its visit to the Soviet Union in 1984. Says one female
- staffer: "She was not a wavemaker."
- </p>
- <p> Pauley says she did complain to management when Gumbel was
- given the pre-eminent role on Today in 1982. But she admits to
- being a "conflict avoider" and to putting her family ahead of
- her work. "Once I brought babies home from the hospital, I
- didn't feel comfortable marching into the boss's office and
- pounding my fists on his desk, saying, `Hey, send me.' But I
- never turned down a trip. The difference was I wasn't lobbying.
- I felt I had obligations to a family. The irony is that I think
- that's why people admire me, to the degree that they do. Not
- that I've been glamorous and globe-trotting and interviewed the
- mighty and powerful. I'm almost celebrated for the career I
- didn't choose."
- </p>
- <p> In conversation, Pauley is simultaneously bubbly and serene.
- She talks in crisp, carefully crafted sentences sprinkled with
- oddly legalistic phrases ("Absent such and such..." is one
- of her favorite constructions) and punctuated with
- self-deprecating humor and girlish giggles. She gives
- wholesomeness a good name. Pauley is close to her parents and
- her older sister, whom she took along on several Today trips.
- She and her husband, Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau, live
- on Manhattan's Upper West Side but avoid the New York social
- scene. She cooks, but not well ("Our family standards aren't
- that high"); goes out to a movie on occasion; rarely watches
- TV for pleasure.
- </p>
- <p> Pauley keeps a tight lid on details of her family life,
- partly for security reasons, partly because of a determination
- to shield her children from the public spotlight. But there is
- another, more philosophical consideration. "To the degree that
- your family becomes part of your image," she says, "it becomes
- less real. Someone once referred to my family as `authentic.'
- One of the reasons it's authentic is that there's no confusion
- between the Trudeaus and the Cosby kids. I am very sensitive
- to the fact that there's a certain imagemaking attendant to my
- career. I don't want my family to become part of my public
- persona. It is real."
- </p>
- <p> Pauley's early life was as real as it gets. She grew up in
- Indianapolis, the daughter of a milk salesman who traveled half
- the time (though, she says, "I mostly remember him being
- home"). In high school Jane was a six-time loser for homecoming
- queen but a whiz at extemporaneous speaking. Her toughest rival
- in statewide competitions was another future TV star: actress
- Shelley Long.
- </p>
- <p> At Indiana University, Pauley majored in political science
- and participated in a decorous student walkout during Founder's
- Day ceremonies, in protest against a proposed tuition increase.
- She remembers the incident chiefly for the distress it caused
- her staunch Republican parents: "It was a very low moment for
- my father." Nor were her parents thrilled when, after
- graduating from college a semester early, she went to work for
- John Lindsay's 1972 campaign for the Democratic presidential
- nomination, then for the state Democratic Central Committee.
- "Mom was mad at me all summer," she says. "My father was at
- least pleased that I was gainfully employed."
- </p>
- <p> By Election Day Pauley had her first TV job: as a reporter
- at WISH-TV, the Indianapolis CBS affiliate. She specialized in
- farm stories, anchored a Saturday-night newscast, and found
- herself the butt of jokes by a local radio personality named
- David Letterman. After three years at the station, she caught
- the eye of executives at Chicago's WMAQ-TV, who were looking
- for someone to co-anchor the evening news. A few days after her
- audition, Pauley got a call from the station's news director,
- offering her the job and a salary more than triple what she was
- making. Recalls Pauley: "He said, `By the way, what are you
- making now?' I told him. There was silence at the end of the
- phone. Then he said, `Don't ever tell anybody that.'"
- </p>
- <p> Her year in Chicago was not easy. The critics were nasty
- (one said she had "the IQ of a cantaloupe") and fellow
- reporters skeptical. "I was all too fair game," she says. "I
- was the first woman to anchor an evening newscast, and I was
- practically a college coed." A former staff member at WMAQ
- remembers, "She didn't know the first thing about reporting.
- But her on-camera presence was incredible."
- </p>
- <p> Ratings were low, and her days at the station seemed
- numbered when NBC asked her to audition for the job of Barbara
- Walters' successor on the Today show. The candidates
- constituted a virtual Who's Who of women in broadcasting,
- including Cassie Mackin, Linda Ellerbee and Betty Rollin. "I
- assumed I was there as a courtesy," says Pauley. Improbably,
- she won the job. "I was very impressed with her poise," says
- former NBC News president Richard Wald, now at ABC. "Jane looks
- like somebody you would meet in your neighborhood but who is
- just a little smarter and more articulate, so that you look up
- to her."
- </p>
- <p> In her early years at Today, Pauley was the one who did most
- of the looking up. "Everything that came out of my mouth was
- run through the Tom Brokaw filter before I said it," she says.
- "I was so in awe of him that there was very little spontaneity
- in me." She gradually gained confidence and skill, but not job
- security. "It seemed about every six months I would read in the
- newspaper about someone being groomed for my job," she says.
- "And"--the self-deprecating laugh--"it rang pretty true to
- me."
- </p>
- <p> Steve Friedman, the former executive producer of Today who
- now runs the NBC Nightly News, claims the turning point for
- Pauley came after her first pregnancy leave. "After the babies,
- the megastar was born," he says. "Before that she used to go
- in and out in terms of attention and work. But she came back
- focused, confident, directed. It was a different Jane." She
- specialized in handling delicate interviews (grieving parents,
- wives of hostages) but also carried her weight in breaking news
- stories like the invasion of Grenada.
- </p>
- <p> Pauley admits that she was taken aback when Norville was
- brought in last September to replace newscaster John Palmer,
- Jane's close friend, and given a prominent on-air role. Stories
- about "the other woman" threatening to take Pauley's job soon
- became a deluge. "I was repeatedly told, `Jane, you're reading
- the newspapers too much.' My reaction to that was `I'm not
- reading the newspapers, I'm watching TV!' I felt that signals
- were being sent." Whether NBC was trying to ease Pauley out or
- not, she decided the time had come to take a break--not just
- from Today but from all TV--and sought to negotiate an end
- to her contract. "I realized that I probably would not come
- back in broadcasting at the level I left it. But somehow that
- felt O.K." NBC, of course, didn't let that happen.
- </p>
- <p> Her post-mortems on the Today affair are mostly charitable.
- On the show's precipitous ratings: "I don't think it was just
- me. It was a succession of events," notably the much publicized
- memo in which Gumbel criticized nearly everything about the
- show except Pauley. Of Gumbel, she speaks fondly: "Bryant is
- vastly more complicated than I am. I just found him endlessly
- fascinating to watch." On Norville: "I don't think any of us
- saw [the transition] being as damaging to Deborah as it
- ultimately was. But I think she'll be fine. Americans can be
- generous. I think that public opinion will say, `This woman has
- suffered enough.'"
- </p>
- <p> Watching the Today show now, Pauley feels no twinges of
- regret. "I can enjoy it and have no sense that that's my
- chair." It helps, of course, to have your own prime-time show,
- a nation's adulation and a schedule that for the first time in
- 13 years doesn't require you to get up at 3:30 a.m. "I'm no
- longer working against the flow of a normal workday rhythm in
- the city," she says with a glow. "I haven't set an alarm clock
- but once in seven months. I wake up because there's sun
- streaming through my windows."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-