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Joan Ganz Cooney

 
Biography: Joan Ganz Cooney

Although few know her name, parents and children all over the world love the work of Joan Ganz Cooney (born 1929), who founded the Children's Television Workshop and created some of the most famous educational programming in television history, including "Sesame Street," and "The Electric Company."

Cooney, the youngest of three children, was born November 30, 1929, in Phoenix, Arizona, to Sylvan C. and Pauline Reardon Ganz. Her father killed himself when she was 26 years old, which, as Hilary Mills reported in Vanity Fair, sent Joan "into a long period of anorexia, which today she considers a form of passive suicide."

Early on, Cooney developed a strong sense of civic responsibility, which she credited to the influence of a priest named Father James Keller and his Christopher Movement, a 1950s Catholic group that encouraged Christians to work in communications. "Father Keller said that if idealists don't go into the media, nonidealists would," Cooney told Michele Morris of Working Woman.

Heeding Father Keller's directive, Cooney in 1951 graduated from the University of Arizona in Tucson with a degree in English, then spent a year working as a writer for the Arizona Republic in Phoenix. Next, she moved to New York City and found work as a soap opera publicist for NBC and then CBS television networks, where she promoted a variety show called the U.S. Steel Hour from 1955 to 1962.

Within a few years, Cooney had bluffed her way into a job producing documentaries at Channel 13, Manhattan's public television station. "I've never been qualified for any job I've been hired for," she later told Ray Robinson of 50 Plus. Lack of experience notwithstanding, Cooney continually rose to the occasion. Within four years of her hire, she won her first Emmy in an award-studded television career, for "Poverty, Anti-Poverty, and the Poor," a three-hour documentary that traced a busload of poor people confronting officials of the government's War on poverty program.

Cooney's big break came when she received a grant from the Carnegie Corporation to do a study on educational programming aimed at disadvantaged children. She jumped at the opportunity to figure out a concrete way to help children. "I saw in a flash that that was where the power and influence of the medium was going to be," Cooney told Working Woman. "I could do a thousand documentaries on poverty and poor people that would be watched by a handful of the convinced, but I was never really going to have an influence on my times. I wanted to make a difference."

A Legend was Launched

By 1967, reported Peter Hellman of New York magazine, Cooney and Carnegie Corporation Vice-President Lloyd Morrisett, who arranged funding for the study, "we're convinced that a fast-paced, entertaining hour of educational TV each weekday, modeled after Laugh-In, [a comic variety show popular in the 1960s] could reach and teach pre-schoolers-especially the disadvantaged." They discovered that while middle-class children started school with a basic knowledge of letters and numbers, disadvantaged children didn't. Their study, The Potential Uses of Television in Preschool Education found that those same children watched an average of 27 hours of television per week. The duo figured that they could harness some of that viewing time into educational growth, like learning the alphabet.

Cooney and Morrisett managed to raise the show's first-year budget of $7 million through the U.S. government's Office of Education, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the Carnegie Corporation, and the Ford Foundation. "We had decided from the first that we wouldn't go around begging for pennies," Cooney told Peter Hellman of New York magazine. "Either we would get full funding to do the show right or we would drop it."

Children's Television Workshop has since branched out into a products division, which funds the show and others through its licenses of products ranging from books and toys to sheets, towels, and Big Bird toothpaste. The company in 1986 raised about $14 million a year from such deals.

Even after she conceptualized and raised money for the program's inauguration, the Children's Television Workshop board wasn't sure Cooney, with her relative lack of experience, was the right person to head the project. She has always given credit to her husband, Timothy Cooney, for encouraging her to hold firm for leadership of the Children's Television Workshop. "Without him," Cooney told Vanity Fair's Hilary Mills, "I don't know if I would have gone as far as I went." Joan Ganz Cooney has called Timothy Cooney, who once worked for New York City mayor Robert Wagner but quit to become a full-time activist, a "militant feminist." Married in 1964, the couple divorced 11 years later, and Joan Ganz Cooney continues to support him through alimony payments.

Sunny Days

Sesame Street began many years of sunny days with its launch in November 1969. Filmed in Queens, New York, the show, with its urban tenement setting and multicultural cast of characters, reflects a world familiar to its target audience. Hispanic, black, and white actors share the stage with puppets like Bert and Ernie, Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Oscar the Grouch, Kermit the Frog, and loveable furry old Grover. The show frequently welcomes guests, as well, including Susan Sarandon, Robin Williams, Rosie O'Donnell, Jay Leno, James Taylor, and Lena Horne. Even the Count von Count would have trouble tabulating the show's estimated 11 million weekly U.S. viewers.

Broadcast in 141 countries, Sesame Street had won a record 71 Emmys by 1998. One secret to its success is its constant evolution. "The first Sesame Street shows were aimed at two-to five-year olds, the curriculum a narrow five or six subjects," noted Dan Moreau in Changing Times. "Today the show examines more than 200, from geography to the color green." The show's writers particularly struggled over dealing with the death of Will Lee, who played Mr. Hooper, in 1982. Norman Stiles, then the head writer, remarked in New York magazine: "In any adult show, the choice would have been obvious-replace the actor or write him out of the script." Instead, the staff chose to dedicate a segment to Big Bird and others talking about his death and remembering him with fond memories. "We felt we owed something to a man we respected and loved," Stiles said.

Cooney is a constant advocate for innovation, noted Michele Morris in Working Woman. "Because she encourages the creative team to deal with current issues, such as changing male and female roles, sibling rivalry, child abuse, and death, the show stays fresh and contemporary." Led by Cooney, the Children's Television Workshop, which employs about 250 people, has gone on to produce a number of other educational shows, including The Electric Company, a reading program aimed at grade-school kids, 3-2-1 Contact, a science show that Cooney especially hoped would lure girl viewers, and Square One TV, a program about math.

No Dress Rehearsal

Cooney's career has included serving on the boards of corporations including Johnson & Johnson, Chase Manhattan Bank, and Xerox. Although she's still active in Children's Television Workshop projects, Cooney stepped down as CEO in 1990. With her husband second husband, Peter G. Peterson, a former U.S. secretary of commerce and investment banker whom she married in 1980, Cooney works with her own foundation, which focuses on children. Unable to have children of her own, she became a stepmother to Peterson's five children.

Cooney's zest for life was reinvigorated in 1975, after she was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a radical mastectomy, the surgical removal of both breasts. Her friend Stephen Schwarzman told Hilary Mills of Vanity Fair that "to understand Joan, you have to understand the cancer. Because of the cancer she has a policy of no bullshit. 'Life is too short, I could have checked out, I'm going to check out. There is no dress rehearsal.' That's one of her constant lines. Because of that she demands authenticity."

Further Reading

Who's Who of American Women, Reed Reference Publishing Company, 1993.

50 Plus, December 1987.

Changing Times, July 1989.

New York, November 23, 1987.

People, November 2, 1998.

Vanity Fair, August 1993.

Working Woman, April 1981; May 1986.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Joan Ganz Cooney
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Cooney, Joan Ganz, 1929-, American television producer, b. Phoenix, Ariz. After graduating (1951) from the Univ. of Arizona, Cooney worked as a newspaper reporter and television publicist for ten years before becoming a producer at WNET, a public television station in New York City. There she developed the concepts for children's programming that led to the incorporation (1968) of the Children's Television Workshop (CTW; since 2000, Sesame Workshop); Cooney has been president since 1970. Through Sesame Street, Electric Company, and other innovative programs, CTW transformed children's television and learning. Cooney was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1995.
Wikipedia: Joan Ganz Cooney
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Joan Ganz Cooney (born November 30, 1929 in Phoenix, Arizona) is an American television producer. She is one of the founders of the Children's Television Workshop (now known as Sesame Workshop), and the organization famous for the creation of the children's television show Sesame Street. Cooney received her B.A. degree in education from the University of Arizona in 1951.

Cooney was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1998, and the Television Hall of Fame.[1]

She has been married to Peter G. Peterson, former U.S. Secretary of Commerce, since April 1980.[2] Unable to have children of her own, she became a stepmother to Peterson's five children.[3] She lives in New York City.

Contents

Childhood

Cooney was born Joan Ganz, and adopted the name Joan Redden Ganz, using her mother's maiden name. Cooney's mother was Irish-Catholic, and born in Jackson, Michigan. After her maternal grandfather died, her mother's family came west when she was 18 or 19. Her father was Jewish and was born in Phoenix, but his mother went to California to get better medical care when giving birth to him. Her Jewish German paternal grandfather was Emil Ganz, who fought in Georgia during the American Civil War, on the Confederate side. Ganz was elected mayor of Phoenix three times.

Cooney's mother and father dated for five years. She describes her father as "the perennial bachelor,"[cite this quote] being thirteen years older than her mother.

Her father, Sylvan, always had a job in the Depression era, and the family had a summer cabin "up near Prescott, Arizona, because the weather was terrible in the summer."[cite this quote] Growing up near the Phoenix Country Club, she grew up more affluent than her family had money, although she considers them to have been middle class. Her father's occupation was executive vice-president of the First National Bank in Phoenix.

Cooney went to public school in first grade, switching to Catholic school St. Francis Xavier in Phoenix for grades 2-8. She describes herself then as "just a grim, over-wrought little kid."[cite this quote] Never able to keep up with her siblings, she always read, much to the chagrin of her mother, who always wanted her to get outside. While she doesn't consider herself to have been a nerd as child, she always argued about ideas—including religion—with Jesuit priests.

As World War II and gas rationing came, Cooney's family sold the cottage. Cooney describes the weather at the time as "bearable,"[cite this quote] thanks to early, self-made air conditioning systems.

For high school, Cooney went to North Phoenix, while her siblings went to St. Mary's. She feels this separation, that she was no longer "their little sister",[cite this quote] let her come into her own. In school plays and even state-wide drama contests, Cooney was sure she wanted to become an actress. She describes herself as the "world's happiest adolescent",[cite this quote] especially after not being a happy child. She says that a psychologist once told her, "You're the only patient I've ever had that's ever had a happy adolescence."[cite this quote]

One of Cooney's teachers in 1943, Bud Brown, taught a course on the history of culture, as well as operating Bud Brown Barn, a dancing establishment. Brown was Cooney's first teacher to talk about the injustice of segregation, and it "absolutely inflamed" her. Brown talked about Hitler's treatment of the Jews, a topic Cooney says "nobody talked about": "I was 13-years-old, and it totally changed my life."[cite this quote] Later, both Brown and Ms. Natscowski were investigated as potential Communists.

Cooney stopped acting in college, when her father expressed that he would never support such a career; she says she's very content with this life path, instead of trying to find jobs on Broadway. Cooney attended the Catholic girls' institution Dominican College, before transferring to the University of Arizona, where she was initiated into Kappa Alpha Theta and obtained her BA in Education. Along with not wanting to stay in an all-girl institution, she switched because it was "more fun" at Arizona. She feels she learned more at Dominican, simply because she didn't find Education challenging. Her mother advised her to take Education, with the justification that women teachers could find work if their husbands were to die, and could still be at home at the same time as their children.

After graduation, Cooney went with a friend to Washington, DC, to work for the United States government in 1951, organizing Foreign Student Exchange for the State Department. She started as a clerk typist, and was on the point of being given the position of Program Officer when she left. During that period, Cooney visited New York City a couple of times, and became intent on moving there.

She returned to Phoenix and began working at the Arizona Republic newspaper, getting a job on the women's page, to write wedding stories and the like. As time went on, she got many general assignments.

Life in New York City

Moving to New York City, she was hired in the press department of RCA. There, she wrote regular releases, on prediction of what television would be like in the future, from shopping for groceries, and color transmissions. She was offered a job on the women's page of Lester Markel's The New York Times, which she found easy to turn down. Her stay at RCA was miserable, as she was thought to have been sophisticated and manipulative, and sleeping with her boss.

She met up with the Arizona-born head of a firm that ran publicity at Pat Weaver's NBC, moving there after eight or nine months at RCA. At NBC, Cooney promoted the Day Drama lineup, consisting of soap operas. As Cooney had started at RCA with a low wage, and transferred within the same company to NBC, her boss wasn't able to raise her income to acceptable levels. He helped Cooney move to publicise The US Steel Hour, which aired on CBS.

Cooney became involved in the Democratic reform movement, led by Eleanor Roosevelt, helping them write releases about their activities. Still, she had much time on her hands, promoting a bi-weekly show. She became involved in the Partisan Review, to help fundraise; the intellectual contributors had great contempt for Cooney, as she was involved with both television and publicity.

Television production

When someone from The US Steel Hour was left to go to WGBH in Boston, Mass., Cooney was shocked to learn that there was a new educational television movement. She instantly knew that she was meant for such an area of broadcasting, "it was like St. Paul on the highway." She wanted to become the publicist for what is now WNET. The head of the station told Cooney he had a publicist, but needed producers. After proving she knew the national issues of the time and pursuing the position through a series of notes, she became a producer for the station.

At the station, she had an initial income of USD$9000, down from USD$12000 at US Steel.

Her first program was Court of Reason, where two advocates debated, with an audience of three expert judges. The series was hosted by Columbia University's sociologist Robert Merton. All tapes, including those with notable guests like Malcolm X, no longer exist, as videotapes were reused (a standard industry practice at the time as videotape was expensive).

One show Cooney produced was called Cuba: Should America Change Its Policy? It featured was a roundtable discussion on the topic; guest President Kennedy "virtually declared World War III." The series, incidentally, debuted the week before the Cuban missile crisis.

Cooney's first documentary produced was A Chance at the Beginning. Through this, she met Tim Cooney, who would become her husband. The first episodes focused on adult literacy programs, teenage program Har U in Harlem, and Martin Doutch's program for four-year-olds in Harlem. Head Start was started within months of the third episode airing, and bought 125 print of the episode to use for teacher training.

Cooney produced Poverty, Anti-Poverty, and the World, for which she won a regional Emmy. The program invited multitudes of poor people into the studio, to confront the bureaucrats about the programming going on at the time. It was the very first teach-in, a format that became increasingly popular during the Vietnam War.

Cooney "gave a little dinner party"[cite this quote] in 1966 with her then-husband Tim Cooney, Lloyd Morrisett (VP Carnegie Corporation) and his wife Mary, and Louis Friedman. Carnegie Corporation had been researching children's education; Morrisett was inspired by Friedman's speaking on how the medium of television was untapped for children.

Morrisett called Friedman and Cooney over to the Foundation's offices a few days later. During the meeting, Morrisett and Friedman agreed to create a study by channel Thirteen, to investigate what reactions would be to such a program. During the meeting, Morrisett mentioned that Cooney wouldn't be interested in such a project, as she was involved in public affairs programming. Cooney remembers yelling back, "Oh yes I would!" Friedman passed over her enthusiastic response, however, as he didn't want to lose her from his crew.

One day, Tim Cooney and Morrisett were having lunch together on a separate matter. Tim suggested to Joan that he would mention the project, and Joan agreed, knowing that with Friedman in the way she would never get involved. Morrisett eventually convinced Friedman that he wanted Cooney, who went on a three-month leave of absence from documentary production. Cooney toured the United States and Canada, talking to educators, researchers, and television producers. She wrote a paper based on this study, titled The Potential Uses of Television in Preschool Education. Cooney says that she always knew television could teach, as kids nationwide learned and sang ad jingles perfectly, but a paper was needed to make things conclusive and systematic.

Along with some unused components, the paper suggested the basic format of what was to become Sesame Street. The paper also proposed the creation of a children's television production company, to be part of channel Thirteen; Cooney couldn't suggest to her employer that such an organization might be independent. Harold Howe, U.S. Commissioner of Education, liked the findings of the report, and the Ford Foundation soon became interested in such a series, thanks to Macarthur Bundy.

Children's Television Workshop established

Moving to Carnegie, to act and advise independent of Thirteen, Cooney began laying the groundwork for the Children's Television Workshop. Carnegie hired Linda Gotley to help Cooney write the proposal. Barbara Finberg and Morrisett would regularly act as funders, every few days trying to find holes in the proposal. During these days, segments now considered traditional Sesame Street favorites like "One of these things is not like the other" were established.

Despite the insistence of the US Office of Education that there was no money to fund the project, Howe persisted, and insisted the project be classified as a research project. The Ford Foundation joined funding, as did the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which was being established just as Sesame Street was. Between those organizations and Carnegie, USD$8 million was raised to create a semi-autonomous organization. This organization was established to become completely separate, should they succeed.

At a press conference in March 1968, the Children's Television Workshop and Sesame Street were announced. Jack Gould, television critic for The New York Times gave the project front page space. "If you had Jack Gould in your corner, you could not believe what it meant."[4]

With Cooney, an assistant, and a secretary, CTW began production on the show. Soon, Cooney signed on Mike Dann of CBS, and Captain Kangaroo alumni David Connell, Jon Stone, and Sam Gibbon.[4]

During preparations for the program, Cooney insisted that "if we can't get Jim Henson, we won't use any puppets at all." [1]

Cooney directed CTW's expansion into licensing for consumer products, one of the organization's key methods of funding.[1]

Recent years

In 1988, David V. B. Britt took over as President and COO of CTW. In October 1990, Cooney stepped down as CEO as well, Britt taking the position, based on long-standing plans.[1] She wanted to be able to focus more on the creative side of the company's projects, then Sesame Street, 3-2-1 Contact, and Square One TV.[1] She became and still remains chairwoman of Sesame Workshop's executive committee.[5]

The Joan Ganz Cooney Center was founded in 2007 by Sesame Workshop, to study the role of digital technologies in childhood literacy.[5] It was created on the belief that the "vast wasteland" theory was being repeated in new media; few of the educational games available were based on detailed educational curriculum.[5]

Since its launch in 2008, Joan Ganz Cooney has been a contributor for wowOwow.com. A new website for women to talk culture, politics and gossip.

Honors

  • Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • Celebrate Life Award from the National Alliance of Breast Cancer Organizations[6]
  • Association of Educational Publishers Hall of Fame, 2004[7]
  • Centennial Medallion Award[8]

Board of directors

Trustee

  • New York and Presbyterian Hospitals Inc.
  • Educational Broadcasting Corporation
  • WNET New York

Honorary degrees[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Carter, Bill (1990-07-31). "Children's TV Workshop Head to Step Down". The New York Times (New York, NY: The New York Times Company). http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE0DF1E3BF932A05754C0A966958260&scp=6&sq=%22joan%20ganz%20cooney%22&st=cse. Retrieved 2008-12-01. 
  2. ^ "Joan Cooney, P.G. Peterson Are Married". New York, N.Y.: The New York Times. Apr 27, 1980. pg. 76, 1 pgs.
  3. ^ Biography: Joan Ganz Cooney
  4. ^ a b "Archive of American Television Interview with Joan Ganz Cooney", an interview by Shirley Wershba for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Foundation.
  5. ^ a b c Jensen, Elizabeth (2007-12-06). "Institute Named for ‘Sesame’ Creator". The New York Times (New York, NY: The New York Times Company). http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/arts/television/06sesa.html. Retrieved 2008-12-01. 
  6. ^ http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9405E7D61639F930A25750C0A960958260
  7. ^ Association of Educational Publishers press release: Sesame Street Creator Among Hall of Fame Inductees, 12 June 2004.
  8. ^ a b Biographical background on 2006 Dartmouth honorary degree recipients: JOAN GANZ COONEY, 1 May 2006.
  9. ^ Johnson & Johnson 2001 DEF 14A / Securities and Exchange Commission
  10. ^ http://www.secinfo.com/dsvr4.asw.htm
  11. ^ Suzanne Williams-Rautiolla. "Cooney, Joan Ganz". The Museum of Broadcast Communications. Chicago, Illinois: The Museum of Broadcast Communications. http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/C/htmlC/cooneyjoan/cooneyjoan.htm. Retrieved 2008-12-01. 
  12. ^ Christy, Marian (1986-05-21). "Inventing 'Sesame Street'". Boston Globe (Boston, MA: Affiliated Publications). http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=BG&p_theme=bg&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=0EADED81F403ECB9&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2008-12-01. "Cooney has 12 honorary degrees, including one from Harvard in 1975." 
  13. ^ "COMMENCEMENTS; N.Y.U. President Compares Goals and Progress in His Tenure". The New York Times (New York, NY: The New York Times Company). 1991-05-17. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0CE6D81038F934A25756C0A967958260. Retrieved 2008-12-01. 
  14. ^ Ackermann, Dina (2002-04-02). "Lehrer to get honorary degree". The Daily Pennsylvanian (Philadelphia, PA: The Daily Pennsylvanian, Inc.). http://media.www.dailypennsylvanian.com/media/storage/paper882/news/2002/04/02/News/Lehrer.To.Get.Honorary.Degree-2157867.shtml. Retrieved 2008-12-01. "Other recipients include Joan Ganz Cooney, a television producer..." 
  • "Archive of American Television Interview with Joan Ganz Cooney", an interview by Shirley Wershba for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Foundation.

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