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Michael Schildberger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Schildberger
Born
Michael Julius Schildberger

(1938-04-04)4 April 1938
Berlin, Germany
Died2 June 2010(2010-06-02) (aged 72)
EducationMelbourne Grammar School
Occupation(s)Journalist, broadcaster
Years active1955–2010
Known forHost of A Current Affair
SpouseJulia (deceased)
Children5
AwardsLogie: Best TV interviewer (1976)

Michael Julius Schildberger (4 April 1938 – 2 June 2010) was an Australian journalist, radio and television presenter, and author. He is best known for hosting A Current Affair in the 1970s.

He was the son of Hermann Schildberger.[1][circular reference] Hermann had had an important musical career in Berlin prior to being brought out to Melbourne in 1939 by Rabbi Dr Herman Sanger,[2] to escape the Nazis. He was accompanied by his wife (check name) and by Michael who was then a babe-in-arms.

Hermann became musical director of Temple Berth Israel in St. Kilda upon arrival in Melbourne in 1939, as well as taking on a number of other important musical roles including being the founding Musical Director of the Camberwell Chorale.[3]

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Transcription

Career

Michael Schildberger began his media career in 1955 when he joined The Sun News-Pictorial as a copy boy and subsequently became a cadet reporter.[4]

In 1958 he moved to GTV 9 where he remained for the next twenty years. During the 1970s he was executive producer and national host of A Current Affair.[4] For that role, he was awarded a 1976 Logie Award for Best TV Interviewer.[5] While at A Current Affair he conducted the first full-length television interview with singer-songwriter Neil Diamond, who had only previously done brief group press conferences. The interview was in conjunction with Diamond's 1975-76 "Thank You Australia" tour and nationally broadcast live concert.[6]

After leaving Channel 9, Schildberger worked for several years as Director of News for ATV 10 and FOX-FM. He then moved to Melbourne radio station 3LO where he hosted the morning program,[4] with a short stint at 3DB.[7]

In 1984 he founded the media production company Business Essentials.[8]

Schildberger was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1997.[4] He achieved remission, and became a strong advocate of positron emission tomography.[9] The cancer returned in early 2010. Schildberger died at the Cabrini Hospital in Prahran on 2 June 2010.[4]

Publications

  • The sorcerer's apprentice. Spectrum. 2000. ISBN 0-86786-300-5.
  • Secrets of success. Information Australia. 2000. ISBN 1-86350-319-6.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 5 June 2024, at 12:48
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