×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Teleprompter inventor Schlafly dies in US at 91

Last Updated : 03 May 2018, 06:56 IST
Last Updated : 03 May 2018, 06:56 IST

Follow Us :

Comments

Schlafly (91) died April 20 at Stamford Hospital after a brief illness, according the Leo P Gallagher & Son Funeral Home, which handled the arrangements. A funeral was held yesterday at St Mary Parish in Greenwich, where he was a longtime resident.

He did not use a teleprompter himself until he was 88, while rehearsing his speech for induction into the Cable Television Hall of Fame, said Thomas Gallagher, a close friend. Schlafly helped start the TelePrompTer Corp, eventually becoming its president and accepting an Emmy Award for the company in 1999 a few years after winning one himself 1992 for his work in developing the first cable system permitting subscribers to order special programs.

He held 16 patents, Gallagher said. "Hub Schlafly was the cable industry's most innovative engineer and, at the same time, one of its ablest executives," Charles Dolan, the chairman of Cablevision, said in a statement yesterday.

"Whether you were his friend or competitor, he was always congenial and supportive and probably had more friends than anyone." Schlafly was born Aug 14, 1919, in St Louis. He graduated from Notre Dame University, where he studied electrical engineering. He worked for General Electric and the MIT Radiation Laboratory before joining 20th Century Fox in New York City in 1947.

Actor Fred Barton Jr wanted a way to remember his lines and approached Irving Berlin Kahn, nephew of composer Irving Berlin and vice president of radio and television at 20th Century Fox. Kahn went to Schlafly, then the director of television research.

The result a monitor facing the person appearing on screen and rolling a script at reading speed was named the TelePrompTer, which made its debut in 1950 on the soap opera "The First Hundred Years," Brown said.

"It revolutionised television and improved the quality of on-air performers," said Jim Dufek, a professor of mass media at Southeast Missouri State University. "It also made the politicians look smarter because they were looking right into the camera."

ADVERTISEMENT
Published 27 April 2011, 09:09 IST

Deccan Herald is on WhatsApp Channels| Join now for Breaking News & Editor's Picks

Follow us on :

Follow Us

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT