Mister Rogers

Amos Stevens

New Member
I grew up with this guy & was very sorry to hear that he passed away during the night:

Mister Rogers Dies

by Lia Haberman
Feb 27, 2003, 8:20 AM PT



It's a somber day in the neighborhood as news breaks that Fred Rogers has passed away.

The iconic actor, recognized by millions of children by his surname Mister Rogers, died of cancer early Thursday. He was 74.

Rogers, who passed away in his Pittsburgh home, had been diagnosed with stomach cancer after the holidays according to family spokesman David Newell, who played Mr. McFeely on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood.

A statement on Rogers' Website, www.misterrogers.org, thanked fans for watching and encouraged them to carry on Rogers' friendly philosophy: "We are grateful for the many people, young and old, who have cared about his work over the years and who continue to appreciate Mister Rogers' Neighborhood on PBS. We hope that you'll join us in celebrating his life by reflecting on his messages and taking them into your everyday lives."

For 34 years Rogers slipped on his sneakers and signature cardigan and sang "It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood," before taking a trolley tour through the neighborhood of Make Believe to greet his friends (both human and puppet).

One of his infamous cardigans currently hangs in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

A staple of children's educational television, right up there with Sesame Street, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood has long been praised for teaching tykes how to play fair, respect others, deal with their anger and make them feel loved and valued.

His kid-friendly work won him four Emmys, a lifetime achievement award, a George Foster Peabody Award "in recognition of 25 years of beautiful days in the neighborhood" and induction into the Television Hall of Fame in 1999.

His good-natured ways and un-hip attire also earned him an Eddie Murphy parody in the '80s on Saturday Night Live with Mister Robinson's Neighborhood but Rogers was more amused than annoyed by the urban spoof.

More important to Rogers than the honors and celebrity recognition was his connection with kids. "He was so genuinely kind, a wonderful person," Newell told the Associated Press. "His mission was to work with families and children for television…That was his passion, his mission, and he did it from day one."

Rogers, an ordained Presbyterian minister since 1963, was born in Latrobe, a suburb of Pittsburgh, in 1928. After earning his degree in music composition at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida in 1951 he went to work for NBC as an assistant producer for The Voice of Firestone and later as floor director for The Lucky Strike Hit Parade, The Kate Smith Hour and the NBC Opera Theatre.

Two years later Rogers went to work as an unseen puppeteer on a live WQED broadcast in Pittsburgh called The Children's Corner, during which he created many of the characters that would later populate Mister Rogers' neighborhood, including King Friday XIII, Daniel Striped Tiger, Henrietta Pussycat and Lady Elaine Fairchilde.

In 1963 Rogers developed his own 15-minute show Misterogers for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The show was brought back to Pittsburgh and aired on the East Coast in 1966, going national two years later on what is now PBS. It became public television's longest running series.

The finale episode of Mister Rogers was taped in December 2000 and aired on PBS in August 2001. But the kindly host lived on through back to back reruns. He also continued to focus his creative energy on teaching preschoolers through his Website, publications and special museum programs. Just last month Rogers was awarded a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Rogers is survived by his wife Joanne, two sons and two grandsons

http://pbskids.org/rogers/
 

suziwong

Administrator
Staff member
Yes I am very sorry for this !!
Thank you very much for this information Amos !!

God Bless
 

Mama San

Administrator
Yes, Amos, I saw that this morning. How very sad.
I remember, when my children were very small, they
would watch Mr. Rogers Neighborhood. His little shows
were always fun but with a lot of educational substance!
He taught "4 R's"! Reading , Writing, Arithmatic and Respect!
He will be sadly missed! May he rest in peace!
God bless,
Mama san
 

Amos Stevens

New Member
Mister Rogers, the Asteroid

by Joal Ryan
May 2, 2003, 10:15 PM PT



Mister Rogers was not your ordinary star. The proof? Today, he is an asteroid.

The soft-spoken, sweater-wearing kids' TV host, who died February 27 of stomach cancer, has been immortalized in astronomy ledgers as the namesake of Misterrogers, the asteroid formerly known as Number 26858.

The designation was announced this week by the International Astronomical Union, the France-based organization responsible for naming the rocks and stuff that fly around in outerspace. (We paraphrase for the benefit of the science impaired.)

The story of Misterrogers, the asteroid, begins with John G. Radzilowicz, director of the Henry Buhl Jr. Planetarium & Observatory at the Carnegie Science Center in Fred Rogers' hometown of Pittsburgh. He submitted the nomination for the redesignation of Number 26858 the day Fred Rogers passed away at the age of 74.

Radzilowicz, who says he's just old enough to have missed being virtually raised in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, the public-TV staple that ran for 34 years, thought Rogers worthy of a minor planet (the astrological name for asteroid) based on his work with children, in general, and his work in astronomy education, in particular.

Rogers produced the multi-media show, The Sky Above Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, for Buhl Planetarium in 2000. The program continues to run there, and at other planetariums across the country.

In a Q-and-A on the Buhl Website, posted around the time of the show's debut, Rogers spoke of his longtime love of space and flight, noting how he earned his pilot wings as a high-schooler.

"I never lost my fascination with the sky," Rogers told the site. "In fact, one of my favorite 'elective' courses in college was Astronomy I. It's really exciting for me to be sharing my enthusiasm for the sky with children and their families."

Most asteroids are named after the astronomers who discover them, Radzilowicz explains. But when an astronomer is prolific--E.F. Helin discovered 113 minor planets, including Number 26858, between 1973-1994--his or her unnamed asteroids go into a pot whereby they eventually can be named after any person, living or dead, provided the International Astronomical Union grants approval.

This process is not to be confused with that private company that named a star after your Uncle Ed for Christmas.

"Those folks are the astronomical equivalent of a pet rock," Radzilowicz says. "...It means nothing. It's not legally binding. No astronomer will use it."

Not so in the case of Misterrogers. If by chance old Number 26858, currently in orbit in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, were to veer off course, and head straight for Earth, newscasters would be correct to warn, "Misterrogers is coming!"

But fear not. "There's little to no chance of that happening," Radzilowicz says. "...We shouldn't be running into [that asteroid]."

Unfortunately, there's also little chance of you seeing Misterrogers with your handy-dandy sky-gazing equipment at home. The asteroid is just six to seven miles in diameter, meaning all but the most powerful telescopes will be able to capture it, Radzilowicz says. Buhl is considering taking a photo of Misterrogers and putting it on display in the planetarium, he says.

David Newell, the Neighborhood's own Mr. McFeeley, calls the naming of an asteroid after the beloved TV icon the "perfect" honor.

"Here's Mister Rogers revolving around all the neighborhoods now," says Newell, who also serves as spokesman for Rogers' still-operating production company, Family Communications.

The news of the Misterrogers asteroid comes as a Pittsburgh prepares Saturday for a public memorial service honoring its beloved civic figure and TV host.

The service, scheduled for 2:30 p.m. (ET) at Heinz Hall, will feature speeches by friends, colleagues and PBS President Pat Mitchell. The event will be covered live by Pittsburgh's WQED-TV, and carried by about 50 percent of PBS affiliates across the country. A live audio Webcast of the event will be available at the WQED site.
 
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