Edward "Ted" Nathanson (1925 – June 6, 1997) was an American television director.
Biography
Born Benedict Gimbel III to a Jewish family in Philadelphia, the son of Ethel S. (née Nathanson) and Benedict Gimbel Jr. and the great-grandson of Adam Gimbel of the Gimbel Brothers retailing family.[1][2] His father was the president and general manager of WIP, one of the first radio stations in Philadelphia.[3][4] He changed his name to Edward Nathanson (the surname of his mother) after his parents divorced.[1] (His father remarried in 1931 to actress Sally Phipps although they divorced in 1935).[5] During World War II, he volunteered for the American Field Service as an ambulance driver in Europe for Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery's Eighth Army.[1] After the war, he worked for CBS, ABC and then NBC where he directed the original Tonight Show and the Today Show.[2]
He was the first person to receive the Directors Guild of America Lifetime Achievement Award for sports-related broadcasting.[1]
Personal life
He died on June 6, 1997, in Manhattan of lung cancer.[1] He was survived by his wife, Edith (née Landesman), a producer he met while working at ABC;[2][6] and three children, Michael Nathanson, Laura Nathanson Knobloch, and Carla Nathanson Hoffman.[1][7][8] All three of his children worked in the industry: Laura retired as Senior Vice President at ABC Television; Carla with the David Letterman Show; and Michael as president of MGM Pictures.[2] His wife died in 2020.[6]