Perhaps the only director to
don protective elbow pads before his broadcasts, Teddy Nathanson was
a study in contrasts. Absent-minded and forgetful outside the production
truck, he was laser-sharp inside it, directing 21 Wimbledon championships
and 13 Super Bowls during his 37 years at NBC. With intensity tempered
by a penchant for practical jokes, Nathanson’s youthful exuberance
colored his entire career.
“Teddy was like a great basketball
player in that he raised the level of performance of everyone around
him,” explains Steve Hellmuth, executive vice president of operations
and technology at the NBA. “He strived for excellence by empowering
and soliciting ideas from everyone.”
Nathanson’s career began
in the mailroom at CBS, but “he was dying to get into sports,” explains
Edith Nathanson, Teddy’s widow. After working his way through the
entertainment ranks at ABC, Nathanson landed at NBC, where he
worked his way into sports, spending nearly four decades directing baseball, boxing, football, hockey,
golf, and tennis, as well as two Olympic Games.
“He was always thinking about
how he could make his telecasts better,” explains Ken Aagaard, executive
vice president of operations and production services for CBS Sports.
“He really laid the groundwork for the standards of the way football
is covered.”
Pioneering the use of handheld
and remote-controlled cameras and instant replay, Nathanson changed
the look of football coverage, coloring his broadcasts with unusual
reaction shots that matched his personality.
Nathanson’s intense directing
style literally got his blood flowing. He would emphatically bang his
elbows and knees against the console, bloodying himself to the point
of requiring two surgeries. For every telecast thereafter, he suited
up in synch with the athletes he covered, donning elbow pads and a neck
brace before taking his place in the truck.
“Because he was so heavily
encumbered by all of his corset-like padding, he would have to loosen
his pants,” recalls Michael Weisman, former executive producer of
NBC Sports. “Very often, his pants would flop down to his knees, making
for an occasional embarrassing moment in the truck.”
On at least one occasion, the
devilish director attached a piece of paper to his shirttails. When
he stood, his pants inevitably came loose and revealed an 8x10 sign
reading, “HI!!!!,” immediately breaking the tension.
Treating his crews more like
family than co-workers, Nathanson was legendary for his generosity.
“He cared about all the production people, knew all their family names,
their birthdays, what was happening in their lives,” Weisman says.
Every holiday season, Nathanson
made sure everyone he worked with — from executives to cashiers and
telephone operators — received a gift worthy of their contributions.
“His television crews worshipped
him,” Edith says. “He considered them part of his world. They were
not just technicians, grips, or engineers; they were buddies.”
Nathanson turned every broadcast
into a family affair but saved plenty of time for his own family. All
of his children — Michael, Laura, and Carla — “got the television
germ,” as Edith says, before Teddy’s death from lung cancer in 1997.
Despite his constant forgetfulness
and zany sense of humor, or perhaps because of them, Teddy Nathanson
was one of a kind: a gifted director who was loved by everyone who had
the privilege of working with him. —
Carolyn Braff