By Robert Simonson
02 Jul 2007
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| Joel Siegel |
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| Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris |
While never considered a deep-thinking critic, Mr. Siegel possessed a wide influence with the public, due to his long-time perch as entertainment critic on "Good Morning, America," a program he joined in 1981. He was also for many years a critic at WABC.
As Mr. Siegel was prone to hyperbole, quotes from his reviews were routinely featured in newspaper ads and on placards outside Broadway theatres.
Joel Siegel was born on July 7, 1943, in the entertainment capital of the U.S., Los Angeles. He graduated cum laude from the University of California at Los Angeles. Though always interested in show business and journlism, his early career was flavored by the tumultuous times during which he grew up. In college he worked to register black voters in Georgia and met Martin Luther King Jr. He also worked as a joke writer for Senator Robert F. Kennedy and was at the Ambassador Hotel the night the senator was assassinated in 1968.
Before establishing himself as a television personality, Mr. Siegel seemed to have tried a bit of everything. While working in advertising for Carson/Roberts Advertising, he invented and named ice cream flavors for Baskin-Robbins. Among them were German Chocolate Cake, Blueberry Cheesecake and Red, White and Blueberry Chilly Burgers. He knew Terry Gilliam in his pre-"Monty Python" days. Together they published a book, "The Cocktail People."
The producers were Zev Bufman, Neil Bogart, Michael Harvey and Peter A. Bobley. Joel Siegel was married three times. The first union, to Karen Oshman, ended in divorce. His second wife, Jane Kessler, died of brain cancer in 1982. He married Ena Swansea in 1996. Together, they had a son, Dylan. When Mr. Siegel discovered the next year that he had cancer, he decided to write a book for his son called "Lessons for Dylan: From Father to Son." It was published in 2003.
He is survived by his son, Dylan, and his wife.



