Werner Veigel
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Werner Veigel | |
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Born | The Hague, Netherlands | 9 November 1928
Died | 2 May 1995 Munich, Germany | (aged 66)
Nationality | German |
Occupation(s) | Journalist, news presenter |
Werner Veigel (9 November 1928 – 2 May 1995) was a Dutch-born German journalist and news presenter.
Veigel was born in The Hague, the son of a German salesman. After his education he successfully completed a sales trainee ship in a travel agency. When Radio Hilversum sought an announcer in 1950 Veigel applied and was given the position. In February 1954 he moved to the NWDR, where he was employed as a presenter and newsreader. From 1961 onward he also worked as an announcer and host on television.
In 1966 Veigel became a narrator on the Tagesschau, the oldest and the most watched news bulletin on German television. In 1987 Tagesschau promoted him to the role of chief newsreader, succeeding Karl-Heinz Köpcke. He was considered exemplary in terms of his faultlessness in emphasis, presentation and articulation.
He commentated on the 1978 Eurovision Song Contest for ARD, and in 1980 played himself in the Udo Lindenberg film Panic Time. In 1985 Veigel spoke the samples for a German version of Paul Hardcastle's single 19 which reached Number 1 in Germany.
In January 1995 Veigel had to give up his position on the Tagesschau due to his declining health. In a magazine interview given the following month he came out as gay; he had lived with his partner Carlheinz Faust since 1955.[1]
Veigel died on 2 May 1995 as a result of a brain tumour. He is buried in Ohlsdorf Cemetery in Hamburg.
Literature
[edit]- Dagmar Berghoff, Wilhelm Wieben, Werner Veigel: Rezepte und Geschichten aus 2000 Plattenkisten. Kuhle L. Verlag, 1987
References
[edit]- ^ Clarus, Nicolai (2010). Mann für Mann. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 1200. ISBN 978-3643106933.
External links
[edit]- German broadcast news analysts
- German television talk show hosts
- German reporters and correspondents
- German male journalists
- 20th-century German journalists
- 1928 births
- 1995 deaths
- German LGBTQ journalists
- German LGBTQ broadcasters
- Deaths from brain cancer in Germany
- German gay writers
- Journalists from The Hague
- ARD (broadcaster) people
- Tagesschau (ARD) presenters and reporters
- Norddeutscher Rundfunk people
- 20th-century German LGBTQ people
- Eurovision commentators