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Peter Sagal

NPR personality, host of "Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!"This article is about the radio host Peter Sagal. For the director, see Peter Segal.

Peter Daniel Sagal (born January 31, 1965) is an American humorist, writer, and host of the National Public Radio game show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! and the PBS special Cons*ution USA with Peter Sagal.

Contents

  • 1 Early life, family and education
  • 2 Career
    • 2.1 Playwright
    • 2.2 Screenwriter
    • 2.3 Television writer
    • 2.4 Actor
    • 2.5 Journalist
    • 2.6 Author
    • 2.7 Awards and honors
  • 3 Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!
  • 4 Personal life
  • 5 See also
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Early life, family and education

Sagal was raised in Berkeley Heights, New Jersey, son of Matthew and Reeva Sagal. Matthew was a telecommunications executive, and Reeva was a schoolteacher who became a stay-at-home mother.

Sagal is a 1987 graduate of Harvard College, where a college roommate was future Wall Street Journal correspondent Jess M. Bravin. Together, they entered a compe*ion to write the Hasty Pudding production and were selected to develop their script "Between the Sheiks". Peter studied English literature at Harvard. While there he wrote and directed other student theater productions. He also spent a summer as a journalist for Cycle, a now defunct motorcycle magazine.

Career

After graduating from Harvard, Sagal pursued several different occupations, all connected to the theater or writing. While living in Los Angeles, he appeared as a contestant on the game show Jeopardy! in April 1988, in which he placed second.

Sagal then moved to New York to pursue a theater writing career In 1998, he moved to the Chicago area, when he became the host of NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! news quiz program.

He was literary manager for the now-defunct Los Angeles Theater Center, a stage director, an actor, a playwright and a screenwriter, and an extra in a Michael Jackson video. He has also been a journalist, an essayist, a humorist,a travel writer, and an author.

Playwright

Sagal has written several plays that have been performed across the United States and internationally. Some have also been performed as radio plays or podcasts. For instance, Sagal's plays have been performed at:

  • Long Wharf Theater
  • New York Stage and Film
  • Actors Theatre of Louisville
  • Seattle Repertory Theatre
  • Florida Stage
  • Illusion Theater
  • City Theatre of Pittsburgh
  • New York's Metropolitan Playhouse.

Sagal's plays include:

  • Denial – A Jewish lawyer defends the free speech rights of a Holocaust denier.
  • Most Wanted – A comedy in which retired grandparents flee to Florida with baby granddaughter
  • Kim's Sister
  • What to Say
  • Real Time
  • Mall America – The aftermath of terror at Minnesota's famous mall
  • Milton Bradley (a podcast play) – a rabbi must eulogize a mother whose son can only say terrible things about her.

Sagal has been awarded fellowships and grants, and commissioned by stage companies to write plays. These include:

  • Grants from
    • The Jerome Foundation
    • The McKnight Foundation
    • A residency grant from the Camargo Foundation in C*is, France
  • Fellowships
    • The Charles MacArthur Fellowship from the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center
    • Two Jerome Fellowships from the Playwrights' Center
  • Commissions to write new plays from
    • The Seattle Repertory Theatre
    • The Wind Dancer Theater
  • Invitations to work on his plays at
    • Sundance
    • The National Playwrights Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center
    • The New Harmony Project
    • PlayLabs

Screenwriter

Sagal has written screenplays, one for a 1996 science fiction / martial arts thriller, Savage, another for Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights, a 2004 sequel to the original Dirty Dancing, adapted from his screenplay Cuba Mine, which Sagal said bears little resemblance to the poorly received film.

Television writer

Sagal has also written for television shows including,

  • Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!: A Royal Pain in the News (TV Movie 2011)
  • Wait Wait Don't Tell Me Live! (TV Movie 2013)
  • Cons*ution USA with Peter Sagal (2013)

The two Wait Wait pilots are based on the weekly NPR/WBEZ Chicago news quiz radio program which Sagal hosts.

Actor

Sagal on his "We the People" Harley Davidson motorcycle at the National Archives during filming for Cons*ution USA with Peter Sagal

Sagal voiced Clown's Joy in the 2015 animated movie Inside Out

He appeared as himself in the "Pay Pal" episode of the animated television series The Simpsons. In that episode characters Lisa and Tumi listened to an episode of Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! featuring Sagal and announcer Carl Kasell.

Sagal has appeared in three television specials based on his radio show: Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! (2008), Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!: A Royal Pain in the News (2011), and Wait Wait Don't Tell Me Live! (2013).

Sagal has appeared as himself in do*entaries. These include:

  • Cons*ution USA with Peter Sagal—PBS TV miniseries do*entary in 2013
  • Narrator of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra's performance of Leonard Bernstein's operetta Candide
  • National Geographic Explorer—TV series do*entary (hosted one episode) in 2016
  • A Personal Journey Through and To The Cons*ution—based on the 2013 PBS do*entary Cons*ution USA with Peter Sagal

Journalist

A runner of marathons, Sagal writes the Road Scholar column for Runner's World magazine. He has also written for The New York Times Magazine, the Chicago Tribune, the Houston Chronicle, and Time magazine.

Sagal and the Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! team contributed a feature called Sandwich Monday to The Salt, NPR's food blog. For five years, each Monday the Wait Wait team ate a new and different kind of sandwich for lunch. Then one of the team members would write a tongue-in-cheek blog post describing the food. Sandwiches included Fritos-topped Papa John's pizza, latke double-down, P*over Sandwich, and Burger King's YUMBO.

Author

In the early 1990s while he was living in Minneapolis, Sagal was hired to ghostwrite an autobiography of the 1970s adult movieography director Gail Palmer. Sagal discovered that Palmer did not direct the adult movieography movies attributed to her, and that she was a front for her adult movieographer boyfriend. Peter wrote the book anyway. However, Palmer did not approve of the m*cript, and it has not been published.

In October 2007 HarperCollins published Sagal's The Book of Vice: Very Naughty Things (and How to Do Them). In the book Sagal revisits the Gail Palmer incident and indicates that his exposure to the adult movie industry led to his writing Book of Vice. Publishers Weekly called Book of Vice, "a hilarious, harmlessly prurient look at the b*ity of regular people’s strange and wicked pleasures".

Awards and honors

  • The Theater Visions Award for best new play from the Laurie Foundation
  • A DramaLogue award for directing
  • McCord Arts Prize from Harvard University
  • The Kurt Vonnegut Humor Award from the Kurt Vonnegut Memorial Library in Indianapolis, Indiana.
  • Named one of the top ten Jewish entertainers from New Jersey by New Jersey Jewish News.
  • Creativity Award from Moment magazine in 2013.

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! was designed as a weekly satirical look at the week's news in a quiz format. The host of the show was to be a comedian named Dan Coffey who would quiz panelists, celebrity guests and non-celebrity callers. The show debuted in January 1998 but had a rocky start. The producers replaced Coffey with Sagal in May 1998.

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! has become one of the most popular shows on NPR. The radio program is heard weekly by nearly three million listeners on 520 public radio stations nationwide. The Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! podcast is also heard by a million people every month. In 2008 Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! was awarded a 2007 Peabody Award "For offering a droll, light-hearted alternative to both news and the cottage industry of punditry that surrounds it..."

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! has not been without controversy. For instance, Sagal attempted a joke about a Diocese of Brooklyn Christmas ad depicting a young woman taking a selfie with a picture of Jesus. He asked why Jesus did not just take the picture for her, and answered "His hands were occupied." Critics including Fox News host Bill O'Reilly and Dallas First Baptist Church senior pastor Robert Jeffress called the joke blasphemous and accused Sagal specifically and the secular media in general of mocking Christianity. O'Reilly stated that if Sagal's comment was salacious he should be fired. When asked about the incident, NPR President and CEO Jarl Mohn said, "he show's goal is to poke fun at the news and make people laugh" and he "regrets that we didn't succeed in this case."

  • Taping Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me! at the Chase Auditorium in Chicago. Left to right, Bill Kurtis, Peter Sagal, US Secretary of Labor Thomas E. Perez, and panel, Paula Poundstone, Luke Burbank, and Faith Salie.

  • Doug Berman, Carl Kasell, Peter Sagal, Rod Abid, Philipp Goedicke, and Emily Ecton at the 67th Annual Peabody Awards Luncheon in 2008

Personal life

Sagal was married and then divorced in 2013. He has since remarried; during early 2021, he was congratulated on the birth of their child. They live in Highland Park, Illinois.

See also

  • Bill Kurtis

References

    External links

    • Peter Sagal at IMDb