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As Told To


Feb 15, 2022

Bruce Weber has led a rich and varied writing life. He has been a fiction editor, a magazine editor, a national arts correspondent and theater critic, and a metro reporter…oh, and for good measure, a ghostwriter.

For many years, he wrote obituaries, weighing in with the final word on more than 1,000 notable deaths, which in his hands sprang from the page like notable lives, well and purposefully lived. Attentive listeners might recognize his voice, which was featured prominently (along with the rest of him) in the acclaimed 2016 documentary “Obit,” from director Vanessa Gould, which shined compelling light on the men and women on The New York Times obit desk.

A look back at his career reveals a writer with a gift for sharing other people’s stories in a way that is truly his own. “I don’t think it’s self-aggrandizing to say that obituary writing is important work,” he wrote in an op-ed piece upon his retirement from the paper of record in 2016. “An obituary is, after all, the first last word on a life, a public assessment of a human being’s time on earth, a judgement on what deserves to be remembered.”

Before his retirement, Bruce found the time to write a couple of books of his own, including the best-selling As They See ‘Em: A Fan’s Travels in the Land of Umpires, and Life is a Wheel: Memoirs of a Bike-Riding Obituarist, as well as a book in collaboration with the dancer and choreographer Savion Glover (Savion! My Life in Tap). He is currently at work on a biography of the writer E.L. Doctorow.

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