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Don Herbert, TV's 'Mr. Wizard,' Dies

MICHELE NORRIS, host:

From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Michele Norris.

ROBERT SIEGEL, host:

And I'm Robert Siegel.

We learned today of the death of Don Herbert at age 89. If you're too young to remember television in the 1950s and '60s, the name may not ring a bell. But if not, you may remember him as Mr. Wizard.

(Soundbite of music)

SIEGEL: He showed us surprising phenomena.

(Soundbite of TV program, "Watch Mr. Wizard")

Mr. DON HERBERT (Host, "Watch Mr. Wizard): (As Mr. Wizard) Well, if you put the candle there like that and I hold the money over it, it won't burn.

SIEGEL: He demonstrated principles of geology.

(Soundbite of TV program, "Watch Mr. Wizard")

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) Have you ever seen this before?

Unidentified Boy#1: It looks like some quartz.

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) That's right. That's what it is. Do you know what happens to quartz when it's ground up by the elements in weather?

Unidentified Boy#1: Sure. The same.

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) That's right. The same. Right here.

SIEGEL: And meteorology.

(Soundbite of show "Watch Mr. Wizard")

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) Well, what does the air around the light bulb do when it gets hot?

Unidentified Boy#2: It expands.

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) It expands. Okay.

Unidentified Boy#2: It tries to expand. And so the cold air is going to push the warm air from the light bulb up.

SIEGEL: And many other branches of science. In short, Mr. Wizard, Don Herbert, was this country's science teacher. He was fun and he inspired people, people like NPR's own Ira Flatow.

Ira, do you remember Mr. Wizard?

IRA FLATOW: Oh, yeah. I grew up with Mr. Wizard. I never missed his show. I loved his show. And you know, he had great stuff for we and nerds on those days. He made it very interesting.

SIEGEL: He always had a young child or more than one on the program to - who was the audience, the studio audience, with his experiments.

FLATOW: Yes. Yes. And you know, what's also interesting about those clips you played was his trademark. He actually taught science by asking questions all the time. He asked the kids why did this work, you know. Why does the water stay in the glass when we turn it upside down? Do you have any idea that the paper cardboard is at the glass? How about air pressure, what's - you know, he'd go through this whole list of questions and really teach kids science by the way scientists do it.

SIEGEL: He seemed to be such a good science teacher. One would assume that he had some kind of background in science, but I gather he didn't.

FLATOW: You know, you would. But actually he had a background in show business, and I think everything he knew he taught himself. He was a self-taught science maven, but it was his show business that allowed him to be very inviting instead of frightening to the kids on TV.

SIEGEL: He also had a background in the service during the Second World War.

FLATOW: That's right. He flew many, many bomber missions over Europe. So he just did about everything in his life. He was sort of a renaissance man.

SIEGEL: And the experiments actually worked when he did them on television. And I gather that this was a live show.

FLATOW: Yeah, it was. And actually, he did dozens of live shows every year and that - someone who's worked on television doing demonstrations, I can tell you, this is - he's playing, you know, this is without a net. He was doing live experiments and actually when they didn't work sometimes, he would explain why they didn't work. So that was all part of the fun.

SIEGEL: Did you ever meet him?

FLATOW: Yes. He actually came to my office with his wife, Norma, and they had an idea for a show called Mr. and Mrs. Wizard in the Kitchen. He had a tape, and we played the tape, and it went something like this.

Mrs. Wizard, Norma, would say, hi, Don. Today, we're going to make some soup. And what do you think of that? And Don would say, well, you know, Norma, we're not really making soup. We're making a colloidal suspension of proteins, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And I don't think it ever got off the ground.

SIEGEL: You know, listening to some of those clips from "Watch Mr. Wizard," the old TV show, the image of it was very dated obviously today. But the exchanges between the curious kid and the teacher using the Socratic method to impart principles of science, there's something pretty enduring about those exchanges.

FLATOW: I think, you know, he was a better science teacher than most science teachers because he was always asking those questions. And he was always encouraging the kids to ask questions. And he always used household items so it wasn't scary for the kids.

For example, instead of using a beaker he would use a jar. He would use a kitchen utensil, a pencil, a pipe, a garden hose - things like that. And in fact, when some of the people around him suggested using, you know, fancy laboratory experiments, he really told them to go find him something that, you know, was an every day item.

SIEGEL: Ira Flatow, host of NPR's TALK OF THE NATION: SCIENCE FRIDAY. Thanks for talking with us about Don Herbert.

FLATOW: You're welcome, Robert.

(Soundbite of TV program, "Watch Mr. Wizard")

Unidentified Boy#3: Mr. Wizard.

Mr. HERBERT: (As Mr. Wizard) Oh, hi. (unintelligible) in.

SIEGEL: You can see some clips from Don Herbert's old TV show, "Mr. Wizard," at our Web site, npr.org. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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