Mayes, Bernard Duncan, 1929-

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1929-10-10

Biographical notes:

Bernard Mayes was born on October 10, 1929 in London, England. After graduating from Cambridge University with a BA (1952) and MA (1954) in classical language and history, he taught high school education before becoming ordained as a priest in the Church of England in 1958. He served as correspondent, British Broadscasting Corporation (1956-1971); announcer for stations KPFA-FM (1964) and KXKX-FM (1966); general manager for KQED-FM (1967-1973); executive vice president of KQED-TV (1973-1975); chair, National Public Radio Board of Directors (1970-1972); consultant, Corporation for Public Broadcasting Radio Advisory Service (1971-1980); correspondent, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Radio New Zealand and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (1971-1981).

From the description of Bernard Mayes Papers, 1912-2001 (bulk 1977-1986). (University of Maryland Libraries). WorldCat record id: 276860034

Bernard Mayes was born on October 10, 1929 in London, England. He served as correspondent, British Broadcasting Corporation (1956-1971), announcer for stations KPFA-FM (1964) and KXKX-FM (1966), general manager for KQED-FM (1967-1973), executive vice president of KQED-TV (1973-1975), chair, National Public Radio Board of Directors (1970-1972), consultant, Corporation for Public Broadcasting Radio Advisory Service (1971-1980), correspondent, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Radio New Zealand and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (1971-1981).

Bernard Duncan Mayes was born in London, England on October 10, 1929. After graduating from Cambridge University with a BA (1952) and MA (1954) in classical language and history, he taught high school education before becoming ordained as a priest in the Church of England in 1958.

Mayes' broadcasting career began in 1956 when he became a broadcast correspondent for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), a post he held until 1971. After working as an announcer for San Francisco stations KPFA-FM (1964) and KXKX-FM (1966), he became KQED-FM 's general manager in 1967 . From 1973 to 1975, Mayes served as executive vice president of KQED-TV. While working at KQED, Mayes was also one of the founding directors of National Public Radio (NPR), serving as chairman of the board of directors from 1970 to 1972 . During his tenure, he helped establish the organization and standards of NPR.

Mayes also did a significant amount of work for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) . There, he helped to develop the Radio Advisory Service in 1971, and served as senior consultant until 1980. The Radio Advisory Service was implemented to assist public radio and television stations nationwide struggling with funding or other various problems. Following the founding of the Service, Mayes became an advisor, consulting various stations around the country. Finally, from 1971 to 1981, he was a broadcast correspondent for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Radio New Zealand and the Canadian Broadcasting Company (CBC).

In 1984, Mayes returned to the academic realm as Chairman of the Department of Rhetoric and Communication Studies at the University of Virginia. During his time at the University of Virginia, Mayes developed the Media Studies Program and in 1991 was named dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. He was seen as a valuable asset to the University community and received two awards, the Harrison Award for mentoring and a special award from the University's secret '7' Society.

In addition to his radio, television, and academic accomplishments, Mayes has recorded various dramatizations of famous works, such as J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings and Homer's Odyssey . He received an award from the National Endowment for the Arts for his dramatization of Thomas Jefferson's life.

Mayes most recent endeavor was his 2001 memoir Escaping God's Closet which discussed his life as a homosexual priest with a chapter included on his work with NPR. His book was awarded with the Lambda Literary Award from the Lambda Literary Foundation in 2003.

From the guide to the Bernard Mayes Papers, 1912-2001, 1977-1986, (Mass Media and Culture)

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Subjects:

  • Public broadcasting
  • Public broadcasting

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Hawaii (as recorded)