Russ Banham
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Russ Banham (born September 20, 1954), an American writer and reporter formerly with The Journal of Commerce and later a freelance journalist writing for The Wall Street Journal, CFO, Forbes, The Economist, Euromoney, Financial Times, Treasury & Risk and several other business publications. Banham also is the author of 16 books, including The Ford Century, an international bestseller translated into 13 languages.
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[edit] Education and early life
He graduated from St. John’s University in New York, where he studied Speech and Theatre. He later earned a Master of Arts in Drama Theory and Criticism from the University of Montana. On a Javits teaching fellowship at the university, he also earned a Master of Fine Arts, while teaching classes in drama for three years.
[edit] Early Career
Banham early on had hoped to become a playwright or theatre director. Instead, he fell into acting after college, making his Broadway debut in The Merchant, which starred Zero Mostel as Shylock. Mostel died upstage right after the first public performance of the play in Philadelphia. Banham also appeared in several Off- and Off-off-Broadway plays, and co-starred in the ninth biggest movie of 1979, Meatballs, directed by Ivan Reitman and starring Bill Murray in his first film role. That year he was cast as Brad Hopkins in the short-lived television situation comedy, Joe’s World, opposite Christopher Knight from The Brady Bunch. The series ran for 12 episodes on NBC before it was cancelled.
With prospects as an actor quickly dimming, Banham tried his hand at producing plays. He produced the world premiere of Oliver Hailey’s Kith and Kin at the Dallas Theatre Center and later at the White Barn Theatre in Greenwich, Connecticut. He also produced the Off Broadway premiere of Hailey’s Red Rover, Red Rover, with Tony-award winners Phyllis Newman and Helen Gallagher, at the Park Royal Theatre. Both received mixed reviews and failed commercially.
At the same time, he began his career in business journalism, writing stories on spec for The Journal of Commerce. The daily newspaper, then owned by Knight-Ridder, asked him to join its staff in 1983 as a reporter and editor covering insurance and risk management. Banham left the paper in 1987 to pursue work as a freelance journalist. He quickly found a niche writing for numerous trade and business periodicals. Early stories covered insurance and risk, but he soon added finance, technology, global trade and investing to his reporting subjects.
[edit] Enron
Banham’s CFO magazine profile of Andrew Fastow, one year before the Enron debacle came to light, was cited by writer Kurt Eichenwald in his book, Conspiracy of Fools. “Banham … captured everything pretty well: asset securitization, special-purpose entities, the reduction of balance-sheet debt,” Eichenwald wrote.
[edit] U.S. Embassy
Banham was submitted by The Journal of Commerce for the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Journalism. The nomination recognized his series of investigative stories on the bugged U.S. Embassy in Moscow. His articles disputed the presence of the eavesdropping devices, which he contended were covered financially by a secret insurance policy underwritten by American International Group, Inc., and reinsured by Ingosstrakh, the Russian state insurer. In effect, the Soviet Union would be on the hook financially for the damage to the building. The articles were cited in the Congressional Review. The Cold War ended before the alleged eavesdropping devices were ever ascertained.
[edit] Corporate Histories
In 1996 Banham was approached to write his first book, a 100-year history of USF&G, a major national insurance company. He followed it up with similar chronicles of Coors Brewing Company, Conoco, Dover Corporation and Appleton Paper Company, among others. The Coors book, Rocky Mountain Legend, reached number four on the Denver Post’s regional bestseller list.
Banham also wrote three authorized biographies: on discount brokerage magnate Ernest Jacob Olde, Houston developer Kenneth Schnitzer, and Gary Milgard, founder of Milgard Manufacturing, the third largest producer of windows in the U.S.
[edit] The Ford Century
In 2003, Banham was asked to write the official 100-year history of Ford Motor Company. He obtained vital access to Ford family artifacts and company archives, culminating in The Ford Century. The book received favorable reviews in the New York Times and other publications. "A tale that churns through every decade of the 20th century makes for a rich pictorial bath, all the more so since somebody got at Ford's inner archives and has made imaginative use of them." New York Times Book Review - Bruce McCall (12/08/2002). More than 750,000 copies of the book are in print around the world.
Banham’s newest book, Wanderlust, profiles his journeys on the iconic travel trailer to meet other so-called Airstreamers at rallies and conventions, the design impact of the Silver Bullet and its historical relevance.
He recently was commissioned by George Mason University to write a post-World War II history of Fairfax County, Virginia. The book, America’s County, is slated for publication in 2008.
[edit] Theatre
Banham has kept his hand in the professional theatre as a director in Seattle, his home base. He is a veteran director in the city’s professional theatre community, directing Othello, Macbeth and Twelfth Night for Seattle Shakespeare Company, Merchant of Venice for Wooden O Theatre, and two of his own adaptations, Ethan Frome and Romance with Double Bass (based on four short stories by Anton Chekhov) for Book-It Repertory Theatre, among others. At present, he is writing a theatrical adaptation of Tom Robbins’ Even Cowgirls Get the Blues for Book-It Rep, slated to open in fall 2008.
[edit] External Links
Mark Waldstein, “He Said, She Said,” Encore magazine. http://www.encoremediagroup.com/arts_coalition/IE_Mar_04.pdf
Banham, “Party of Three,” CFO magazine, May 8, 2006, http://www.cfo.com/printable/article.cfm/6874879/c_6880743?f=options