Journalism Shortly after graduating from Johns Hopkins in 1947, Baker took a job at
The Evening Sun, a paper oriented towards blue collar / working-class readers with the largest circulation in town. Baker started out on the night police beat. Baker described in his first memoirs learning his way around and working his way up experiencing the journalism trade among many legendary old-timers. He soon improved enough to be sent overseas to Britain as
The Sun London
correspondent in 1952.
Writer Baker wrote or edited seventeen books. Baker's first Pulitzer Prize was awarded to him for distinguished commentary for his Observer columns (1979) and the second one was for his autobiography,
Growing Up (1982); he is one of only six people to have been awarded a Pulitzer Prize for both Arts & Letters (for his autobiography) and Journalism (for his column). He wrote a sequel to his autobiography in 1989, called
The Good Times. His other works include
An American in Washington (1961),
No Cause for Panic (1964), ''Poor Russell's Almanac
(1972), Looking Back: Heroes, Rascals, and Other Icons of the American Imagination
(2002), and various anthologies of his columns. He edited the anthologies The Norton Book of Light Verse
(1986) and Russell Baker's Book of American Humor'' (1993). Baker wrote the libretto for the 1979 musical play
Home Again, Home Again, starring
Ronny Cox, with music by
Cy Coleman, lyrics by Barbara Fried, choreography by
Onna White, and direction by
Gene Saks. After an unsuccessful tryout at the
American Shakespeare Theatre in
Stratford, Connecticut, the show closed in
Toronto and never made it to
Broadway. "That was a great experience," Baker said in a 1994 interview with the
Hartford Courant. "Truly dreadful, but fun. I was sorry [the show] folded because I was having such a good time. But once is enough."
Television host and narrator Baker replaced
Alistair Cooke as the regular host and commentator of the
PBS long-running drama television series
Masterpiece Theatre, beginning with Season 22 (1992–93) and continuing for over a decade through Season 33 (2003–04). In 1995, he narrated the
Ric Burns documentary
The Way West about American western expansion for
The American Experience, a long-running documentary series then in its ninth season on
PBS. ==Personal life==