About Howard Reich
Howard was born in Chicago and at age 10 moved with his family to Skokie, a northern suburb that was a nexus of Holocaust survivors, like his parents. At age 16, Howard happened on the film “An American in Paris” and instantly became obsessed with music. By 18 he was a piano performance major at Northwestern, and at 22 he began freelancing articles on music for the Chicago Daily News. The next year he started contributing arts coverage to the Chicago Tribune, where he was hired full time in 1983 and spent his entire newspaper career. Howard’s stories took him to London, Paris, Warsaw, Vienna, Moscow, Munich, Prague, Havana, Panama and other locales, as well as deep into one of the most culturally vibrant cities in the world: Chicago. After 30 years of serving as the Tribune’s jazz critic, Howard also was appointed the newspaper’s classical and opera critic. He retired from the newspaper in 2021, continues writing for the stage and page, and lives in a Chicago suburb with Pam Becker, his wife, a retired Tribune editor.
Awards & Honors
Howard has received two honorary doctorate degrees; an Emmy Award; a Public Advocacy Award from the International Society for Traumatic Studies; two Deems Taylor Awards from ASCAP; the Bravo Award from Dominican University; an Alumni Merit Award from Northwestern University’s Alumni Association; an Anne Keegan Award and eight Peter Lisagor Awards from the Society for Professional Journalists; four Jones-Beck Awards from the Chicago Tribune; the Chicago Journalist of the Year Award and three Sarah Brown Boyden Awards from the Chicago Journalists Association; and an Award of Excellence from the Chicago Association of Black Journalists, among others.