AFP

Washington

Pioneering US television journalist Barbara Walters signed off for the last time yesterday, bidding fans a fond farewell but leaving the door just slightly open for a possible comeback.

The ABC day-time talk show The View that she has co-hosted since its launch in 1997 dedicated its entire hour to Walters, with surprise guests including Hillary Clinton, Michael Douglas and Oprah Winfrey.

“Having had this amazing career, how can I just walk away and say goodbye?” said Walters, 84, who will remain a co-producer of the chatty upbeat programme.

“This way: from the bottom of my heart, to all of you ... thank you. But then, who knows what the future brings? Maybe instead of goodbye, I should say, ‘a bientot’, which in French means, ‘See you later’.”

In a career that spanned six decades, Walters created a much-copied template for high-profile political and celebrity interviews – and blazed a trail for women in an industry that is dominated by white middle-aged males.

Her departure was followed later in the day by a two-hour prime-time special charting her career, which began in 1961 when she joined NBC’s breakfast news and entertainment show Today.

Walters became the first female anchor of a US evening news programme when she joined ABC in 1976, and she has interviewed every US president and first lady since Richard Nixon.

Her long list of interviewees includes political leaders such as Boris Yeltsin, Margaret Thatcher, Indira Gandhi, the late Saddam Hussain and Vladimir Putin, and A-listers like the late Michael Jackson, Angelina Jolie and Harrison Ford.

“She did some important things that will go down in television history, including to help break into the old boys’ network of broadcast journalism in the United States,” media scholar Robert Thompson at Syracuse University in New York told AFP.

Former first lady and secretary of state Clinton was the first guest to appear on yesterday’s pre-recorded farewell show, where she strongly advised Walters to take some quality time off.

On her own future, the potential 2016 presidential hopeful quipped: “I am running – around the park.”

Douglas suggested Walters would make an excellent vice-president if Clinton wins the White House, while Winfrey brought the popular broadcaster to near tears by praising her as a source of inspiration.

The show also featured a reunion of all of Walters’ co-hosts on The View over the years, plus some jabs at Harry Reasoner, her co-anchor on ABC Evening News in the 1970s who barely concealed his contempt for working alongside her.

Reasoner died in 1991 at the age of 68.