Southampton Summer Resident Edward Ney Dies January 8 - 27 East

Southampton Summer Resident Edward Ney Dies January 8

author on Jan 13, 2014

Edward Noonan Ney, former Young & Rubicam chairman and chairman emeritus, as well as a former diplomat, died on January 8. He was 88 and a Southampton summer resident.

Mr. Ney served as Y&R’s chief executive officer and then chairman from 1970 to 1989, having joined the agency in 1951. He returned to Y&R in 1999 as chairman emeritus.

Mr. Ney was widely regarded as one of the leading advertising counselors and strategic marketers. In the 1970s, he was the first to understand that in a changing marketplace clients would benefit from a full range of marketing communications disciplines, according to Y&R. Mr. Ney began acquiring companies, pioneering integrated communications—what he coined The Whole Egg—and acquired the companies that became Young & Rubicam Group. The Whole Egg back then was a radical concept and transformed not only Y&R, but the entire industry, the company said.

Martin Sorrell, chairman and CEO of WPP, Y&R’s parent company, said Mr. Ney “understood, probably more than anybody else, both the power of agency brands and, at the same time, the paradoxical need to bring them together.... He understood it all and saw it sooner than most.”

After Y&R, Mr. Ney served as the U.S. Ambassador to Canada, where he played a key role in efforts to expand the U.S./Canada Free Trade Agreement to Mexico. He spent some time after at Burson-Marsteller, chairing their worldwide board of advisers. In 1995, he also became chairman of Marsteller Advertising, which was subsumed in Burson-Marsteller in 1979, when they merged. During his long career at Young & Rubicam, he continued to shape the firm’s diversified global communications framework.

U.S. News & World Report ranked Mr. Ney the Most Influential Person in Advertising throughout the majority of the 1970s into the early 1980s.

Mr. Ney served on the International Advisory Board of the Center for Strategic and International Studies and was a member of the Advertising Hall of Fame and an honorary chairman of the Advertising Council. He served as a trustee of the Paley Center for Media and as a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He received the Gold Medal (for Advertising) from the International Radio & Television Society in 1989.

A graduate and life trustee of Amherst College, Mr. Ney also was a trustee of both the Bush Presidential Library Foundation at Texas A&M and the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University. He held honorary degrees from Amherst College, Georgetown School of Business, Iona College and St. Lawrence University, and was a founding trustee of Hampshire College in 1970. He served in the United States Navy from 1943 to 1946 and then in the U.S. Navy Reserve from 1947 to 1950.

Former President George H. W. Bush, for whom Mr. Ney served as the U.S. Ambassador to Canada from 1989 to 1992, said, “Barbara and I were saddened to learn of Ed Ney’s passing,” according to Y&R. “Ed was more than a good friend,” they quoted the former president as saying. “He was a very talented man who set aside his successful career in private life to serve so ably as our nation’s representative with our ally to the north, Canada, during a fruitful time in that vital bilateral relationship. I will always be grateful for his selfless service, and Barbara joins me in sending our condolences to the entire Ney family.”

Mr. Ney is survived by his wife, Patricia Murray Wood. He had three children from a previous marriage, Nicholas Hayes Ney of California, Hilary St. Clair Ney of New York City and Michelle Kilduff of Vermont; as well as five grandchildren, Kristina, Andrew, Kimberly, Conor and Hunter, and two great-grandchildren.

You May Also Like:

Two Flee After Hampton Bays Crash, Evade Police Search

Two occupants of a car that fled from police then crashed into another vehicle near Slo Jack’s in Hampton Bays evaded an extensive police search and are still at large. Southampton Town Police say that one of their officers had witnessed a 2022 Honda Accord traveling at a high rate of speed in Hampton Bays on Friday afternoon and attempted to pull the vehicle over, but the driver refused to pull over and sped up. For safety reasons, the officer broke off his pursuit, as is standard police practice in instances where no immediate threat to the public is suspected. ... 3 May 2024 by Staff Writer

‘Technical Difficulties’ Close Drawbridge on Jessup Lane in Westhampton Beach

Due to unspecified “technical difficulties,” the Jessup Lane Bridge, a drawbridge in Westhampton Beach, may ... 2 May 2024 by Staff Writer

Dead Minke Whale Found in Bridgehampton

A badly decomposed female minke whale was found in the ocean surf in Bridgehampton early ... by Staff Writer

A Man on a Mission to Bring Medical Care to Ukraine | 27Speaks Podcast

 John Reilly, a physician assistant from Shelter Island, spent the first half of March ... by 27Speaks

The Bus Test

Social media was abuzz last week with a report: An unmarked bus was dropping off adult men in the parking lot of the Macy’s shopping plaza in Hampton Bays. Speculation was rampant, and it largely followed a national narrative about an “invasion” of immigrants ending up in American communities. In fact, there’s little information on what the bus (or buses — there likely were others) was doing. It might have been seasonal workers arriving for the season, but it could have been something innocuous, like a private bus trip returning home. Police were called, but as one town official pointed ... 1 May 2024 by Editorial Board

Terrible Optics

Westhampton Beach Village officials and Police Chief Steven McManus need a lesson in optics. The revelation last week that a body camera video recorded during the investigation of an off-duty Village Police officer who rolled his truck during a single-car accident in November 2021 was not released to the public for close to a year, despite numerous requests from The Press that went unanswered for seven months, sends the wrong signal about the village’s commitment to keeping the public informed. It was only after a request from an attorney on behalf of The Press that a copy of the video ... by Editorial Board

A Costly Hire

Permitting public employees to collect a six-figure pension while simultaneously collecting a six-figure salary is one of the reasons why New York is such a high-tax state. Though the Village of Southampton took it a step further: It wasn’t enough for the new village administrator to receive a $165,000 salary on top of a $120,000 New York Police Department pension — the Village Board just gave Administrator Anthony Carter a $50,000 pay bump, retroactive to when he started in November, in lieu of receiving village health insurance and other benefits. When a retiree already receiving taxpayer-funded health care goes back ... by Staff Writer

Rally for Increased Train Service Coming to Hampton Bays LIRR Station

Elected officials on the South Fork, Long Island Rail Road passengers, and leaders in education, ... by Christopher Walsh

Southampton Boys, Girls Relay Teams Are Picking Up Steam

Southampton could have its relay teams back. Historically, both the boys and girls track programs ... by Drew Budd

Search for Body Parts in Gilgo Beach Investigation Expanded to North Sea

The search for body parts related to an investigation into homicides allegedly committed by a ... by Christopher Walsh