Peter Roussel
Peter Roussel | |
---|---|
1982 | |
Personal details | |
Alma mater | University of Houston |
Peter Roussel (born c. 1941 in Texas),[1] has had a career as an American press secretary and public relations executive.
Education
Roussel attended St. John's School in Houston, Texas. He then attended the University of Houston, graduating in 1965.[2] Both his parents were journalists, his late father, Hubert Roussel, serving as drama, music and film critic for The Houston Post, 1933-66. During that time he reviewed and interviewed performing arts icons, Arthur Rubenstein, Marian Anderson, Van Cliburn, Judy Garland, Clark Gable, members of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and others. Roussel's late mother, Dewey Roussel, was also a newspaper reporter and an actress. She helped organize the Houston Stage Canteen during World War II. His older brother, Hubert Roussel, Jr., enlisted in the Army Air Corps during World War II and as a member of a B-29 crew was lost on a mission in the Pacific on December 13, 1944 at age 20. Dewey Roussel's story about her eldest son, Message of the White Dove, appeared in the September 1985 issue of Reader's Digest. Peter Roussel also has an older sister, Stephanie, who has been a ballerina and actress.
Career with Federal Government and national figures
Peter Roussel began his career with the Federal Government in 1969 when he was asked to be press secretary to then U.S. Congressman George H. W. Bush. When Bush subsequently served as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (1971–1973) and Chairman of the Republican National Committee (1973–1974), Roussel continued to serve as Bush's press secretary.
Roussel went on to serve two tours of duty in the White House, as Staff Assistant to President Ford (1974–1976), then as Special Assistant and Deputy Press Secretary to President Reagan (1981–1987).
In 1976 Roussel became a special assistant to President Ford's national campaign director, James A. Baker III. After that he served as communications director for Baker's 1978 campaign for Attorney General of Texas.
Roussel's career has also been in public relations, including as executive vice president of Neumann Roussel Public Relations, 1996-2003. From 2004-2008 he was a columnist for Intown magazine, writing a monthly column and serving as editor, June 2005-April 2008.
Post-government career
Roussel is now a public speaker, author and television-radio commentator (abc13, KTRK-TV) based in Houston, Texas. In 2009 he was appointed to the Warner Chair of Journalism in Sam Houston State University's Department of Mass Communication, where he teaches courses on public relations and press-presidency interactions.[3]
He is the author of the White House-based novel, Ruffled Flourishes, published by Bright Sky Press. The novel is a satiric look at the daily travails of reporters covering the White House, attempting to squeeze accurate information from presidential representatives.[4] The late Jack Valenti, former president of the Motion Picture Association, said this about the book: "It's a superior piece of work, reeking of authenticity."[5]
In 1983 Roussel was named Distinguished Alumnus at the University of Houston.
In 1986 Roussel received the first Distinguished Communications Alumnus Award presented by the University of Houston.
References
- ↑ http://blogs.chron.com/txpotomac/2008/06/where_are_they_now_peter_rouss_2.html Texas on the Potomac (where are they now) site, accessed 18 October 2009
- ↑ Texas . .
- ↑ http://keynotespeakers.com Keynote Speakers website, accessed 18 October 2009
- ↑ http://www.brightskypress.com/infostore/ca.cart.asp?sAction Bright Sky Press website, accessed 18 October 2009
- ↑ Texas . .
External links
- Roussel, Peter and David Goldstein. Peter Roussel Oral History, Houston Oral History Project, November 29, 2009.