KSAN 95 FM, San Francisco
Stephen Capen
Tuesday, September 30, 1980
Stephen Capen
at WAAB/Worcester
Stephen Capen
as Steve Kane at
WDRC/Hartford
"Mama, don't let your children grow up to be
deejays. Unless you want them to wake up one day realizing that
what they do for a living is sit in a padded room speaking into
a lead pipe."
— Stephen Capen
Stephen
Capen, a brilliant broadcaster and writer who piloted some of the
brightest and funniest morning shows ever heard in
these parts, died on September 12, 2005, after fighting lung cancer for
two years. He was 59 years old.
"Cape" was best known in the Bay Area as morning host at KSAN and
KFOG, but his voice was also heard on numerous other stations locally,
in one capacity or another, including
KFRC, KSFX/KGO-FM, KMEL, KRQR
and KDBK/KDBQ ("Double 99"), all in San Francisco, as well as at KTID in
San Rafael and KVON/KVYN in Napa.
In the mid-1990s, Capen created, produced and hosted the Futurist
Radio Hour on KUSF. He also appeared on the "Jive Radio" retrospective series, conceived
by Ben Fong-Torres and heard on KUSF, featuring various and sundry KSAN alumni.
Capen began his nearly forty years in radio at WCSB/Boston — the campus station at the
Cambridge School — in 1964. From there, he made stops at WFST/Caribou,
Me.; WBZA/Glens Falls, N.Y.; WAAB/Worcester and WHYN/Springfield, Mass.;
WDRC and WCCC/Hartford, Conn.; WBCN/Boston; WGLD and WDAI/Chicago; WNCR/Cleveland;
CJOM/Windsor, Ont.; KPRI and KGB/San Diego; back to Hartford at WHCN;
then WINZ/Miami; back to Boston at WCOZ, WCOP and WEEI; and New York,
where he worked at WPIX and WCBS-FM.
In 1980, it was on to KSAN, in its final year as San Francisco's legendary "Jive 95,"
followed by a news anchor gig at Top 40 KFRC. After making the rounds at
several other radio stations in the Bay Area, he returned to New York
for one final go-round,
working briefly at WXRK ("K-Rock") as the afternoon man shortly after
Howard Stern arrived at the station.
"I went to K-Rock in afternoon drive where I made the agreement with
Howard Stern that I'd take the audience from the waist up and he'd have
them from the waist down," Capen told Ed Brouder for the WDRC tribute
site, WDRCOBG.com.
"Eventually it got too political for them, meaning the Republicans at
Infinity, and we, meaning Hank Rosenfeld, my longtime producer, and I,
were history."
"My track record in radio and writing is the greatest argument
against career evolution ever waged," he told Brouder. "I went from
working behind the counter at a newsstand in San Francisco to the
biggest market in the country. I was promoted by at least two radio
stations as joining them imminently, and then never showed. I left San
Francisco radio to study Jungian psychology and ultimately landed in the
rural outskirts doing hog reports and working the Latino gang beat. I
was privileged to interview some of the finest and most original
authors, revolutionary thinkers, and talented performers in the world
but it was a bust freelancing at a few hundred dollars a pop. It was a
really hard dollar."
Paul "The Lobster" Wells, a Capen teammate at KSAN, called him "one
of the most inventive, creative wits to ever grace the airwaves."
Stephen Capen at KSAN
"Stephen Capen's ability to entertain by unleashing his personality
went beyond the capacity and boundaries of most in radio," Lobster
said. "A friend, who's only connection to Stephen was on the other
side of the radio, said this to me upon reading of his passing:
′Stephen Capen was responsible for my
missing many a first period class.′ The
fact that listeners felt compelled to stay tuned to his morning show
even after they reached their destinations is one of the ultimate
compliments Stephen can be paid for his wild audio antics."
"R.I.P. ′Step On Cake Pan,′
and thank you for showing me how to climb over the record library room
wall at KSAN that the DJs had been locked out of when we worked together
there in 1980."
After being diagnosed with cancer, Capen said, "The Grim Reaper decided he wanted to open talks with me, and chose a
lung tumor to convince," according to
the Jive95.com website. He had recently returned to his New England
roots, taking up residence in Scituate, Mass. His family was gathered at
his bedside when he passed away.
According to Hank Rosenfeld, Capen's ashes were to be
scattered at sea near Scituate Harbor by his family. "Sadly, Cape is
heading for that broadcast net wide as heaven — either there or
somewhere else," Rosenfeld said. A memorial service was also planned
in San Francisco for late September 2005.
The edited broadcast recording accompanying this exhibit dates
back nearly 25 years from the day Stephen Capen shuffled off this mortal
coil, and includes a KSAN newscast with Jack Popejoy, direct from "The
Stephen Capen Building." It begins with an amusing review of "What's
Happening" around the Bay Area, voiced by Dan Carlisle.
Special thanks to
Ed
Brouder of Man From Mars Productions for biographical
information and the photographs of Stephen Capen shown here.
Ed's interview with Stephen was
also essential to the
creation of this exhibit. The Bay Area Radio Museum gratefully
acknowledges the assistance of Norman Davis and
Jive95.com
for permission to present the broadcast recording featured
here.
THE BAY AREA RADIO MUSEUM IS A
CALIFORNIA NON-PROFIT CORPORATION
DEDICATED TO PRESERVING AND HONORING THE HISTORY OF
RADIO BROADCASTING IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA