Morley Safer
”60 Minutes” journalist Morley Safer, pictured in 2012, died Thursday at age 84. Reuters/Stephen Chernin

Television journalist Morley Safer, who made his reputation as a Vietnam War correspondent for CBS and then became a mainstay on the network’s “60 Minutes” show for 46 years, has died at age 84, a few days after his retirement, the network announced Thursday.

He retired from CBS last week, with “60 Minutes” paying tribute to him with a look back at his work Sunday.

Safer, who spent 61 years in television news, brought an authoritative, urbane style to “60 Minutes,” CBS’ groundbreaking news program, and his work was a mix of hard and soft news. The part-time painter frequently reported on art and his disdain for contemporary works often set the art world atwitter.

Although he interviewed many artists, actors and musicians, Safer never cared much for celebrities, saying, “I really don’t care what movie stars have to say about life.” Still, he listed country singer Dolly Parton among his favorite interview subjects.

“If I could interview Dolly every week, I would,” Safer told the New York Post in 2009.

Safer also delivered deep investigative pieces on injustice, corporate malfeasance and trade in human body parts, among a raft of other subjects.

“Some people, you have to grit your teeth in order to stay in the same room as them but you get on and ask the questions you assume most of the people watching want to ask,” he once said.

The now-deceased Don Hewitt, the creator of “60 Minutes,” frequently cited a Safer story as one of the show’s greatest moments. In that award-winning 1983 story, Safer reported on new evidence that freed an innocent man who had been sentenced to life in prison for armed robbery in Texas.

Safer’s long tenure at “60 Minutes” followed years of war reporting for CBS News, particularly from Vietnam. In a 1966 report, he showed shocking images of U.S. Marines burning the village of Cam Ne that infuriated President Lyndon B. Johnson so much that he called CBS executives to complain. That report was widely seen as one of the first to turn public opinion against the Vietnam War.

A Canadian, Safer joined CBS News in London in 1964 and opened the network’s Saigon bureau. He later returned to London to be bureau chief.

“After four or five different wars, I grew weary of that work, partly because in an open war, open to coverage, as Vietnam was, it’s not that difficult, really,” he said.

He joined “60 Minutes” in December 1970 in the show’s third season.

Safer told a CNN interviewer that he and prickly colleague Mike Wallace, who died in April 2012, were sometimes “like scorpions in a bottle” before their relationship mellowed.

In 1968, Safer married anthropology student Jane Fearer, shortly after surviving an attack by Biafran soldiers who had killed a photographer friend and made him aware of his own mortality. The couple had a daughter, Sarah.