The Whole of Baltimore Will Miss Bill Whitman who played over the years all over town. See details below from the Baltimore Sun-
William Moore Whitman, 51, PBS technician, singer Originally published July 10, 2003
William Moore Whitman, a senior technician with Public Broadcasting Service and a singer who was an enthusiastic collector of Irish music, died of cancer Monday at Gilchrist Center for Hospice Care. The Fells Point resident was 51.
Born and raised in Akron, Ohio, Mr. Whitman earned his bachelor's degree in television and broadcasting in 1974 from Kent State University.
He moved to Washington and for a number of years owned The Strip Joint, an antiques restoration business. He did voice-overs for commercials before taking a job with PBS in Alexandria, Va., in 1985. As a senior associate, his duties included screening new shows for technical problems before they were aired.
A baritone, Mr. Whitman was a former member of two singing groups, the Shamrock Aces and the Bog Wanderers. Since 1985, he had performed with his wife, the former Denise Bartenfelder, and C.B. Heinemann with Irish Edge. The trio regularly performed locally at Cat's Eye and J. Patrick's.
Mr. Whitman also played the Irish flute, the bodhran and the tin whistle. He also had an extensive collection of Irish sheet music and 78-rpm recordings.
"He collected Irish songs that were performed in music halls and those written by Tin Pan Alley songwriters. He was always going to antique shops and yard sales looking for music and had had tons of it," Mrs. Whitman said.
Mr. Whitman was a member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and the Screen Actors Guild.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at Zion Lutheran Church, 400 E. Lexington St.
In addition to his wife of 15 years, survivors include a daughter, Katie M. Whitman of Fells Point; and his mother, Mary Patricia Moore Whitman; a brother, John A. Whitman; and two sisters, Ann Kerschner and Mary Schumacher, all of Akron.