What to Know Liz Smith was a famed gossip columnist who spent decades chronicling the highs and lows of New York's high society

Her gossip column ran six days a week in dozens of newspapers, including Newsday and the Daily News, and brought her nationwide fame

She was a fixture on WNBC's Live at Five for more than a decade and received an Emmy for her work in 1985

Liz Smith, the famed gossip columnist who chronicled the highs and lows of New York society for decades and had a second calling as one of the city's most successful charitable fundraisers, has died at the age of 94.

Smith, who was a fixture on WNBC's Live at Five for years, died at her home Sunday, NBC News confirmed.

She won an Emmy for her reporting on Live at Five in 1985 and her prolific gossip column was syndicated to nearly seventy newspapers and read by millions. The column, titled "Liz Smith," was one of the most widely read in the world for more than a quarter-century.

The column's success was due in part to Smith's own celebrity status, which gave her insider access. Known as "Dame of Dish," she helped usher in the era of celebrity journalism in print and television.

Her reporting on the divorce of Donald and Ivana Trump made front page news around the world and led to a deal with Newsday that made her the highest paid columnist in the country, according to her obituary.

Smith arrived in New York in 1949 with no job and $50 in her pocket. A friend helped her get work at Modern Screen magazine.

Smith ultimately wrote for nine New York newspapers and dozens of magazines, but it was a stint writing for Cosmopolitan that led to her break. While establishing herself as an authority on Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, Smith attracted the attention of the New York Daily News.

She landed her own column at the Daily News in the mid-1970s and her career took off. During a newspaper strike in 1979, she was asked to appear on WNBC's Live at Five, where she became a regular three nights a week for 11 years.

Smith succeeded with kindness and an aversion to cheap shots. Whether reporting on entertainers, politicians or power brokers, the "Dame of Dish" never bothered with unfounded rumors, sexual preferences or who's-sleeping-with-whom.

"When she escorts us into the private lives of popular culture's gods and monsters, it's with a spirit of wonder, not meanness," wrote Jane and Michael Stern in reviewing Smith's 2000 autobiography, "Natural Blonde," for the New York Times Book Review.

She eventually used her access and celebrity — by then she was a household name — to become a champion for literacy. Throughout her life she raised $37 million for Literacy Partners, helping 27,000 people learn to read.

Smith held a lighthearted opinion of her own legacy.

"We mustn't take ourselves too seriously in this world of gossip," she told The Associated Press in 1987. "When you look at it realistically, what I do is pretty insignificant.

"Still, I'm having a lot of fun."

A memorial service will be held to honor her this spring.

