H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-Ohio@h-net.msu.edu (January, 2000)
Marilyn S. Greenwald. A Woman of the Times. Athens, Ohio: Ohio
University Press, 1999. xxiv + 220 pp. Forewords, illustrations,
notes, and index. $26.95 (cloth), ISBN 0-8214-1265-5.
Reviewed for H-Ohio by Marilyn Howard ,
Departments of Social and Behavioral Sciences and Humanities,
Columbus State Community College, Columbus, Ohio
Just a Little Girl From Ohio
Readers will like A Woman of the Times for its sympathetic yet thorough
picture of Charlotte Curtis, former reporter for the long defunct
Columbus Citizen paper, and its behind-the-scenes peek at one woman's
rise out of the ghetto of the women's pages to one of the most coveted
spots in journalism: the masthead of on the nation's most respected
newspapers.
When former Columbusite Charlotte Curtis joined the venerable New York
Times in 1961 to write for the paper's Food, Fashion, Family and
Furnishings section -- often called the Four F's -- it was a bastion of
maleness and whiteness. By the time she left the Times in 1986 due to
ill health, she had been named the first female editor and was the first
woman to have her name appear on the masthead of the crusty old paper.
How did this woman who often referred to herself as "a little girl from
Ohio," (p. xvii) survive and thrive at a time when women had so few
opportunities? Greenwald's fast paced biography uncovers a woman who,
despite her petite size, impeccable three-strands-of-pearls grooming, and
privileged upbringing, possessed a will of iron and a steely determination
to succeed. Her inability to see herself as a victim because she was a
woman generally stood her in good stead. Greenwald repeatedly reminds us
that Curtis was raised during a time in which women did not compete openly
with men, and so she taught herself to join them and ultimately beat them
at their own game.
Curtis was born in 1928. Her mother was an ardent suffragette and in
1920, took the tests to join the Foreign Service, the first woman to do
so. Her father was an internationally known professor and researcher, who
eventually became the chairman of the department of research surgery at
Ohio State University. Curtis's upbringing was somewhat contradictory.
She and her sister attended Columbus School for Girls, which while
academically rigorous, also trained its students to marry well -- which
she did, right out of college. Yet within the family, Charlotte and her
sister Mary were expected to argue logically, think critically, engage in
sports and outdoor activities, and excel. Charlotte also graduated from
Vassar, where she had a passing acquaintance with the young Jacqueline
Bouvier, about whom she later wrote a book that was thought by her editors
to be so caustic it had to be extensively revised before it was published.
During her first summer vacation from Vassar, Curtis applied for and got a
$40-a-week job on the society and women's pages of the Columbus Citizen,
one of three daily papers in Columbus. From then on she was hooked.
While she longed to report hard news, there was already a woman on the
news desk, so Curtis took the society and women's beat and made it her
own. Reporters at the Columbus Citizen had a great deal of
independence, and her stories reflected this. They were varied and full
of intricate detail, puns and alliteration. And while the men at the
newspaper teased her unmercifully about what they considered her
hoity-toity backgroun -- they called her Vassar (p. 35) -- she loved it.
Her affinity for the reporter's life helped contribute to her divorce in
1953. Like many well-bred women of her generation, Curtis had married
early and unsuitably, and the divorce scandalized her family and the
community in which she lived. But it freed Curtis of the straitjacket
that women of her generation often found themselves in, and allowed her to
devote herself to her first love, reporting.
After her divorce, Curtis threw herself into her work. She became active
in the journalists' union, the Newspaper Guild, and later became an
officer. Curtis also traveled to Paris and Russia at her own expense and
sent stories back to Columbus. It was during this time she honed what was
to become her life long style: intricate detail, irreverent asides, and
the use of direct quotes which often made her subjects look very foolish.
She also skewered the rich and famous. Two of her stories from the
presidential campaign of 1960 portrayed Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy and
Patricia Nixon in unusually unflattering ways, branding the former as a
spoiled rich woman and the latter as a seething cauldron of resentment at
the indignities of political life.
Indeed Curtis was practicing what was then a new style of reporting known
as the new journalism,
". . . a brand of analytical journalism [that]
stressed details about the subject, his or her personal characteristics
and the surroundings." (p. 67). When Curtis moved to the Times, she took
this style with her, and shook up the staid women's pages. Heretofore,
the Four F's was a backwater of the Times, a place that Curtis began
planning to escape as soon as she was hired. Instead, her unusual style
of writing--and a timely friendship with Clifton Daniel, an influential
assistant managing editor-set the Four F's on its ear. Curtis approached
her job as a society writer as an exercise in sociology, approaching each
story as an examination to be aced. As such, she studied her subjects and
their surroundings assiduously, turning her columns into history lessons
as much as society reporting. By the end of her first year at the
Times, she was hailed as "the Boswell of America's social scene from
coast-to-coast with her byline gems." (p. 81) She had also developed a
coterie of influential and devoted friends, including Iphigene Ochs
Sulzberger, mother of "Punch" Sulzberger, the Times' publisher.
One group of people who did not like Curtis, however, were the women who
sued the Times for sex discrimination. In 1974, after four years of
attempting to resolve the discrimination issue in house, seven women filed
a class-action suit against the Times. Charlotte Curtis and
architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable were not among the plaintiffs. Two
decades later, many of the women were still angry at Curtis, and at least
one spoke of her as a traitor. As one of two very powerful women at the
Times, it was thought that she could have done more for the 550 female
employees there. To this day, Curtis's friends defend her lack of a
substantial role in the lawsuit, pointing out that as a member of
management, she was not eligible to join the plaintiffs. Moreover, even
though early in her career she had been very supportive of workers'
rights, openly supporting the women in their lawsuit was not Curtis's
style; she genuinely disliked confrontation, and preferred to work behind
the scenes. Finally, her lack of assistance was tied to her own confusion
and ambivalence about feminism and the so-called women's liberation
movement. On the one hand, Curtis was a strong believer in equal
opportunity and equal pay for equal work; on the other, the inability of
many of the movement's spokeswomen to clearly and logically define their
mission irritated her, and she loathed the attention-getting tactics of
the radical fringe of the movement.
Greenwald's story of Charlotte Curtis is the story of America in the
second half of the twentieth century: the 1950s twin goals of fitting in
and belonging, the incredible turmoil of the 1960s -- Curtis covered
Robert F. Kennedy's funeral train and the famous Leonard Bernsteins' party
for the Black Panthers -- the third wave of feminism in the 1970s, and the
institutional greed of the 1980s. Through it all we see Curtis in a
series of firsts and onlies. Yet despite her talent, popularity, and
friendships among influential people at the Times, she was treated poorly
as management changed and she aged. Stripped of her title as op-ed editor
in 1982, she was made a weekly columnist in the paper's news section and
again forced to report to Abe Rosenthal, her old enemy. Her lifelong goal
of becoming a reporter came too late in her career, an irony surely not
lost on the astute Curtis. She never regained her old edge, and
floundered in her new role. In retrospect, it seems almost merciful that
she became too ill to continue.
While Curtis never thought of herself as a feminist, Greenwald helps us to
see her in that role. Clearly she paved the way for others, among them
Anna Quindlen, the first female deputy editor at the Times, and Maureen
Dowd, Times op-ed columnist and Pulitzer Prize winner, noted for her
writing style which is very much like that of the young Curtis. Yet
Greenwald concludes that Curtis's legacy is not that of a feminist, but a
journalistic pioneer. Ultimately, her hairsplitting on this issue may not
matter. Just ask Quindlen or Dowd.
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