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Dorothy Thompson (9 July 1893, Lancaster,
New York – January 30, 1961, Portugal) was an American journalist, who was
noted by Time magazine in 1939 as one of the two most
influential women in America, the other being Eleanor
Roosevelt.[1]
She is notable as the first American journalist to be expelled from Nazi Germany (in 1934)[1], and as the inspiration for Katharine Hepburn's character "Tess Harding" in the film Woman of the Year (1942).
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Dorothy Thompson's father was an English-born Methodist preacher. Her mother died when Dorothy was quite young, and when her father remarried, Dorothy went to live with an aunt in Chicago. She attended Syracuse University where she studied politics and economics, and shortly afterwards became involved in women's suffrage. On a trip to Europe shortly after the end of World War I, she met a group of Zionists; her first journalism assignment was to report on their meetings for the International News Service.[2]
Thompson focused her attention on Central Europe and became fluent in German and various dialects. She was appointed Vienna correspondent for the Philadelphia Public Ledger and shortly thereafter (1925) was named Chief of the Central European Service for the Ledger. She resigned in 1927 to take a break, but returned to Germany in 1931 where she interviewed Adolf Hitler, a conversation she later expanded into the book I Saw Hitler.
Both the book and her articles were considered offensive by the German government (though William Shirer, writing the day after Thompson's expulsion from Germany, believed that she had "badly underestimated" Hitler) and in August of 1934, Thompson was expelled from Nazi Germany by Ernst Hanfstaengl.
According to Bennett Cerf in Try and Stop Me (1944), she socked a woman who made pro-Nazi remarks in her presence — after asking her to step outside. She also attended the Bund rally at Madison Square Garden, where she showed her disgust by giving the participants the Bronx cheer.
In 1938, Dorothy Thompson championed the cause of a Polish-German Jew, Herschel Grynszpan, whose assassination in Paris of a minor German diplomat, Ernst vom Rath, had been used as propaganda by the Nazis to trigger the events of Kristallnacht in Germany. Thompson's broadcast on NBC radio was heard by millions of listeners, and led to an outpouring of sympathy for the young assassin. Under the banner of the Journalists' Defense Fund, over $40,000 USD was collected, enabling famed European lawyer Vincent de Moro-Giafferi to take up Grynszpan's case. The assassination inspired the composer Michael Tippett to write his oratorio A Child of Our Time as a plea for peace, and as a protest against the persecution of the Jewish people in Nazi Germany. His use of Negro spirituals to allude to the subjugation of the Jews is particularly innovative, and arguably deeply haunting.
As an American of German descent, Thompson felt it incumbent upon her to organize other German-Americans to speak out against Nazism, and counter the publicity given the pro-Nazi German-American Bund[1]. In the fall of 1942, she approached the World Jewish Congress, which agreed to pay for such a statement, and in the last week of December, 1942, the "Christmas Declaration by men and women of German ancestry" was printed appeared in the New York Times and nine other major American daily newspapers, signed by fifty prominent German-Americans, the most famous being Babe Ruth.[1]
After World War II, Thompson turned her attention to the friction between the newly-formed state of Israel and the surrounding Arab nations. She wrote an article in Commentary cautioning American Jews about Zionism as it would lead to dual loyalty. The Jewish Oscar Handlin rebutted her in the same issue. Later, she became very critical of the newly created state of Israel.
Thompson wrote a monthly article for the Ladies' Home Journal for twenty-four years (1937-1961); its topics were far removed from war and politics, focusing on gardening, children, art, and other domestic and women's-interest topics.[2]
Thompson was married three times. Her first husband, in 1921, was Hungarian Josef Bard. Her second, to author Sinclair Lewis in 1928, produced a son, actor Michael Lewis. She divorced Lewis in 1940. In 1943 she married her third and last husband, Czechosolvakian artist Maxim Kopf.[2]
Dorothy Thompson (July 9, 1893 – January 30, 1961) was an American journalist.
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