Anne Mollegen Smith | |
---|---|
Born | Anne Rush Mollegen Meridian, Mississippi, U.S. |
Education | Smith College (BA) |
Occupation(s) | Magazine editor and writer |
Notable credit(s) | Editor-in-chief, Redbook |
Title | Former editor-in-chief Redbook , Working Woman , and McCall's . |
Spouse | David Fay Smith |
Children | 1 |
Family | Albert Mollegen (father) Ted Mollegen (brother) J. H. Rush (granduncle) Leslie Rush (first cousin once removed) Julian Rush (second cousin) Al and Fred Key (second cousins once removed) |
Anne Mollegen Smith is an American magazine editor, and writer. She was the first woman to serve as editor-in-chief of Redbook.
Anne Rush Mollegen was born in Meridian, Mississippi, [1] the youngest of two children of (Harriette) Ione Rush and Albert Theodore Mollegen, Sr. Her father was a religious scholar who wrote Christianity and Modern Man (Bobbs-Merrill, 1961), a book on Christian apologetics. [2] Prior to her marriage, Anne's mother edited a society column for The Meridian News. [3] Her grand-uncle J. H. Rush founded the first private hospital in Meridian.
As a small child, the family moved to Alexandria, Virginia. During her formative years, the family lived on the campus of the Virginia Theological Seminary, where her father was a professor. Her brother, Albert, Jr. (commonly known as Ted), attended the adjacent Episcopal High School, then an all-boys school. Anne attended the formerly all-girls St. Agnes School in Alexandria. [4]
She graduated from Smith College where she earned a B.A. degree in English literature. [4] [5]
Shortly after graduating from Smith College, she was hired as an assistant editor at Ladies' Home Journal . Within a few years, she landed at Redbook where she rose up through the ranks from associate editor to become the first woman to serve as editor-in-chief for the magazine in 1981. [1]
Smith served as editor-in-chief of Working Woman from 1984 to 1989. In December 1988, decades before MeToo, the magazine published what it claimed was the first scientific study of sexual harassment in the workplace. Of the 160 corporations that participated in the study, 90% reported complaints of unwanted sexual advances by men toward female employees. Over one third of these corporations had been sued by victims. "If companies don't deal with it better," Smith said at the time, "this is a financial time bomb for American business." [6]
The Working Woman sexual harassment survey would later be referenced during the hearings before the U.S. Congress on H.R. 1, known as the Civil Rights Act of 1991. As a result, this important study conducted with Freada Klein of Klein Associates (who drafted the executive report), is now part of the public record. [7]
Prior to her next editorial assignment, Smith was a past president of the Women's Media Society. [4]
In 1989, Smith was named editor-in-chief of McCall's . [4] [8] She served in that capacity for approximately four years.
After she left McCall's, she briefly served as executive editor and then editor-in-chief for Her New York. The latter debuted on October 1, 1993 as a penta-weekly newspaper (or simply a daily published Monday through Friday) aimed at women based in New York City. Her New York was founded by businessman Steven Hoffenberg shortly after he left the New York Post, despite his assets being frozen due to a pending civil fraud suit against him by the Securities and Exchange Commission. [9] Smith left Her New York after only a few weeks, and later openly criticized the paper's shift in editorial policy from articles targeted to sophisticated working women to pieces deemed more "hip," for an example, a feature on former porn star Annie Sprinkle. She also accused the publication of "misogyny." [10]
Other editorial assignments include stints at startup publications, NY city life (a lifestyle magazine) in 1997, [11] and Space.com Illustrated in 2000. [12]
Later, Smith served as editor-in-chief at the Art of Simple Living. She has written on a variety of topics including personal finance, career planning, and country music. She also worked as a consultant for several top corporations including Target. [13]
She co-founded and writes for the blog, Brooklyn Artisan. [13] Additionally, Smith is a poet. [4]
Anita Faye Hill is an American lawyer, educator and author. She is a professor of social policy, law, and women's studies at Brandeis University and a faculty member of the university's Heller School for Social Policy and Management. She became a national figure in 1991 when she accused U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, her supervisor at the United States Department of Education and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, of sexual harassment.
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Terry Southern and I wrote Candy for the money. Olympia Press, $500 flat. He was in Switzerland, I was in Paris. We did it in letters. But when it got to be a big deal in the States, everybody was taking it seriously. Do you remember what kind of shit people were saying? One guy wrote a review about how Candy was a satire on Candide. So right away I went back and reread Voltaire to see if he was right. That's what happens to you. It's as if you vomit in the gutter and everybody starts saying it's the greatest new art form, so you go back to see it, and, by God, you have to agree.
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Albert Theodore Mollegen, Sr. was a widely-known apologist for classical Christianity and a proponent of evangelical liberalism.
Dr. Mollegen was a widely-known apologist for classical Christianity to modern intellectuals and had lectured widely on campuses.
Thursday morning in the parlors of the Great Southern Hotel, Mrs. Elizabeth Gully Hall complimented her guest, Miss Elizabeth Smith, of Tuscaloosa, with a bridge party.
A native of Meridian, Miss., she graduated from the St. Agnes School in Alexandria, Va., and received a B.A. in English literature from Smith College. She is a past president of the Women's Media Society and has written articles and poetry.
Anne Mollegen Smith, the former editor of McCall's, Working Woman and Redbook magazines, has signed up last week to be executive editor.
The change drew criticism from some of those who had joined up with Mr. Hoffenberg. "If you look closely at what's in there currently, that's misogyny," said Anne Mollegen Smith, a former editor.
Anne Mollegen Smith, who was a top editor at Redbook and McCall's, became executive editor; Jack Berkowitz, president of The Nation, is a consultant to the venture; Kenneth Fadner, who worked at New York and Adweek, became the chief investor and publisher.
Anne Mollegen Smith has been tapped for editor.
Anne Mollegen Smith has more than 35 years of journalism experience, as both a reporter and editor.