Ruth Seymour

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Ruth Seymour
Ruth Seymour in her early days at KCRW.png
Seymour in her early days at KCRW
Born
Ruth Epstein

(1935-02-17)February 17, 1935
New York City, U.S.
DiedDecember 22, 2023(2023-12-22) (aged 88)
Other namesRuth Hirschman
Alma mater City College of New York
OccupationRadio executive
Spouse
(m. 1954;div. 1973)
Children2

Ruth Seymour (née Epstein; February 17, 1935 – December 22, 2023) [1] was an American broadcasting executive known for her innovative work with public radio. [2] She has been described as a pioneer in public radio [3] and "a commanding presence in the public radio arena". [4]

Contents

Early years

Ruth Epstein was born at Sydenham Hospital in Harlem, New York City. [1] A secular Jew, [5] [4] she grew up across the street from the Bronx Zoo, along with her younger sister. [6] Her parents were both Polish immigrants; [1] her mother was a garment worker, while her father worked as a furrier. [6] The couple had met while attending The New School for Social Research in New York City. [1]

Epstein's parents were involved in Yiddish-speaking society, and were active in the Workmen's Circle. [1] They sent Epstein to Sholem Aleichem Folk School [7] to learn Yiddish literature and language as a supplement to her public schooling. [8] During her years at City College of New York [9] she studied Yiddish and Hebrew with Jewish linguist Max Weinreich. [1] [4]

Career

Seymour's first venture into radio came at KPFK in Los Angeles from 1961 to 1964. [10] She had moved to the city with her husband in 1961. [6] As that station's drama and literary critic, she produced award-winning series. [5] From 1971 to 1976, [10] she worked as program director there, and she did freelance work for the Pacifica Foundation while traveling in Europe. [5] She was fired in 1976, after the FBI raided the station in search of a tape KPFK had aired from Patty Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army, which the station manager refused to turn over. [6] [11] Seymour broadcast the raid live, as it occurred. [11]

Seymour joined the staff of KCRW at Santa Monica College in 1977 as a consultant and was named manager a few months later, in 1978. [12] She retired from there in February 2010 [13] after having helped the station "transcend its basement location to shape the culture in Los Angeles". [14] During her tenure, the station grew from being based in a playground at a middle school and having an old transmitter to covering much of southern California with its broadcasts. It also developed streaming services and podcasts. [13]

In 1979, two factors combined to enhance Seymour's efforts toward advancing KCRW's status. Soon after the station began using a new transmitter, National Public Radio launched Morning Edition . While the area's then-most-significant public radio station ran the two-hour program before 6 a.m., Seymour decided to run it three times each morning from 3 a.m. to 9 a.m. on KCRW. "That way nobody was going to have [the programs] when I didn't have them," she said. [5]

Seymour also brought other programs to KCRW, such as Le Show (hosted by Harry Shearer), Left, Right & Center, Morning Becomes Eclectic, The Politics of Culture, To the Point , and Which Way L.A.? (hosted by Warren Olney). [6] In 1996, KCRW became the first station other than Chicago's WBEZ to air This American Life, [6] and she pushed host Ira Glass to rename the show from its original name, Your Radio Playhouse. [1] She also supported programs that brought literature to the radio, including airing radio dramas adaptations of Babbitt and Ulysses . [12] She also created two popular volumes of the audio collection Jewish Short Stories from Eastern Europe and Beyond, in which well-known actors read works by Jewish authors. [12]

Seymour spearheaded fundraising efforts not only for KCRW, including a $1 million pledge drive in 1995, [5] but also for the network program Weekend All Things Considered in 1985 and for NPR in 1991. [15] She also was active in the effort to simplify podcasting of radio stations' programs. Without blanket licensing agreements, such as those that apply to over-the-air broadcasts and streaming of programs, a separate contract with each record label used in the podcast was required. [16]

In 2008, Seymour successfully lobbied for a municipal bond issue that would allow KCRW to build its own building. [6]

Hanukkah broadcast

In 1979, Seymour launched a program on KCRW that became a tradition, going strong a quarter-century later. Noting the lack of radio programming related to Hanukkah, she created and hosted Philosophers, Fiddlers and Fools, a program that included recordings of Yiddish folk music and songs from Yiddish music halls, a short story by a Yiddish author, and a memorial to the Holocaust. Initially surprised and disappointed because only two people called the station during the broadcast, Seymour thought that it was a failure—until it ended. Then calls kept the staff and their telephones busy for three hours. Thereafter, the show was broadcast annually, [4] with Seymour hosting until 2007. [6]

Personal life and death

Seymour married the poet Jack Hirschman in 1954, after meeting him at the City College of New York, and divorced him in 1973. [1] [17] They had two children. [6] The family traveled often, due to Hirschman's job as a professor at Dartmouth and UCLA. [1] Her son, David, died of lymphoma in 1982, at age 25. [1] Her daughter Celia Hirschman is a music business consultant and is the host of the "On the Beat" program on KCRW. [18] [19]

In 1993, she changed her surname to Seymour to honor her paternal grandfather, who had been a rabbi. [9] [17]

Seymour died at home in Santa Monica, California, on December 22, 2023, at age 88. [6]

Recognition

In 1997, she received Amnesty International's Media Spotlight Award. [11]

In 1999, the Workmen's Circle gave Seymour its Yiddishkayt Award for her "service to Yiddish language and culture." [8]

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References

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