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‘The Columnist’ focuses on Joseph Alsop
Joseph Alsop was perhaps the most influential political columnist in the country for many years, but his power gradually declined.
David Auburn’s 2012 “The Columnist,”presented by Dragon Theatre in its Bay Area premiere, chronicles that decline in a fascinating glimpse at recent American history.
While he was professionally well known, Joseph, called Joe, had a secret life that’s revealed to the audience in the opening scene, set in 1954. Joe (Randy Hurst) has just had an afternoon tryst in a Moscow hotel room with Andrei (Casey Robbins), who was working for the KGB — unknown to Joe at the time.
Before that decline, which came more than a decade later, the aristocratic Joe moved in the nation’s most powerful political circles. For example, President John F. Kennedy went to his house after his inauguration in 1961.
Joe, whose column was widely syndicated, admired JFK and ardently supported the war in Vietnam as a way to halt the spread of communism. He was so convinced that the U.S. was winning that war that he tried to get younger reporters like David Halberstam (Drew Reitz) removed from their Vietnam posts because they were reporting otherwise.
After JFK’s assassination in 1963, Joe continued to sup
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Ethel Kennedy, human rights advocate and widow of Senator Robert F. Kennedy, died on October 10, 2024, at the age of 96. She founded the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights shortly after her husband’s 1968 assassination and was known as a champion of social causes. Her dedication earned her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014.
Born the sixth of seven children in Chicago in 1928, Ethel grew up in a 31-room English country–style manor in Greenwich, Connecticut. Her father, coal magnate George Skakel, was a self-made millionaire, and her mother, Ann, was a secretary. Ethel married Robert F. Kennedy in 1950. The couple shared 11 children: Kathleen, Joseph II, Robert Jr., David, Courtney, Michael, Kerry, Christopher, Max, Douglas, and Rory. Six years after they wed, the two bought Hickory Hill, a stately white brick house in McLean, Virginia, from Robert’s brother John F. Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline Kennedy. The 13-bedroom home remained under Ethel’s ownership until 2009; her seasonal home at the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, where her large family congregated every summer, became her primary dwelling. She is survived by nine children, 34 grandchildren, and 24-great-grandchildren.
“She has had a great summer and transition into