Author and publisher Helen Gurley Brown passed away yesterday
after a brief illness. She was 90.
After a successful career as a copywriter, Brown came to
international prominence half a century ago with the release of her
book Sex & The Single Girl which, for better or for
worse, played a significant role in fomenting the sexual
revolution of the 1960s.
In 1965, Brown took over the reins of Cosmopolitan
magazine and would remain in that role for more than three decades
until she was unceremoniously ousted in 1997.
Brown was
derided equally by both conservatives and liberal
feminists. Case in point. Regarding Anita Hill’s accusations of
sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas during his confirmation
hearing to the Supreme Court twenty years ago she was asked if
there was sexual harassment at Cosmo. She said in
jest, “I certainly hope so. The problem is that we don’t have
enough men to go around for harassing.” At around the same time,
Brown also came to the defense former liberal Republican Senator
Bob Packwood after multiple accusations of sexual harrassment. She
remarked, “My darling, would you please remember that he was one of
the congressmen who supported legal abortion. He was one of us, so
we have to forgive him for being a jerk.” These remarks would in
part lead to her dismissal from Cosmo five years
later.
Yet what is interesting about the Packwood remarks is how
similar they were to remarks made at the end of the 1990s by Gloria
Steinem, a frequent critic of Brown. During the Monica Lewinsky
Scandal, Steinem wrote an op-ed
in The New York Times which became known as the “first
grope is free” defense. Yet Steinem was never ostracized for
her defense of Clinton as Brown was for her defense of Packwood and
Thomas. The only difference is Brown made the mistake of defending
Republicans and for that she was a bad girl.
But Helen Gurley Brown had a long life and it took her
everywhere.