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Judy Bachrach

31 articles 2005–2017

Fascists in Love

Judy Bachrach · April 18, 2017

On Christmas Day 1937, a famous national leader, then 54 years old, wrote his mistress the following billet-doux:

Fascists in Love

Judy Bachrach · April 7, 2017

On Christmas Day 1937, a famous national leader, then 54 years old, wrote his mistress the following billet-doux:

Just How Delightful Were the Mitford Sisters?

Judy Bachrach · January 12, 2017

All right, so Diana had Britain’s Fascist-in-Chief in tow, smouldering at her across the dinner table and chatting in baby talk down the telephone. But Hitler: do admit. That was something more. The man with the real power, the one who had putsched his way to the top and had the whole of Germany…

The Class Act

Judy Bachrach · January 6, 2017

All right, so Diana had Britain’s Fascist-in-Chief in tow, smouldering at her across the dinner table and chatting in baby talk down the telephone. But Hitler: do admit. That was something more. The man with the real power, the one who had putsched his way to the top and had the whole of Germany…

What Rinka Wrought

Judy Bachrach · November 18, 2016

In October 1975, on a lonely stretch of Exmoor, an incompetent hired hitman pointed a 1910 Mauser at a voluble, unbalanced British homosexual named Norman Scott, at which point the gun jammed several times. The only casualty of that strange evening: Scott’s dog, a famously pleasant Great Dane named…

Their Children’s Hour

Judy Bachrach · October 23, 2014

I don’t like to make too much of all the celebrity heirs who, in an extremely down media market, somehow keep on snagging major journalism gigs. It makes me sound bitter and envious and uncharitable, all of which I sort of am. But how can anyone help it? All the so-called smart people who run the…

Perchance to Dream

Judy Bachrach · July 28, 2014

It’s hard to know what to make of Lincoln Dreamt He Died. On reading the title, my first irreverent thought was: Hey, safe bet. My second: Contrary to popular myth-ology, many of us dream of our own deaths—and guess what? We’re prophetic! Then I studied the subtitle and worried some more. Was this…

The Vulgar Games

Judy Bachrach · November 11, 2013

The tragedy of Paula Deen, I believe, is not her heart-rending choice of pink liquid cosmetics on the occasion of her famously damp sua culpa (my term for blaming current shortcomings on one’s social origins). Nor is it her provocative defense against accusations of racism: “I is what I is” plays…

Undercover Novelist

Judy Bachrach · October 7, 2013

"Valerie Plame’s career as a CIA operative was cut short when her cover was blown by George W. Bush’s White House,” reads the blurb of Plame’s latest imaginative stab. “Now, after dedicating herself to protecting the nation from its enemies, Plame turns to fiction .  .  .”

The Women Who Wed

Judy Bachrach · January 21, 2013

I’m burning with envy. Here I’ve been plugging away of late in places like Oklahoma City and Scottsdale. Meanwhile, both Susan Mary Alsop and Kati Marton, heroines of two ostensibly different books, had a much better idea. The only possible way to provoke interest in their surprisingly similar…

A Celebrated Editor

Judy Bachrach · September 3, 2012

Grey Gardens itself is a marvel. .  .  . Like Ben and Sally’s other two homes, it’s ritzy and historic and perfectly restored and all of that, but more than anything it’s just a beautiful place. The gardens take up an entire acre and are as lush as you can imagine, full of archways and hydrangeas…

See Jane Run

Judy Bachrach · August 29, 2011

The main reason I wanted to read Prime Time, which is Jane Fonda’s latest book—there have been others—about Jane Fonda, is because of its cover. On the right-hand side, next to a large color photograph of the actress, her lips painted the precise color of her sweater (tangerine) and her hair…