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Judith Crist

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Full Name
  
Judith Klein

Awards
  
Raven Award

Books
  
Take 22

Role
  
Film critic

Name
  
Judith Crist


Judith Crist Remembering Film and TV Critic Judith Crist Emmy TV

Born
  
May 22, 1922 (
1922-05-22
)
The Bronx, New York City, New York, United States

Alma mater
  
Hunter College Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

Occupation
  
Film critic and academic

Spouse(s)
  
William B. Crist (1947-1993; his death; 1 child)

Died
  
August 7, 2012, Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States

Education
  
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Hunter College

Pioneering film critic judith crist dead at 90 from nbc nightly news with brian williams


Judith Crist (; May 22, 1922 – August 7, 2012) was an American film critic and academic. She appeared regularly on the Today show from 1964 to 1973 and was among the first full-time female critics for a major American newspaper, in her case, the New York Herald Tribune. She was the founding film critic at New York magazine and become known to most Americans as a critic at the weekly magazine TV Guide and at the morning TV show Today. She appeared in one film, Woody Allen's dramatic-comedy film Stardust Memories (1980), and was the author of various books, including The Private Eye, The Cowboy and the Very Naked Girl; Judith Crist's TV Guide to the Movies; and Take 22: Moviemakers on Moviemaking.

Contents

Judith Crist Gregg Barrios An Appreciation of Judith Crist The Rag Blog

Remembering critics robert hughes and judith crist


Early life and education

Judith Crist Judith Crist 19222012 Daily Racing Form

Crist was born Judith Klein in The Bronx, borough of New York City, New York, the daughter of Helen (née Schoenberg), a librarian, and Solomon Klein, a manufacturing jeweler. She attended Morris High School in The Bronx, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Hunter College and a Master of Science degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

Career

Judith Crist wwwtrbimgcomimg5021beccturbinelamejudithc

After graduating from Columbia in 1945, she was employed by The New York Herald Tribune as a reporter, film critic and arts editor for 22 years, and also worked as TV Guide's resident film critic. After the Tribune ceased publication, she was named the first film critic at New York magazine. She was an adjunct professor at Columbia's School of Journalism starting in 1958 and taught for more than 50 years.

Judith Crist Judith Crist obituary Film The Guardian

Like Dwight Macdonald, Crist reviewed films for the Today show in the 1960s. She conducted the Judith Crist Film Weekends at Tarrytown House, in Tarrytown, New York, from 1971 to 2006. She was a longtime member of the Executive Committee of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism Alumni Association and served three terms as President of the Alumni Association during the 1960s.

Judith Crist Judith Crist Queen Mother of Critics

In 1963, she was awarded an Alumni Award by the Journalism School Alumni Association.

On April 5, 2008, the school presented her with its Founder's Award on her completion of 50 years as a faculty member. She taught until just before her death.

She wrote the article "Tribute to a Partnership", a tribute to Rodgers and Hammerstein, in 1965, for a booklet that accompanied RCA Victor's original LP release of the soundtrack album of The Sound of Music. However, the article has not been reprinted for any of the CD releases of the soundtrack.

She cited Charlie Chaplin's The Gold Rush as her "first and to-this-day-most-vivid film experience."

Personal life

Judith married William B. Crist in 1947, changing her last name. Her husband died in 1993. Judith Crist died at age 90 in her Manhattan home.

She was the mother of Steven Crist, a thoroughbred handicapper and publisher of the Daily Racing Form.

References

Judith Crist Wikipedia