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Fannie Hurst

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@ National Portrait Gallery

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Born Hamilton, OhioFannie Hurst’s name and striking face are little remembered today, but in the early twentieth century she was one of America’s most prominent female celebrities. She owed her fame (as well as her fortune) to novels and short stories that spun heartrending tales of immigrant life and the struggles of working women. Phenomenally popular, her fiction was dramatized in more than thirty Hollywood films. Hurst’s passion for social justice led to friendships with Eleanor Roosevelt and several leading figures of the Harlem Renaissance. She campaigned for a married woman’s right to retain her maiden name, fought racial discrimination alongside the Urban League, and raised money for refugees of Nazi Germany. A talk show she hosted in the late 1950s broke new ground by featuring forthright discussions of homosexuality, and Hurst was among the first public figures to champion gay rights.Nacida en Hamilton, OhioHoy pocos recuerdan su nombre o su impactante rostro, pero a principios del siglo XX Fannie Hurst fue una de las celebridades más destacadas de Estados Unidos. Adquirió fama (y fortuna) escribiendo novelas y cuentos sumamente emotivos acerca de la vida de los inmigrantes y las luchas de las mujeres trabajadoras. Sus obras alcanzaron una popularidad extraordinaria y fueron llevadas a Hollywood en más de treinta películas. El fervor de Hurst por la justicia social propició su amistad con Eleanor Roosevelt y varios líderes del movimiento conocido como “renacimiento de Harlem”. Defendió el derecho de las mujeres casadas a conservar su apellido original, luchó contra el...
Type:
Image
Format:
Lithographic Crayon On Paper
Rights:
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
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National Portrait Gallery

Record Harvested From

Smithsonian Institution