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Dr. Ruth Westheimer

 
Who2 Biography: Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Sex Advisor
Dr. Ruth Westheimer
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  • Born: 4 June 1928
  • Birthplace: Frankfurt, Germany
  • Best Known As: Spunky multimedia sex expert

Name at birth: Karola Ruth Siegel

Dr. Ruth was born in Germany, spent World War II in Switzerland (separated from her parents and grandparents) and at the age of 16 emigrated to Israel. In the 1950s she lived and studied in Paris, and in 1956 she moved to New York City, where she eventually got her PhD in Education. Advocating sex education, she started Sexually Speaking on the radio in 1980. Her bubbly personality, thick accent and frank advice about sex made her a celebrity. While continuing her private practice, Dr. Ruth has dispensed advice on TV, in newspaper columns and in books.

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Biography: Ruth Karola Westheimer
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Ruth K. Westheimer (born 1928) has gained fame for giving practical and straightforward advice for sexual problems.

Known to her public simply as "Dr. Ruth, " the New York psychologist, broadcaster, and writer Dr. Ruth Westheimer became known for giving out sexual advice "like good hot chicken soup" to Americans in the 1980s. Orphaned by the Third Reich when her German-Jewish family perished after sending her to safety in Switzerland, she immigrated to Palestine where she became a fervent Zionist and member of the Haganah, the Jewish underground movement. The tiny woman, only four feet seven inches tall, briefly married a young Israeli soldier, and the couple moved to Paris where she earned a degree in psychology from the Sorbonne. In 1956 Dr. Ruth moved to New York with her second husband. After this marriage ended, she supported herself and her young daughter by working as a maid while she learned English and earned a master's degree at the New School for Social Research. After meeting her third husband on a ski trip to the Catskills, she earned her doctorate in education at Columbia University.

Media Celebrity

Dr. Ruth learned about sex early when she sneaked into her father's library to read his hidden marriage manual. At Columbia she studied family counseling and sex counseling, and her big break came in 1977 when she gave a lecture to a group of New York broadcasters about the need for more broadcast programs to promote "sexual literacy." Contacts at this lecture evolved into a phenomenally popular two-hour syndicated radio talk show called Sexually Speaking, a cable television show, The Dr. Ruth Show, several best-selling books, and celebrity status throughout the country.

"Grandma Freud"

Dr. Ruth's accent, witty humor, eccentric style, and commonsense advice made her enormously popular with the American public. On a typical night four thousand callers jammed the radio station's switchboards, and her talk show became the top-rated radio show in the New York City area in 1983. She stirred controversy with both political and religious leaders because of her frank answers about homosexuality, sex education, and contraception. Her ability to say anything and get away with it gave her both detractors and admirers. Critics warned she verged on entertainment rather than psychology and accused her of being frivolous and irresponsible. Her admirers praised her conviction and "knack of translating new technological information about sex into sound practical advice." A firm believer in traditional marriage and family, her enthusiasm for her work also kept her in her active private practice as a psychologist and family counselor.

Spicy Advice and the Ratings

To her loyal followers who counted on her, no question was too outrageous and no problem was insoluble. When a caller asked what to do about his girlfriend who had given him an inflatable love doll and "wants to watch, " Dr. Ruth fired back, "Give the doll a name and have a good time." Concern about instant advice to unseen callers prompted the American Psychiatric Association to caution the growing ranks of media therapists against providing actual therapy or trying to solve a problem conclusively over the air. But Dr. Ruth's spicy advice, conventional morality, and upbeat approach continued to help media ratings whether or not they actually helped the nation's sexual psyche.

Further Reading

Ruth K. Westheimer and Jonathan Mark, Heavenly Sex: Sexuality in the Jewish Tradition, New York University Press, 1995, 188p.

Ruth K. Westheimer, Dr. Ruth's Guide to Good Sex, Warner Books, 1983.

Ruth K. Westheimer, Dr. Ruth's Guide for Married Lovers, Warner Books, 1986.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Ben Yagoda, All in a Lifetime: An Autobiography, Warner Books, 1987.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Louis Lieberman, Sex and Morality: Who is Teaching Our Sex Standards, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Louis Lieberman, Dr. Ruth's Guide to Erotic and Sensuous Pleasures, Shapolsky, 1991.

Ruth K. Westheimer, Dr. Ruth Talks to Kids: Where You Came From, How Your Body Changes, and What Sex is All About, Macmillan, 1993.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Steven Kaplan, Surviving Salvation: The Ethiopian Jewish Family in Transition, New York University Press, 1992.

Ruth K. Westheimer, Dr. Ruth's Guide to Safer Sex, Warner Books, 1992.

Ruth K. Westheimer, Sex for Dummies, IDG Books Worldwide, 1995.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Ben Yagoda, The Value of Family: A Blueprint for the 21st Century, Warner Books, 1996.

Ruth K. Westheimer and Pierre Lohu, Dr. Ruth Talks About Grandparents: Advice for Kids on Making the Most of a Special Relationship, Farrar Strauss Giroux, 1997.

Ruth K. Westheimer, ed., Dr. Ruth's Encyclopedia of Sex, Continuum, 1994, 319 p.

Ruth Westheimer, The Art of Arousal, Abbeville Press, 1993, 180p.

Patricia Bosworth, "Talking with Doctor Goodsex, " Ladies' Home Journal (February 1986): 82 ;

Georgia Dullea, "Therapist to Therapist: Analyzing Dr. Ruth, " New York Times, 26 October 1987, p. 8B;

George Hackett, "Talking Sex with Dr. Ruth, " Newsweek (3 May 1982): 78.

Wikipedia: Ruth Westheimer
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Ruth Westheimer
Dr. Ruth Westheimer by David Shankbone.jpg
Birth name Karola Ruth Siegel
Birthdate June 4, 1928 (1928-06-04) (age 81)
Birth location Frankfurt, Germany
Alias(es) Dr. Ruth

Ruth Westheimer (born June 4, 1928) is an American sex therapist, media personality, and author. Best known as Dr. Ruth, the New York Times described her as "a cultural icon in the 1980s. The Sister Wendy of sexuality, she ushered in the new age of freer, franker talk about sex on radio and television—and was endlessly parodied for her limitless enthusiasm and for having an accent only a psychologist could have."[1]

Contents

Biography

Westheimer was born Karola Ruth Siegel in Frankfurt, Germany, the only child of Orthodox Jews, Julius Siegel and Irma Siegel née Hanauer. In January 1939 she was sent to Switzerland by her mother and grandmother after her father was taken by the Nazis.[2][3][4] There she came of age in an orphanage, and stopped receiving her parents' letters in September 1941. In 1945, Westheimer learned that her parents had been killed in the Holocaust, possibly at the Auschwitz concentration camp.[4][3]

Westheimer decided to immigrate to the British Mandate of Palestine. There, at 17, she "first had sexual intercourse on a starry night, in a haystack—without contraception." She later told the New York Times that "I am not happy about that, but I know much better now and so does everyone who listens to my radio program."[4] Westheimer joined the Haganah in Jerusalem. Despite her diminutive height (4'7"),[4] she was trained as a scout and sharpshooter.[2] Westheimer was seriously wounded in action by an exploding shell during the Israeli War of Independence in 1948, and it was several months before she was able to walk again.[5][3]

In 1950, Westheimer moved to France, where she studied and then taught psychology at the University of Paris. In 1956, she immigrated to the United States, settling in Washington Heights, Manhattan.[6] She still lives in the "cluttered three-bedroom apartment in Washington Heights where she raised her two children and became famous, in that order," because the two synagogues she belongs to, the YMHA she was president of for three years, and a "still sizable community of German Jewish World War II refugees" remain in the neighborhood.[6] She is multilingual, speaking English, German, French, and Hebrew.

She earned a master's degree in sociology from The New School[7] and an Ed.D. from Teachers College, Columbia University. She completed post-doctoral work in human sexuality at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, training with pioneer sex therapist Helen Singer Kaplan.[3]

Westheimer has written several books on human sexuality, including Dr. Ruth's Encyclopedia of Sex and Sex for Dummies. The full version of Dr. Ruth's Encyclopedia of Sex is currently available online. [8]

Westheimer has given commencement speeches at the Hebrew Union College seminary, Lehman College of the City University of New York, and, in 2004, at Trinity College.[9] She has also taught courses and seminars at Princeton and Yale.[9]

Westheimer was the guest speaker at the Bronx High School of Science in New York in commemoration of Yom HaShoah 2008. She spoke about her life story and the audience of 500 sang "Happy Birthday" in honor of her 80th birthday. At the ceremony she received an honorary Bronx High School of Science degree. In 2008 she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Westfield State College.

Westheimer has been married three times. Her third marriage, to Manfred Westheimer, lasted until his death in 1997. She has two children, Miriam and Joel, and several grandchildren.


Media career

Dr. Ruth speaking on October 4, 2007 at Brown University

In 1980 WYNY-FM was NBC Radio's New York City owned-and-operated station. The struggling Adult Contemporary station had recently gone through a makeover in an attempt to build an audience. Part of this rebuild was adding specialized talk shows to the evening and weekend hours. Maurice Tunick was recruited from New York's leading talk station, WOR, where he was talk show producer. As WYNY's Program Coordinator he was responsible for developing new talk shows.

Betty Elam was WYNY's Community Affairs Manager. Her job was to work closely with community groups and the station's public affairs programming. After attending a New York Market Radio (NYMRAD) event at which Westheimer was a speaker, she was taken with Westheimer's passion, information, sense of humor, and personality and suggested that WYNY do something with her. She made two appearances as an invited guest on a taped Sunday morning public affairs program. Following that, WYNY's General Manager, Dan Griffin, suggested that Tunick find a way to develop a public affairs show for her.

The show was assigned 15 minutes beginning at midnight on Sunday nights. Being a novice in radio, Westheimer thought it would be a good idea to have guests covering urology, neurology, gynecology, etc. — all areas which could have an effect on sex. While that would be important, Tunick thought a better show would be to not have guests at all but to directly answer listeners' questions. NBC was reluctant to allow live phone calls for a sex advice show, which was considered very risqué in the early 1980s, but Tunick suggested soliciting questions via mail. Westheimer could then control the questions and read them on the air with her answers. Typically each question could begin with, "I have a letter from a listener who asks..."

The show, Sexually Speaking, using the name "Dr. Ruth," was taped in an NBC Radio studio at 30 Rockefeller Center, NBC's radio and TV headquarters, on Thursday mornings at 11:00 a.m. for airing on Sunday nights at midnight. All NBC studios at "30 Rock" were accessible from other studios and many offices around the building. A couple of weeks into recording, it was reported that work was stopping in many places in the building on Thursdays at 11 as people were gathering to hear this "cross between Henry Kissinger and Minnie Mouse," as the Wall Street Journal would later describe her.

After just two months, despite the initial concerns, the show was expanded to an hour and went live, with Westheimer taking phone calls with a delay. Within a year "Dr. Ruth" had a larger audience on Sunday night at midnight on this struggling station than many New York stations had in morning drive-time. She became known for being candid and funny, but respectful, and for her tag phrase, "Get some."

As "Dr. Ruth," Westheimer became nationally known after several appearances on Late Night with David Letterman in the early 1980s.[10][11] In less than two years, Dr. Ruth became a household name and was being heard on radio stations across the country.

Her pioneering TV show, also called Sexually Speaking, first aired in 1982 as a 15-minute taped show on Lifetime Cable. It has since increased in popularity and has been nationally syndicated, as has her radio show.

In recent years, Westheimer has made regular appearances on the PBS Television children's show Between the Lions as "Dr. Ruth Wordheimer" in a parody of her therapist role, in which she helps anxious readers and spellers overcome their fear of long words.

Westheimer also worked as a spokeswoman for Clairol Herbal Essences shampoo and body wash, depicting a comical side to her work as a sex therapist. The commercials usually featured a woman imagining that she was using the shampoo on her hair, apparently receiving some sexual charge from it. When the woman snapped back to reality, Westheimer was standing next to her, stating that if the woman liked the shampoo, she should try the body wash as well.[12]

In the January 2009 55th anniversary issue of Playboy, Westheimer appears as #13 in the list of the 55 most important people in sex from the past 55 years.

References

  1. ^ Barron, James. "Art/Architecture: Some Things Never Age. Just Ask Dr. Ruth." New York Times 13 December 1998.
  2. ^ a b Urban Legends Reference Pages: Dr. Ruth Was a Sniper by Barbara Mikkelson, Last updated 1 March 2007, Retrieved 2 March 2007
  3. ^ a b c d German American Heritage biography http://www.germanheritage.com/biographies/mtoz/westheimer.html
  4. ^ a b c d Dullea, Georgia. "Therapist to Therapist: Analyzing Dr. Ruth." New York Times 26 October 1987.
  5. ^ Dr. Ruth: Sex Sage and Ex-Sniper on Global Sexuality by Tom Foreman, National Geographic, June 11, 2003
  6. ^ a b "Morris, Bob. "At Home With: Dr. Ruth Westheimer; The Bible as Sex Manual?" New York Times 21 December 1995.
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ The Family Encyclopedia of Sex by Dr. Ruth Westheimer
  9. ^ a b "Gordon, Jane. "Worth Noting: Calling Dr. Ruth (To Speak at Trinity)." New York Times 9 May 2004.
  10. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0922756/
  11. ^ http://www.yaleherald.com/article.php?Article=6129
  12. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0922756/

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