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Janet Langhart

 
Black Biography: Janet Langhart

media consultant; television personality

Personal Information

Born Janet Floyd, December 22, 1941, in Indianapolis, IN; daughter of a hospital ward secretary; married Tony Langhart, 1968 (marriage ended, 1968); married Robert Kistner, 1978 (a physician and researcher; marriage ended, 1989); married William Cohen (politician and U.S. cabinet secretary), February 14, 1996.
Education: Attended Butler University.
Politics: Democrat.

Career

Began as Ebony Fashion Fair model; affiliated with WISH-TV, Indianapolis, IN; WBBM-TV, Chicago, television weathercaster in Chicago, late 1960s; WCVB-TV (Channel 5), Boston, MA, co-host of "Good Day," 1974-78; affiliated with NBC network, 1978 and the America Alive show; served as assistant press secretary in the 1988 presidential campaign of Michael Dukakis; co-host of New England Today, c. 1993; co-anchored America's Black Forum with Julian Bond on Black Entertainment Television (BET), c. 1996; founder, Langhart Communications, an image-consulting firm. Former board member, United Negro College Fund, U.. National Arboretum.

Life's Work

As wife of the U.S. Secretary of Defense, Janet Langhart is one of the most prominent spouses in Washington. The former beauty pageant winner, Boston television personality, media consultant--and longtime Democrat--wed a Republican senator in 1996, and their union has been celebrated more as a triumph over multicultural issues in America than political ones. Though there are other high-profile interracial couples in Washington power circles, including Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and his wife, Langhart and her husband William S. Cohen--appointed to his cabinet post in the Clinton Administration in late 1996--are the country's highest-ranking such pair on the official protocol lists. Washington Post writer Kevin Merida called them "the best advertisement for the kind of dialogue and interpersonal racial progress President Clinton is now pushing, the kind of progress that can't be legislated."

Langhart was born Janet Floyd in 1941 and grew up in public housing in racially segregated Indianapolis. She was raised by her mother, who worked as a hospital ward secretary. After spending two years at Indianapolis's Butler University, Langhart found success as a model in the 1960s, winning several beauty pageants, including "Miss Sepia" of 1966 and "Miss International Auto Show" two years later. It was a different era, and one that ignited in her a sense of injustice over racial attitudes in America. She recalled that on one occasion, she arrived at an audition for an appliance commercial and caused somewhat of a stir; an African-American woman pitching products in a nationwide ad campaign was still a rarity at the time.

Langhart married her first husband, Tony Langhart in 1968, just as her career was taking off. She was working at a Chicago television station (she eventually became a weathercaster there), and the couple married just weeks after the tragic assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. Both were ardent civil-rights supporters, and "it was a kind of sentimental reaction to that loss," Langhart told the Washington Post's Merida in a 1997 interview. They divorced later that year.

As a result of her ratings success in Chicago, Langhart was hired by a Boston television station in 1974 as the co-host of Good Day, a local news program. She arrived in the city while a vicious battle over school busing was raging, a crisis whose worst moments were captured in news footage of residents of one neighborhood throwing stones at yellow schoolbuses full of children. The racially charged atmosphere lingered in sections of Boston for years afterward. Langhart was overwhelmed. "I felt betrayed because I had a notion of Boston as the cradle of liberty," she told Boston Globe writer John Powers. "Boston was our beacon of fairness and justice and in many ways, it is. I didn't get those ideas from romance. So I would go on the air and say: 'Why are you doing this? Why are you stoning black children? How do you reconcile this? Where is the cardinal?'" In response, a local civil rights leader invited Langhart to her home, and gently reminded the newscaster to direct her words not to groups of viewers, but rather "to the good people of Boston. They'll know who they are," Langhart recalled in the Boston Globe interview.

Langhart's combination of frankness, affability, and glamour earned her a devoted following. On the streets of Boston, she was a celebrity, a favorite with both black and white viewers. Boston Globe reporter Jack Thomas offered praise years later, saying, "Langhart is known for surprises, and for style, passion and ambition." In 1978, NBC hired her to co-host America Alive, and that same year she married another prominent Bostonian, gynecologist Dr. Robert Kistner. Several years her senior, the physician had been part of the team of research scientists responsible for the birth control pill. As his wife, Langhart never needed to work again; they lived a lavish lifestyle that included a condominium at the city's posh Ritz Hotel. Yet Langhart was loathe to abandon her career for good. She returned to television in Boston for a time, but was released from her contract in a notorious 1987 incident when she refused to draw lottery numbers, declaring to the press that she had no ambition to become "Vanna Black."

Langhart's skills soon found a more appropriate outlet when she became assistant press secretary for the 1988 presidential campaign of Massachusetts governor Michael Dukakis. The Democratic Party nominee lost the election to George Bush, but her involvement in the high-stakes world of media and politics injected added ambition into Langhart's career plans. By then, Kistner had retired, and was enjoying a more relaxed life in Palm Beach; their marriage failed when the pair realized they had far different goals. They split amicably in 1989, but Kistner tragically committed suicide a year later. In time, Langhart renewed an acquaintance with a politician she had once interviewed in the 1970s, a senator from Maine named William S. Cohen.

Cohen had been raised Jewish but rejected the religion at the age of 12 when he was told he could not have a bar mitzvah unless his Protestant mother converted. A moderate Republican who had served in Congress since 1972, Cohen was often at odds with more conservative elements in the party and was known as one of the few Republicans who still supported affirmative-action programs. He also wrote poetry and novels. When he and Langhart started dating, a well-connected New England family wrote him and asserted that dating an African American woman would ruin his political career. The family had donated large sums of money to his campaigns over the years, and Cohen decisively informed them that their funds and opinions were no longer welcome.

In the early 1990s, Langhart was hired by the cable network Black Entertainment Television (BET) and co-anchored America's Black Forum, a talk show, with civil-rights activist Julian Bond. She also founded Langhart Communications, a consulting company that helps corporate executives and government officials improve their on-camera demeanor. After a courtship of several years, Langhart and Cohen married on Valentine's Day in 1996 in a formal room of the U.S. Capitol building. The ceremony was attended by several prominent political figures, including Republican Congressmen Alfonse D'Amato and Trent Lott, as well as journalists such as Andrea Mitchell and Dan Rather.

By this point in his career, Cohen had decided not to run for re- election in the 1996 campaigns. In his farewell speech, he told his colleagues in Congress that bipartisan politics--primarily, the bitter struggle between the Democratic White House and Republican- controlled Congress--was the main reason for his leaving office. He reminded them in his address that "we are all on the same side," the Washington Post reported. In a surprise announcement a few months later, Cohen was named Defense Secretary after Clinton won a second Oval Office term. As a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee during his tenure in Congress, Cohen had often locked horns with Clinton's first Defense Secretary, William Perry, but when Perry stepped down, he recommended Cohen to take his place.

Langhart suddenly became one-half of one of the most prominent interracial couples in the United States. In her new role as the wife of the man who oversees all of the country's armed forces, she travels often with her husband to visit American troops stationed around the globe--including to some of the harsher, troubled regions of the world--and has tried to use her position to call attention to the plight of military families far from home. She is popular with troops and enjoys speaking with them one-on-one. Langhart's marriage to Cohen also provides inspiration to the more than 1.4 million active-duty servicemen and women, many of whom are non-Caucasian. Furthermore, many military personnel marry someone of another background. "It's a military of volunteers and G.I. Janes and whites and blacks and Latinos and Asians who look at [Cohen] and his spouse and see the America of the millennium," wrote the Boston Globe's Powers.

Langhart often queries soldiers and servicepeople about conditions on American bases overseas, conspiratorially telling them, "You can level with me," as she explained in the Boston Globe interview with Powers. "Maybe I can't do anything about it, but I can hear you, and I can take it back to my husband." Langhart has also become sensitive to the plight of those who are not sheltered by the benefits of an American passport. In Sofia, Bulgaria, for a NATO summit with Cohen, the wives of American embassy officials told Langhart how abysmal the hospital conditions were in the city for its residents; she returned home, marshalled support from pharmaceutical companies for supplies and had them flown over.

Langhart and Cohen have remarked that as an interracial couple, they have never experienced overt discrimination, although some people feel the need to bring up African American subjects. But she remains nonplused by the attitudes of others. "Look at me," she told the Globe's Powers. "I grew up in the ghetto in a single-parent family. I went to a private college on a scholarship. And here I am on Pennsylvania Avenue with the Secretary of Defense. If that isn't a reflection on how great this country is."

Further Reading

Sources

  • Boston Globe, March 9, 1989, p. 77; September 16, 1997, p. E1.
  • Jet, October 10, 1988, p. 33; February 12, 1996, p. 32; March 4, 1996, p. 16.
  • Washington Post, December 6, 1996, p. A26; December 14, 1997, p. F1.

— Carol Brennan

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Wikipedia: Janet Langhart
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Janet Langhart Cohen

Janet Langhart in New York City, 2006
Born Janet Leola Floyd
December 22, 1941 (1941-12-22) (age 68)
Indianapolis, Indiana, USA
Occupation Writer, journalist
Nationality American
Subjects Racism

Janet Langhart Cohen (born December 22, 1941) is an American model, television journalist and author. She serves as President and CEO of Langhart Communications and is the spouse of former Defense Secretary William Cohen. In June 2009, her one-act play Anne and Emmett was premiering at the United States Holocaust Museum when the museum was attacked by a white supremacist.

Contents

Biography

She was born as Janet Leola Floyd in Indianapolis and raised in an Indianapolis housing project by her mother who worked as a maid and hospital ward secretary[1] According to her book, Love in Black and White: A Memoir of Race, Religion, and Romance, she is Multiracial having African, European and Native American heritage. Her unmarried mother, Mary, formed a relationship with her father, Sewell Bridges, an African-American man at a young age. Bridges served in World War II and abandoned[2] his family after the war.[3]

In 1959, Floyd earned her high school diploma from Crispus Attucks High School in Indianapolis. She was a member of the band and debate team. From 1960 until 1962, she attended Butler University, a private liberal arts university in Indianapolis founded by abolitionist and attorney Ovid Butler in 1855.

Floyd was married to Melvin Anthony Langhart for one year. Her second of three marriages was to Dr. Robert Kistner. Floyd, now Langhart, was married to Kistner from 1978 to 1989. Kistner committed suicide one year later in 1990. Kistner was a Harvard Medical School professor who specialized in the treatment of endometriosis.[4]

Media career

In 1962, Langhart began her career in Chicago as a model, where she worked for Marshall Field's and the Ebony Fashion Fair, and she was named Miss Chicagoland. At the age of 28, she became the first black "weathergirl" for WBBM-TV. She became a noted black television journalist at a variety of outlets, most notably Boston's WCVB-TV, where she cohosted morning program Good Day from 1973-78. During her career she interviewed numerous personalities including Rosa Parks and David Duke. She became friends with Muhammad Ali and F. Lee Bailey, and considered Martin Luther King a personal mentor.

Langhart worked on a television show called 9 Broadcast Plaza alongside Richard Bey. She was fired from Entertainment Tonight in 1990 after she asked Arnold Schwarzenegger, apparently violating an agreement he had with producers, about his father Gustav Schwarzenegger's Nazi background. "I was terminated by The Terminator", she remarked. Later, she was a commentator on Black Entertainment Television. She has also worked for the Boston Globe and WCVB-TV in Boston.[5], and she has been a spokeswoman for U.S. News and World Report and Avon Cosmetics.[6]

Marriage to Cohen and Pentagon life

On February 14, 1996, Langhart married United States Senator William Cohen (R-Maine). She and Cohen first became mutual admirers in 1974 during an interview in Boston, when he was a Congressman from Maine, but did not meet in person until she worked for Black Entertainment Television (BET) in Washington and Andrew Young set up a news interview for her. They remained friends, and after both became single again, they began dating when Langhart asked Cohen to take care of a dog that had turned up at the BET offices. The couple were married in the United States Capitol on Valentine's Day 1996. Cohen, a moderate Republican, was chosen to serve as President Bill Clinton's Secretary of Defense. Langhart is a Democrat.[6]

When Langhart-Cohen's husband became Secretary of Defense, she became known as "First Lady of the Pentagon." This was due to her active and visible public role while Cohen was in office. She spurred several initiatives aimed at morale and well-being of military and civilian employees of the Defense Department, including the Military Family Forum, the Pentagon Pops concert series, the Secretary of Defense Annual Holiday Tour (an entertainment revue), and her own series of interviews on Pentagon TV, Special Assignment. She was given a volunteer position as "First Lady of the USO" and helped recruit celebrities and civilians to work with the United Service Organizations.[6]

In 1999, she founded the Citizen Patriot Organization (CPO), a non-profit dedicated to recognizing "those who serve, protect, and defend the United States of America". The group periodically presents a CPO Award. The award has been given to Jack Valenti and John McCain. The group has also organized events including a Homeland Defense Tour, which brought USO-like appreciation events to first responders at the September 11 attacks sites and other domestic locations, and a Citizen Patriot tour to military locations overseas.[citation needed]

Writing

Langhart is the author of a memoir, My Life in Two Americas; From Rage to Reason. In February 2007 she and her husband William Cohen released Love in Black and White. It is a memoir about race, religion, and the bonds that Langhart and Cohen share over similar life circumstances and backgrounds.[7]

Holocaust Museum shooting

On the afternoon of June 10, 2009, Langhart was on her way to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for the premiere of her one-act play, Anne and Emmett. The play imagines a conversation between two teens, Nazi victim Anne Frank and Jim Crow victim Emmett Till.[8] The play was promoted in the Washington Post the week before and presented in honor of the eightieth anniversary of Anne Frank's birth. Langhart's husband, William Cohen, was at the museum waiting when 88 year-old James Wenneker von Brunn fatally shot a security guard before being shot himself by the other guards. Langhart and her husband were not injured, and appeared on CNN that afternoon to describe what they had seen.

References

  1. ^ "Janet Langhart". Nndb.com. http://www.nndb.com/people/451/000051298/. Retrieved 2009-06-12. 
  2. ^ Langhart, My Life in Two Americas; From Rage to Reason, p. 43
  3. ^ Lisa Frydman (June 9, 2004). "Pretty Powerful". Chicago Sun-Times. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1077/is_1_56/ai_66455756. Retrieved 2007-04-10. 
  4. ^ New York Times obituary Robert W. Kistner, 72, Gynecologist, Is Dead, February 10, 1990
  5. ^ "Langhart Cohen has a read on Barnicle". Boston Globe. May 12, 2004. http://www.boston.com/ae/celebrity/articles/2004/05/12/langhart_cohen_has_a_read_on_barnicle/. Retrieved 2007-04-10. 
  6. ^ a b c Lynn Norment (November 2000). "Janet Langhart Cohen: First Lady Of the Pentagon". Ebony magazine. http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1077/is_1_56/ai_66455756. Retrieved 2007-04-10. 
  7. ^ Washington Post, Names & Faces August 18, 2006; p. C03
  8. ^ Brevis, Vita. "DailyKos". DailyKos. http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/6/10/740907/-Anne-and-Emmett-and-Todays-Shooting. Retrieved 2009-06-12. 

Sources

  • (Langhart) Cohen, William and Janet (2007). Love in Black and White: A Memoir of Race, Religion, and Romance. Roman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.. p. 373. ISBN 978-0742558212. 
  • Langhart, Janet (2004). My Life in Two Americas; From Rage to Reason. New York: Kensington. p. 336. ISBN 978-0758203939. 

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