Judith Crist

Judith Crist

Judith Crist Obituary

Published by Legacy Remembers on Aug. 7, 2012.
NEW YORK (AP) - Judith Crist, a blunt and popular film critic for the "Today" show, TV Guide and the New York Herald Tribune whose reviews were at times so harsh that director Otto Preminger labeled her "Judas Crist," has died. She was 90.

Her son, Steven Crist, said his mother died Tuesday at her Manhattan home after a long illness.

Starting in 1963, at the Tribune, Crist wrote about and discussed thousands of movies, and also covered theater and books. She was among the first reviewers of her time to gain a national following, and Roger Ebert credited her with helping to make all film critics better known, including such contemporaries as The New Yorker's Pauline Kael and Andrew Sarris of the Village Voice.

With the growing recognition of such foreign directors as Francois Truffaut and Federico Fellini, and the rise of such American filmmakers as Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese, the 1960s and 1970s were an inspiring time for movie review ers. But Crist's trademark quickly became the putdown.

An early review was for "Spencer's Mountain," a sentimental family melodrama starring Henry Fonda and Maureen O'Hara. Unmoved by a story that became the basis for the TV series "The Waltons," Crist denounced the film's "sheer prurience and perverted morality" and cracked that "it makes the nudie shows at the Rialto look like Walt Disney productions."

The critic really poured it on for "Cleopatra," the budget-busting historical epic that starred Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton and was overwhelmed by the actors' off-screen love affair. "At best a major disappointment, at worst an extravagant exercise in tedium," Crist called the film, dismissing Taylor as "an entirely physical creature, no depth of emotion apparent in her kohl-laden eyes, no modulation in her voice, which too often rises to fishwife levels."

Her conclusion: "The mountain of notoriety has produced a mouse."

Crist was occasionally banned from advance screenings, while studios and theaters would threaten to pull advertising. When her "Cleopatra" review brought her a prize from the New York Newspaper Women's Club, officials at 20th Century Fox, which released the movie, withdrew from the ceremony.

Preminger, whose "Hurry Sundown" she called the "worst film" she had seen in memory, referred to her as "Judas Crist." After she condemned Billy Wilder's cross-dressing classic "Some Like It Hot" for its "perverse" gags and "homosexual 'in' joke(s)," Wilder allegedly remarked that asking her to review your movie was like "asking the Boston strangler to massage your neck."

But Crist had many friends in the business, from Bette Davis to "Cleopatra" director Joseph Mankiewicz. She ran a film festival for decades out of suburban Tarrytown, N.Y., with guests including Robert Redford, Paul Newman and Steven Spielberg. Woody Allen liked her well enough to give her a cameo in his 1980 drama "Stardust Memori es," widely believed to have been based in part on Crist's Tarrytown gatherings.

She was born in New York in 1922 and would say that Charlie Chaplin's silent masterpiece "The Gold Rush" was her first and most vivid film memory. By age 10, she had decided she wanted to be a reviewer; movies became her passion and her vice. She would cut classes for a chance to visit a theater or two, including a cherished day in which she took in showings of "Gone With the Wind," ''The Grapes of Wrath" and "Grand Illusion."

Her edge was likely formed by her Dickensian childhood. The daughter of a successful fur trader, she lived in Canada until age 9, attending private school, enjoying the luxuries of multiple homes, live-in servants and the family's bulletproof Cadillac. But in the 1930s, her father's business was ruined by the Great Depression.

"And then suddenly, our most gracious home was gone. The servants left," she wrote years later in Time magazine. "After we lost the last of our homes, we moved to New York to get some kind of assistance from my mother's family. Well, from both of my parents' families. We lived in a small, one-bedroom apartment while my father went out on the road, recouping things."

She still managed to attend Hunter College and receive a master's degree from Columbia University's journalism school. In 1945, soon after graduation, she was hired as a feature writer by the Herald Tribune, where she remained until the paper closed, in 1966, and where colleagues included Jimmy Breslin and Tom Wolfe. In 1950, her education reporting brought her a George Polk Award, and she was honored five times by the New York Newspaper Woman's Club.

Crist reviewed film and theater for the "Today" show from 1964-73, and as a print critic worked for New York magazine, TV Guide and the New York Post. She was a longtime adjunct professor at Columbia and her essays, interviews and reviews have been compiled into three books: "The Pri vate Eye, The Cowboy and the Very Naked Girl," ''Judith Crist's TV Guide to the Movies" and "Take 22: Moviemakers on Moviemaking."

Crist's husband, public relations consultant William B. Crist, died in 1993. Their son, Steven Crist, covered horse racing for The New York Times and later became publisher of the Daily Racing Form.

___

HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer

AP Movie Writer David Germain contributed to this story from Los Angeles.


Copyright © 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Sign Judith Crist's Guest Book

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August 8, 2015

Harry Simpson posted to the memorial.

August 13, 2012

Jason Abrams posted to the memorial.

August 11, 2012

Sylvia Carter posted to the memorial.

23 Entries

Harry Simpson

August 8, 2015

Thank you for sharing a part of your life with us.

Jason Abrams

August 13, 2012

My deepest condolences to the Crist family. I grew up with Judith Crist as my neighbor, friend, and role model. Once as a boy, I walked down the hill to her house and knocked on the front door. I introduced myself as her neighbor, and had hoped to be of help in anyway she saw fit. She welcomed me into her life with open arms. She offered me chores to do, so that I could keep busy and learn the value of a job as a young man. She would refer to me as just that, a "young man". She expressed such interest in me, and gave so much of herself. She took the time to listen to what I've been up to, and shared her stories of what it's like to be a professional critic. I really enjoyed those experiences and was so happy to have her as a true friend. My birthday is February 14th, and every year, that meant a card and a call to wish her "valentine", "the boy up the hill", a wonderful birthday. I have so much love for Mrs. Crist, and she will forever have a place in my heart.

Sylvia Carter

August 11, 2012

It has been a great honor for me to serve with Judith on the Anne O'Hare McCormick Scholarship Trustees board.

I hope always to gracefully and generously pass the torch, as Judith learned do from Emma Bugbee. (Emma walked all the way to Albany with Suffragettes to take a petition, and filed her copy every night from the road in 1914!)

Here's just about how Judith told the story:

Emma had covered every Democratic convention, including the first one at which women could vote, for 30 years for the Tribune and later the Herald-Tribune. Judith was called into the editor's inner sanctum and told that she would be covering the convention. After a moment of joy and elation at the news, fast on the heels of that emotion came the thought of, "What will Emma say?" She said as much aloud, and the editor said, "Don't worry. I haven't told her yet, but it will be fine."

Each night for a week, Judith went home and said to her husband Bill, "I can't even take pleasure in this, because I so love and respect Emma and I don't know how she will take it," or words to that effect.

One day, Judith saw Emma go into the editor's office; the door closed. About 10 minutes later, Emma came out and headed straight for Judy's desk. Judith put her head down, dreading what Emma would say. Emma came up to her with a big smile and said, "I"ve just had the best news; you're going to cover the convention." She then told Judith that she would give her all her phone numbers and contacts and all the help she could give in every way.

Judith said she learned from that to pass the torch to others.

Yet Emma, who was called out of retirement at 93, not long before her death, to do a story concerning Eleanor Roosevelt, was nobody's fool. Her job insurance at the Trib was one closely held number she gave to nobody, Eleanor's private number. If you couldn't reach Mrs. Roosevelt, you had to go to Emma and ask her to do it.

One more Judith story:

The first time Judith went out on a movie review, she was happy to have the chance but worried about leaving the baby, Stephen, with her husband Bill for the evening. He assured her that it would be fine. She went.

When she returned, the baby was . . . missing. Bill hadn't noticed. Luckily, Stephen had crawled behind the sofa and fallen peacefully asleep. As we all know, it was not the end of her movie-reviewing career, to the delight of millions. But it was a close call.

I have told these stories as faithfully as possible, but if others who heard them can add details, I hope that they will.

On a personal note, when Judith discovered that I was the last person in America to not have pierced ears, she immediately sent several pairs of earrings made by her father, the Kenneth Jay Lane of his day, as she said. It was typical of her thoughtfulness.

So long as she influences our lives and as long as we tell stories of her, Judith is still in the world with us. She was quite a dame.

Abrams Family

August 11, 2012

Our condolences to the Crist family. We lived across the street when she lived in Woodstock. She was always friendly and every year since she moved away we have heard from her around the holidays. She will be dearly missed.
-The Abrams Family

Isaiah 25: 8 & 9

August 11, 2012

My condolences to family and friends. May you find comfort and the words of God he assures "He will actually swallow up death forever" and "will certainly wipe the tears from all faces".

August 8, 2012

To the the family of Judith Crist - May God give you peace and comfort through his word and the Lord Jesus Christ during this time of sorrow, I know that he will sbe missed by many.

Victoria Hine

August 8, 2012

Steven, I am so sorry for your loss. My Mom passed away on the 26th of July, she was 91. Your Mom was straight forward with everything she did in life and I will always remember her for that quality. Thank you for sharing her with us.

August 8, 2012

p. 1255: 3 With that I heard a loud voice from the throne say: “Look! The tentnx of God is with mankind, and he will residenx with them, and they will be his peoples.x And God himself will be with them.x 4 And he will wipe out every tearx from their eyes, and death will be no more,x neither will mourning nor outcry nor pain be anymore.x The former things have passed away.”x

Brunson'

August 8, 2012

Our thoughts and prayers are with you in your time of grief. May your memories bring you comfort.

August 8, 2012

SORRY FOR THE LOST. MAY GOD COMFORT YOU

August 8, 2012

With deepest sympathy to the Crist family during your time of grief...Psalm 46:1...God is for us a refuge and strength, A help that is readily to be found during difficult times...May God provide you with peace and comfort to endure the days ahead.

Ashley

August 8, 2012

May you find peace and comfort through God who will give you the strength to get through this depressing time of grief. God is near to those broken at heart and those crushed in the spirit he saves.

Cynthia

August 8, 2012

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

Jack Hartman

August 8, 2012

One hell of a lady.

Jack Hartman

S

August 8, 2012

To the family of Judith Crist:


Sorry for your loss. May God give you peace, strength and comfort during this most difficult time of grief and sorrow.

Praying for you during this time.

Mary Green

August 7, 2012

May your hearts soon be filled with wonderful memories of joyful times together as you celebrate a life well lived.

Georgia

August 7, 2012

Crist family: Sorry for your loss. May our Heavenly Father, Jehovah, provide your family with the needed comfort & peace during this difficult time. (Romans 15:33)

Kathy Wood

August 7, 2012

Judith Crist is a loss to the community of film lovers. Her wonderful reviews helped me see film in a new way, and educated me and so many others about film. Yes she could be sharp, but also very witty. My sympathies to her family.

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August 8, 2015

Harry Simpson posted to the memorial.

August 13, 2012

Jason Abrams posted to the memorial.

August 11, 2012

Sylvia Carter posted to the memorial.