Jean Stein

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Jean Stein
Born Jean Babette Stein
(1934-02-09)February 9, 1934
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
New York City, New York, U.S.
Cause of death Suicide
Occupation Author, editor
Spouse(s)
Children
Parent(s)

Jean Stein (February 9, 1934 - April 30, 2017) was an American author and editor.

Biography

Jean Stein grew up in Los Angeles, the daughter of Dr. Jules Stein and his wife, Doris (nee Jones). Both her parents were Jewish.[1] She is the author of two books and a pioneer of the narrative form of oral history. She is at work on a cultural and political history of Los Angeles, to be published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. In 1970, Stein has authored, with George Plimpton as editor, a biography of Robert F. Kennedy, entitled American Journey: The Times of Robert Kennedy.

Stein wrote the best-selling book Edie: American Girl based on the life of socialite/actress and Andy Warhol muse Edie Sedgwick, in 1982.[2] Norman Mailer wrote of Edie: "This is the book of the Sixties that we have been waiting for."[citation needed]

Jean Stein also worked as a magazine editor. In the late 1950s, she was an editor at The Paris Review. From 1990-2004, she was editor of the literary/visual arts magazine Grand Street with art editor Walter Hopps. The magazine actively sought out international authors, visual artists, composers and scientists to bring to its readership.[citation needed]

Personal background

Jean Stein's father was Jules C. Stein (1896-1981), founder of the Music Corporation of America (MCA) and the Jules Stein Eye Instituteat UCLA. Her mother, Doris J. Stein (1902-1984), established the Doris Jones Stein Foundation. Jean Stein's sister, Susan Shiva, died on January of breast cancer, as did Doris Stein.

Education

Jean Stein was educated at the Katharine Branson School in Ross, California, then at Brillantmont International School in Lausanne, Switzerland, after which she graduated from Miss Hewitt's Classes in New York City. Thereafter, she spent two years at Wellesley College and then attended classes at the University of Paris (formerly known as the Sorbonne). While in Paris she interviewed William Faulkner, with whom she had an affair,[3] and, according to the historian Joel Williamson, offered the interview to the The Paris Review in exchange for being made an editor there.[4]

She returned to New York and worked in 1955 as assistant to director Elia Kazan on the original production of Tennessee Williams's Pulitzer Prize winning play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.[5] Jean Stein's first marriage in 1958 was to William vanden Heuvel, a lawyer who served in the U.S. Justice Department under Robert F. Kennedy, and who later also became a diplomat and author. Since 1984, he has been the chairman of the Roosevelt Institute.

Jean Stein and William vanden Heuvel's first daughter, Katrina vanden Heuvel, was born in 1959; she is now the editor and publisher of The Nation magazine. The couple's second daughter, Wendy vanden Heuvel, was born in 1961, and she is an actress and producer in New York. She is also on the board of the 52nd Street Project, which matches inner-city youth with professional theater artists to create original dramatic works.

From 1995-2007, Stein was married to Torsten Wiesel, a co-recipient with David H. Hubel of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

References

  1. The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, McA, and the Hidden History of Hollywood By Dennis McDougal p 27
  2. Edie: American Girl review
  3. Natalie Robins. Alien Ink: The FBI's War on Freedom of Expression (New Brunswick: Rutgers U Press, 1992), pp. 424-5.
  4. Joel Williamson. William Faulkner and Southern History (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 304
  5. http://ibdb.com/person.php?id=104252