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Helen Gurley Brown Papers
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Series Descriptions
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(1938-2000)
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2.5 linear feet
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This series includes material that documents Helen
Gurley Brown's personal life and professional
accomplishments. There are clippings, appointment books,
travel itineraries, awards, and photographs. There is
also a file of material from and about David Brown. The
many Clippings give a comprehensive picture of the heavy
press coverage Brown has received throughout her career.
They stretch from her schoolgirl days in Little Rock to
the present. The Education material primarily covers
Brown's involvement later in life with her alma mater
Woodbury College. This series contains miscellaneous
Financial and legal material, including a 1946 income tax
return; Awards; and a Videotape profile of Brown aired on
CNN. The Memorabilia is especially engaging, containing
writings and ephemera from her years in Little Rock and
those pre-dating Sex and the Single Girl. The Papers
contain a large selection of Photographs, some shot by
celebrity photographers, and many with celebrity
friends.
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(1939, 1950-2001)
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4 linear feet
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Brown has always been a prodigious correspondent. Her
correspondence is organized into several subseries. The
Individuals subseries is arranged alphabetically by name
and includes friends, frequent correspondents, and
correspondence more personal than businesslike.
Accordingly correspondence can be found here that is
related to her work at Cosmopolitan, her writings,
speeches and appearances, or other topics located
elsewhere in her papers. Correspondence with celebrities
is filed in Individuals.
The next subseries is Thank you and congratulatory
notes, mostly from her staff at Cosmopolitan magazine,
but also from her household staff and employers at
Hearst. This correspondence is mainly of a quotidian
nature, but illustrates how Brown, by many accounts a
demanding person, earned the respect of her staff and
employers.
Public response and fan mail includes letters from
readers of Brown's writings and viewers of her
appearances. Some letters are simple requests for
autographs, while others provide detailed and moving
accounts of how Brown's plan for success helped these
generally working-class women find degrees of
fulfillment. The extent to which these women embraced
Cosmopolitan's message is in sharp contrast to the
criticism leveled at the magazine by many conservatives
and feminists.
Correspondence by Subject includes letters generated
by Brown's philanthropic work, critiques of magazines
other than Cosmopolitan and other Hearst properties,
letters from libraries and museums interested in Brown's
work, love letters from the 1950s, and correspondence
with friends from Little Rock. The bulk of the Subject
correspondence involves Editor's perquisites/gifts. These
letters reveal Brown's personal interest in clothes and
cosmetics. Noted for her thrift, she often used her clout
as an editor of a women's magazine to obtain these items
wholesale. Manufacturers and designers, eager to have
their products highlighted in Cosmopolitan, and others
because they were friends, obliged. These letters give no
indication that the products were intended for the pages
of Cosmopolitan; such correspondence can be found in
SERIES V. COSMOPOLITAN. As best as can be determined, the
letters here pertain to gifts and perquisites that were
for Brown's personal use.
General correspondence contains letters of a quotidian
nature, regarding home repairs and so forth.
This series contains most of Brown's correspondence,
but there is additional correspondence in other series.
For example, correspondence generated by the planning and
execution of speeches and appearances, with publishers
and media figures interested in Helen's writings, and
tied explicitly to her work at Cosmopolitan can be found
in the relevant series. Correspondence connected to
specific projects has been kept with the project whenever
possible. An exception to this rule is celebrity
correspondence, which has been filed in SERIES II.
CORRESPONDENCE-Individuals even though it may relate to a
specific project. Determining whether or not
correspondence should be categorized as professional or
personal was one of the biggest challenges of this
collection, since Brown's work and personal life were
enmeshed. Many of the people with whom she maintained
friendships were figures in the media. In general, the
correspondence included in SERIES V. COSMOPOLITANis
explicitly related to the production of the magazine.
Nonetheless, many of the correspondents in SERIES II.
CORRESPONDENCE are at least tangentially related to
Cosmopolitan.
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(1962-2001),
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1.75 linear feet
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Material in this series pertains to Brown's
presentations in person, or on television or radio. There
are correspondence; speech texts; and notes from her
personal appearances, including the text of a debate in
which she participated at Oxford University. Her
television and radio work generated scripts; schedules;
and correspondence, including public response mail from
an appearance on the news program Dateline. Pilot shows
starring Brown, one in the 1960s called Outrageous
Opinions and another in the 1980s called What Should I
Do?, generated material as well. Television proposals
that never came to fruition are filed in SERIES IV.
WRITINGS. In the early 1960s, Brown recorded a radio show
that was syndicated in Canada. This series contains the
complete scripts of these recordings.
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(1940, 1956-2000),
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9 linear feet
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Besides editing Cosmopolitan, Helen Gurley Brown
occupied herself primarily as a writer. Before she wrote
the best-selling Sex and the Single Girl, she wrote ad
copy, of which a small amount can be found here, and
unpublished vignettes and poems. The emphasis on themes
of sexuality and independent womanhood is greater in
these early unpublished writings than her later published
works.
Brown's collection boasts impressive documentation of
her published writing efforts. It contains drafts;
manuscripts; newspaper clippings; and published copies of
Sex and the Single Girl, Sex and the Office, Outrageous
Opinions, Having It All, The Late Show, and I'm Wild
Again. Researchers interested in her first two books
should consult correspondence (filed in this series) with
her publisher Bernard Geis Associates, which includes
letters from Bernard Geis and Letty Cottin Pogrebin, and
the Lucy Kroll Agency. This correspondence gives an
excellent sense of the circumstances that surrounded
Brown's sudden rise to fame and the successful efforts of
Helen and David Brown to capitalize upon that fame. The
correspondence also elucidates the changing world of the
media and publishing in the 1960s as well as relatively
new strategies of marketing controversial and sexually
explicit material. Clippings record the public response
to such efforts.
There are published and draft versions of Brown's
magazine and newspaper articles in this series. Material
related to a syndicated advice column for single women
that ran between the time Sex and the Single Girl was
published and the point at which Brown took over
Cosmopolitan is of special interest. The series also
contains the scripts and LP albums Brown recorded, one an
album of advice, the other a recording of a speech. Short
pieces that Brown wrote for other people's books and
articles and her declines of such requests are found
here.
The unpublished material reveals the breadth of
Brown's ideas. Several proposals for unrealized
television programs, plays, and articles concern themes
that Brown repeated in her published work, but take a
more radical approach to them. Fragments of an incomplete
autobiography; an autobiographical theatrical piece,
which includes an audiotaped interview; and fictional
short stories and poems are included among the
unpublished works.
The series also contains letters to the editor, notes,
and some writings by David Brown
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(1965-2000)
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4.5 linear feet
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Helen Gurley Brown's 'child' for the past thirty-five
years has been Cosmopolitan magazine. She changed a
failing general interest magazine into a phenomenon - not
only a best-selling magazine, but a cultural icon.
This series comprehensively traces Brown's
Cosmopolitan career from its beginnings to her current
job evaluating Cosmopolitan's international editions. Of
special note is the proposal circulated by David and
Helen Brown for a new magazine, 'Femme,' that would
become Cosmopolitan's new format.
Throughout her tenure, a primary component of Brown's
job was the courting of advertisers. Texts of the
speeches and presentations she gave to advertisers and
international editorial staff, as well as acceptance
speeches for awards given to Cosmopolitan can be found in
the subseries Advertising and publicity. This subseries
includes advertisements for the magazine, including many
written by Brown; promotional materials from the Hearst
Corporation; and a large amount of newspaper clippings
documenting coverage of Cosmopolitan in the press.
Correspondence (the years 1988-89 are especially well
documented) illuminates the day-to-day operations of
Brown's editorial work, as letters flow between Brown and
writers, Cosmopolitan staffers, advertisers, and Hearst
executives regarding specific issues of the magazine as
well as ongoing concerns. Frequent correspondents among
the staff and Hearst executives are filed by individual.
Researchers interested in the advertising content of the
magazine may wish to consult the letters of Stan Perkins
and Seth Hoyt.
The Editorial subseries provides an in-depth look at
the magazine production process. Rules for writing and
art format, which Brown enforced strictly, are compiled
from the 1970s to the 90s. There are files of article
ideas and editing memos, and a sample folder that
represents the transformation of an article from its
submitted state to the published version. Some notes on
Brown's ideas for the magazine have been included, as is
information on production and circulation. This subseries
also contains the results of reader and staff surveys.
Within the Editorial material is a section on special
features. Material regarding the famous Burt Reynolds
centerfold and other special issues of the magazine, such
as anniversary issues and the last issue edited by Helen
Gurley Brown, are filed here. Another special feature was
the failed television pilot A View from Cosmo starring
Brown. A "Best of" set of articles has Brown's favorite
article among pieces from such regular Cosmopolitan
writers as Erica Jong, Judith Krantz, and Gail Sheehy; a
collection of some of Brown's long-running editorial,
"Step into My Parlor;" and drafts and a copy of the only
article Brown wrote for the magazine.
A small subseries concerns Cosmopolitan Events and
includes material from a lunch given by Brown for other
women's magazine editors to raise awareness for the
National Abortion Rights Action League and a party thrown
by the Hearst organization to celebrate Brown's
twenty-fifth anniversary as Editor.
A set of Cosmopolitan magazines from 1953-79 is housed
in the Sophia Smith Collection's Periodicals
Collection.
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(1965-96)
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.75 linear feet
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These items have been culled from other series for
preservation purposes. The series features large
photographs and artwork of Brown; an honorary degree;
birthday cards and tributes; writings; publicity from her
books and Cosmopolitan; material from Cosmopolitan; and
scrapbooks from Sex and the Office, a television show
proposal, a Cosmopolitan speech, and her Cosmopolitan
twenty-fifth anniversary party.
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