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"The real Los Angeles cannot be
seen because it is to be found only in such invisible qualities as newness,
openness, freedom, variety, tolerance, and optimism, and of course the
weather – which is visible only when it’s bad." |
Jack
Clifford Smith (1916-1996) was a journalist, author, and newspaper columnist
who wrote about
Born
in
The
war over, he continued his migratory ways, working at times for United Press,
the Sacramento Union, San Diego Journal, and two erstwhile Los
Angeles newspapers, the Daily News and Herald-Express. In 1953,
at the age of 37, he joined the Los Angeles Times, where he remained for
the rest of his life, moving from general assignment reporting to the rewrite
desk (from which he wrote occasional humor pieces for the Op-Ed page), and
finally to a regular column, which he undertook reluctantly in 1958, fearing he
would fail. "His use of the language was meticulous, his manners were
graceful – both in print and in public – and his middle-aged
fascination with the trivia of a changing world was a constant delight to his
readers," wrote the Times.
Smith
shared his life with his readers, who, like him, were "members of the
post-World War II generation that filled the Southland’s subdivisions and
schools, built swimming pools, raised kids, supported the public library,
watched football and went to the philharmonic," wrote Times reporter
Bill Boyarsky. Everything and everyone around him became grist for his mill:
his wife Denise, his children, the Smith home atop Mount Washington, bird
watching, disappearing landmarks,
"In
many ways, Jack served as the country’s first -- and most enduring --
columnist of postwar suburbia," wrote Times reporter Robert A. Jones.
"With his minimalist, non-intrusive style, he fit superbly with his era.
He functioned almost as a diarist of the time when modern
Quoting
a friend who believed that
Here
is Jack Smith on the subject of East Coast journalists who put down
"They
are sent out here on expense accounts to write stories that will please their
editors, and their editors want to be told that
In
time, Smith’s writings became as synonymous with
Smith
was the author of ten books, including one published posthumously, Jack
Smith: Eternally Yours (1996), a collection of ninety columns,
mostly from the last ten years of his life. His first book, Three
Coins in the Birdbath, appeared in 1965. His other books include: Smith
on Wry (1970), God and Mr. Gomez (1974), The Big Orange (1976), Spend All Your Kisses, Mr. Smith (1978), Jack
Smith’s L.A. (1980), How to Win a Pullet Surprise (1982), Cats, Dogs and Other Strangers at My Door (1984), and Alive
in La La Land (1989). God and Mr. Gomez, which described the
building of the Smiths’ beach home in
Finally,
as the Times noted, "After about 6,000 columns over 30 years,
bowing only slightly to declining health, Smith cut back in 1992 from four
columns a week to one, which appeared on Mondays. For most of his career, he
wrote five columns a week."
The
final columns chronicled his own declining health, "the failures of a body
that now needed the assistance of his wife, Denny, and others to get around
town," stated Bill Boyarsky. "He’s covering his own
death," said former Times editor Bill Thomas to Boyarsky. "And
Jack was doing it, Thomas explained, just as he had covered everything else
– with precision and a clear eye. No sentimentality or self-pity
cluttered up his last story."
Smith’s
final column appeared in the Times on Christmas Day, 1995, fifteen days
before his death on Jan. 9, 1996, at age 79, from severe heart failure.
Jack
Smith’s contribution to
--
Contributed by Albert Greenstein, 1999