By Ron Gilbert
Ruth Gruber was really ahead of her time.” I am experiencing that feeling of zest which goes with exploration. I am in the thick of an historic moment” were the first lines she dispatched from the Soviet Artic in 1935.
I felt exactly like that as I watched this film at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles. Here was this 98 year (She will be 99 when this article is posted) female journalist share her experiences on her early days in these historical moments of her career. She has this vitality and sense of humor which would allow her to team up with 88 year old actress Betty White on Saturday Night Live when she is 100 years old. Ruth was born the same year (1911) as my mom, who is no longer with us, and seemed to express herself in a way that touched my heart and also my mind.
Gruber's on-screen voice is heard throughout this film as she described her globetrotting career. First as a teen in 1920s New York, she possessed a love of Virginia Woolf's views and also had a strong desire for German culture and language. As a student she lived in Cologne and observed the rise of Hitler firsthand.
Cinematographer Bob Richman's directorial debut is a portrait of an extraordinary woman whose life is an engrossing story of proto-feminist achievement and humbling empathy.
Born in Brooklyn in 1911, Ruth Gruber became the youngest PhD in the world before going on to become an international foreign correspondent and photojournalist at age 24. She emerged as the eyes and conscience of the world. With her love of adventure, fearlessness and powerful intellect, Ruth defied tradition in an extraordinary career that has spanned more than seven decades.
In this documentary we follow her career as the first journalist to enter the Soviet Arctic in 1935 who also traveled to Alaska as a member of the Roosevelt administration and in 1942, she escorted Holocaust refugees to America in 1944.Then she covered the Nuremberg trials in 1946 and documented the Haganah ship Exodus in 1947. That harrowing journey shows in detail the British government’s reaction which I was not aware of. Her relationships with world leaders including Eleanor Roosevelt, President Harry Truman, and David Ben Gurion gave her unique access and insight into the modern history of the Jewish people.
Ruth is truly an inspiration for her ground-breaking career which is reflected in the film which interweaves verite scenes with never-seen-before archival footage.
This is a film for all ages and is currently at the Laemmle theaters in Beverly Hills and Encino and should not be missed. After that read her books and hopefully we will see her at the Oscars. Next year. I leave you with her words” There will be peace someday “
http://www.ruthgruberthemovie.com/
25.09.2010 | Editor's blog
Cat. : actress Alaska America BETTY WHITE Bob Richman British government British people Brooklyn CDATA Cologne Contact Details correspondent and photojournalist David Ben Gurion Eleanor Roosevelt English people Gruber Harry Truman Hitler http://www.ruthgruberthemovie.com Journalist Literature Los Angeles Museum of Tolerance New York Nuremberg Person Attributes Person Career Person Location Person Travel president Ron GilbertRuth Ruth Gruber Ruth Gruber the Oscars Virginia Woolf Virginia Woolf