Houston Chronicle Sunday

Cynthia MaCdonald

1928-2015

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Cynthia Lee Macdonald, passed away at the age of 87 after a more than 10 year battle with Alzheimer’s. Cynthia was, by trade, a poet, a psychoanal­yst and an opera singer, and by heart the mother of two children and one grandchild who survive her; Jennifer Tim Macdonald of New York, NY; Scott Thurston Macdonald of Denver, Colorado; and grandchild Liam Skyler Watts of New York, NY.

Cynthia was born in New York City in 1928 to parents Dorothy Kiam and screenwrit­er Leonard Lee, and was raised in New York and Beverly Hills. She was educated at the Brearley School, the Mannes School of Music, Bennington and Sara Lawrence College. Her profession­al life began as a dramatic soprano, winning both the San Francisco Opera Auditions and singing on CBC Radio.

After marrying Shell Oil executive “Mac” Macdonald, their geographic movements tied to his career made the continued pursuit of a singing career difficult, and so with early support from poet Ann Sexton, she turned her fine intellect and talent instead to the pursuit of the voice of the pen, going on to publish 6 volumes of poetry. Cynthia taught in the early 70’s at Sarah Lawrence where she served as the interim Dean of Studies, and then as tenured faculty at Johns Hopkins University. In 1979, she cofounded the University of Houston graduate creative writing program, which soon became one of the top graduate writing programs in the country. Motivated to help students solve writing blocks, she studied Freudian psychoanal­ysis, becoming the first non-MD student ever to be accepted in to the HoustonGal­veston Psychoanal­ytic Institute. She later joined the faculty of the Institute and maintained a psychoanal­ytic practice while continuing to teach at U of H. Cynthia’s last book, “I Can’t Remember”, uncannily foreshadow­ed her illness. Cynthia would have wished to - and will – be largely remembered by her many achievemen­ts, but her family will also remember her for the grace and courage she showed as she navigated the collapsing empire of her mind.

A Memorial Service, to be held this fall, will be announced. In lieu of Flowers please consider donations in Cynthia’s name to INPRINT, Houston’s premier literary arts nonprofit, which Cynthia named and of which she was one of the founders, or the Fisher Center for Alzheimer’s Research.

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