Los Angeles Times

Foreign correspond­ent who broke barriers

GEORGIE ANNE GEYER, 1935 - 2019

- By Steve Marble

Georgie Anne Geyer, a longtime foreign correspond­ent who chased after the world’s most despotic leaders while clearing the way for a future generation of women journalist­s who’d largely been excluded from the male-dominated foreign press corps, has died at her home in Washington. She was 84.

First as a reporter in Chicago, then as a syndicated columnist whose work appeared in the Los Angeles Times and scores of other publicatio­ns, Geyer seemed to live a life of adventure — trooping through the hills of Guatemala with guerrilla fighters, held by Palestinia­n commandos who believed she was a mysterious foreign agent known as the Israeli Blonde, locked up by jittery government officials in Angola.

Geyer interviewe­d autocrats, strongmen and fiery

revolution­aries. Fidel Castro, she told the Chicago Tribune, was sweet, though “essentiall­y incoherent,” while Libya’s Moammar Kadafi seemed nothing more than “a desert boy.” Saddam Hussein she called mysterious, his intentions hidden behind his “hooded eyes.”

“One of the nice things about interviewi­ng Castro is that you don’t really have to ask him any question,” she told The Times. “He starts talking, and eight hours later he stops talking.”

But for someone who leaned on the written and spoken word to tell her stories, Geyer’s upward arc as a journalist was slowed when she was diagnosed with cancer of the tongue. She continued to write a column until late in life, but had to largely forgo speaking engagement­s and found it difficult to carry out interviews or appear on the Sunday morning news roundup shows she so enjoyed.

“When you come and you can’t speak, people tire of you very quickly,” she said.

Dan Southerlan­d, a former Washington Post correspond­ent and a friend, said Geyer’s death on May 15 arose from complicati­ons of pneumonia.

At its height, Geyer’s column — first syndicated by The Times and later by Universal Press Syndicate — was carried by more than 100 newspapers across the nation. Geyer was a regular on news talk shows and filled bookstores with her biographie­s, commentari­es and even a book on the relationsh­ip between royalty and their pampered cats.

On the road in Central America, the Middle East and Africa, Geyer traveled with three sets of clothes, a swimsuit and an Olivetti typewriter.

Her mission was to seek out the powerful men — always men, she came to see — who ruled the world, often with bloodshed and unchecked cruelty.

A woman in her 20s in what then was a middle-age man’s world, Geyer cringed at the suggestion that she should use her femininity to land interviews or coax world leaders into talking freely.

“I just couldn’t picture waking up at 3 in the morning with some stranger lying next to me and saying, ‘Eh, Che, mi amor, tell me where your missiles are,” she wrote in “Buying the Night Flight: The Autobiogra­phy of a Woman Foreign Correspond­ent.” “Men apparently think this is the way it’s done.”

Born April 2, 1935, and raised in a brick bungalow in Chicago’s working-class Far South Side, Geyer grew up long before the women’s movement arrived. She graduated from Northweste­rn University’s Medill School of Journalism and attended the University of Vienna on a Fulbright scholarshi­p. She became fluent in Spanish, German, Russian and Portuguese. To most, she was known as Gee Gee.

“World War II had left the United States with men who craved the hearth and women who craved their men,” she wrote in her autobiogra­phy, according to the Tribune.

She began her career at the Southtown Economist in suburban Chicago, then moved on to the Chicago Daily News, where she sat across from Mike Royko, who would become the city’s signature columnist. Women in the newsroom, he advised her, are “as rare as a teetotaler.”

Abroad, Geyer met with Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Palestine Liberation Organizati­on leader Yasser Arafat and Juan and Eva Peron, the Argentine strongman and his charismati­c wife.

She was drawn to Latin America and its cast of rebels, freedom fighters and iron-willed rulers. She hiked the hills in Guatemala with guerrilla fighters.

Her reporting was questioned at times and she was branded by some as being anti-Israel because of her focus on Palestine. Others complained that she fawned over tyrants and humanright­s abusers, failing to appreciate the everyday people who suffered under their rule.

In her 1996 book “Americans No More,” she underscore­d her right-leaning beliefs by predicting that “illegal aliens will destroy the very fabric” of America and complained that too many “non-Europeans” were pouring across the border. The world, she wrote, was filled with people who shared the same question: “Who belongs, and why?”

“Above all, I am a true universali­st, appreciati­ng every culture, speaking five languages, exploring the countries of the world with the passion of a lover,” she wrote.

When age forced her to cut back on travel and cancer silenced her speaking schedule, she continued to roam the world from her home, reading five newspapers daily with CNN humming in the background and a cup of coffee at her side.

Never married, Geyer had no immediate survivors.

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