Eartha Kitt, CIA Target
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Eartha Kitt, self-described "sex kitten" and singer of the yuletide classic "Santa Baby" died this week on Christmas Day. My wife and I had one memorable encounter with Kitt last year at LAX. We were waiting for my sister and her family to arrive from Chicago on an American Airlines flight. In the terminal, we were standing next to a limo driver holding a sign that said "Kitt." I wondered if he could possibly be waiting for the star who I was first was introduced to as a child on the TV show "Batman." Kitt was the controversial replacement for Julie Newmar's Catwoman character, and while my heart always belonged to Julie, I had to admit that the feline Kitt was a sexy-as-hell, delightfully evil villain--one of the first black women on television who was allowed to exude such sex appeal in the 1960s.

Suddenly, descending down the airport escalator, we saw a breathtaking vision of old school glamour: gorgeous Eartha Kitt, already 80, decked out in a glittery turban and false eyelashes, and holding a floor-length mink coat. My family members were right behind her, but we ignored them completely since our eyes were riveted to the incandescent Star. As she walked toward us, the driver stuck out his hand to introduce himself. "How do you do, Miss Kitt," he said politely. Without missing a beat or even glancing in his direction, Eartha dropped her heavy mink coat onto the driver's outstretched hand and continued walking, looking like a queen who could not be bothered to make eye contact with her subjects. Wow.

Let's take a look at one of Kitt's trademark numbers, " IWant to Be Evil." She loved playing the mischievous, sexy vixen, and thoughshe's not the best lip-syncher in the world, this 1962 clip shows Eartha at hersultry best:

To listen to Eartha Kitt's unique speaking voice and to hearher strangely accented singing, an uninitiated fan might think she hailed fromthe West Indies or perhaps some exotic European principality. But Eartha Kittwas a product of the American Deep South, born in the tiny town of North, SouthCarolina, in 1927. Her mother was a poor African-American woman and her fatherwas the white son of a plantation owner. When Kitt's mother later marriedanother white man, he wanted nothing to do with his wife's mixed-race child, soEartha was shipped off to poor relations in Harlem.

Kitt's difficult early life in the ghettos of New York andthen in London and Paris are well documented in her obituaries, as is her earlyrise to fame--as a dancer in Katherine Dunham's company, playingopposite Orson Welles in a European production of "Dr. Faustas," and finally herbreakthrough role on Broadway in "New Faces of 1952." She was nominated for a Tony Award for her portrayal of a 15-year-old girl living in the ghetto in "Mrs. Patterson," starred in films opposite Nat King Cole and Sidney Poitier, and became world-famous for her sexy nightclub performances. There's much to say aboutKitt's amazing career, but instead I want to focus on a pivotal episode in her life that I vividly remember fromchildhood: when Eartha Kitt went to the White House in 1968 and was condemnedfor making First Lady Lady Bird Johnson cry.

In January 1968, Kitt was invited to a luncheon the FirstLady was giving that featured a discussion on crime and juvenile delinquency. Always known for speakingher mind, Kitt caused a sensation when she challenged Mrs. Johnson about theeffects of the war on young people in America. As the New York Times reported:


Singer Eartha Kitt stunned fellow guests at a White House
luncheon and left Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson in tears Thursday when she declared
angrily that the Vietnam War was causing American youth to rebel in the cities.

About 50 white and Negro women invited to the White House to
discuss President Johnson's proposals to combat crime in the streets sat at their
tables in embarrassed silence as Miss Kitt delivered an emotional tirade
against the war.

"You send the best of this country off to be shot and
maimed," she told her fellow guests. "They rebel in the street. They will take
pot...and they will get high. They don't want to go to school because they're
going to be snatched off from their mothers to be shot in Vietnam."

Mrs. Johnson rose afterward and looked directly at the
singer, who leaned against a podium in the yellow-walled family dining room.
"Because there is a war on--and I pray that there will be a just and honest
peace--that still doesn't give us a free ticket not to try to work for better
things such as against crime in the streets, better education, and better
health for our people," Mrs. Johnson said, her voice trembling and tears
welling in her eyes.

The President had dropped in on the luncheon briefly, and
answered a pointed question from Miss Kitt, but left before her outburst.

Miss Kitt, her eyes flashing in defiance while she puffed on
a cigarette and jabbed a finger at her startled audience, said American youth
are "angry because their parents are angry...because there is a war going on that
they don't understand." She told Mrs. Johnson that youngsters feel alienated
because "they can't get to you and they can't get to the President, and so they
rebel in the streets."

Many in the crowd sat in stunned silence and then cheered thewife of the governor of New Jersey who rose next to defend the war.Kitt probably had no idea that a media frenzy would erupt over her words andthat her career would be severely affected. To her credit, the First Lady neveraccused Kitt of doing anything wrong. Realizing that she may have offendedpeople, Eartha tried to explain herself toward the end of the luncheon.

Miss Kitt rose during a question-and-answer period afterward
and apologized for speaking up if she had offended the President and his wife.
But, she said, turning to the other well-dressed guests. "I have to say what is
in my heart." She said she had not walked the streets of ghettos as a crusader
as some of the other guests had, but "I have lived in the gutters."

"I'm sorry," Mrs. Johnson replied. "I cannot understand the
things that you do. I have not lived with the background that you have. I cannot
speak as passionately or as well as you. But I think we have made advances in
these things and we will do more."

Still, the irrepressible Kitt couldn't stop herself. Shecontinued:

"We have to realize where the truth really is," she said,
pointing her finger at the guests who sat transfixed. "The children of America
are not rebelling for no reason. They are not hippies for no reason at all. We
don't have what we have on Sunset Blvd. For no reason. They are rebelling
against something. There are so many things burning the people of this country,
particularly mothers. They feel they are going to raise sons--and I know what
it's like, and you have children of your own, Mrs. Johnson--we raise children
and send them to war."

She said that today's youth feels there is no reason to be a
"good guy." He would rather go to jail as a "bad guy" and avoid the draft, she
said. "They feel that if they have any life, it's best to live because they may
not be here tomorrow."

Was anybody ever that honest to a President orFirst Lady? The reporters couldn't get out of that room fast enough to filetheir stories, some of them in support of Eartha's right to speak up, but manyhighly critical. Editorials condemning the singer appeared around the country,as well as many angry letters. Everyone got into the act, from actress MarthaRaye and former child star Shirley Temple Black, who criticizedEartha, to writer Gore Vidal who praised her. PresidentJohnson's pastor felt it his duty to apologize for Miss Kitt in a publicizedtelegram sent to the President the next day:

"I commend you for all the work you have been doing to urge
more justice and opportunity, especially for Negroes, and because all the
Americans are in a sense a family, I apologize for any member of that family
including Negroes who are ill-mannered, stupid, and arrogant."

Shocked by the negative response to her comments, Kitt wasaccosted at the airport when she returned to Los Angeles.

Arriving from Washington, Miss Kitt explained that she had
said "only what was in my heart and head. People thought I was rude, but
there's nothing rude about telling the truth. All those very nice people kept
saying very nice things about putting flowers in Harlem and making bigger street
lights to keep the cities safe," she said. "I thought they were avoiding
talking about the reasons we have problems with crime and problems with our
children."

Letters sent to the New York Times about the matter ran thegamut. Many took Kitt to task:

Once again bad taste has been flaunted in the guise of
"Freedom." Eartha Kitt's "performance" at the White House was unforgiveable.
The legitimate cause of civil rights and the image of our Negro population is
damaged by irresponsible acts like this. Why must the Negro be subjected to and
exploited by Communists and publicity-seeking egotists who will espouse any
current cause without knowledge or research or soul-searching. Eartha Kitt
could not afford to buy the front-page publicity that her affrontery reaped.

And this:

Eartha Kitt said she spoke for millions when she behaved in
a rude and stupid manner towards Mrs. Johnson. She did not speak for anyone
except hate-filled gutless fools. She did not speak for my son in the army; for
my daughter who is working hard so her husband can finish college; for me, or
my husband or our three younger children. We were all shocked at her
unnecessary behavior. She had a tough childhood...so did I and I'm not
crying...that meeting wasn't for her to air her crude adjectives and gripes of
life.

But others supported the star:

Three cheers for Eartha Kitt! In a few words she expressed
what is in my heart, and Im sure many other mothers'. Hers must have been the
first honest words the White House walls have heard in a long time--words that
were not first edited, programmed, pre-digested, and homogenized before the
President heard them. And fie on those who feel they must apologize for her. No
apologies necessary.

As well as thisarticulate response from a doctor in Philadelphia:

Eartha Kitt is to be commended for her courageous direct
speaking to Mrs. Lyndon Johnson. The Vietnam War is alienating our
youth--whether in the streets or on the college campuses. Our young people see
our society expending the major portion of its economic resources and many
thousands of lives (their lives) to achieve, by morally dubious means,
questionable political ends. The Vietnam war is preventing desperately needed
efforts to solve our grave domestic problems that include the needs for
improved education, better housing, urban renewal, more jobs for the
underprivileged--problems which lie at the root of racial tensions.

The Johnson Administration needs to know that there are
many, many people in this country who understand this, who are gravely
concerned, and who are--yes--angry because they feel utterly frustrated in their
attempts to transmit their concern to their President and to the Congress For
this reason I applaud Miss Kitt's plain speaking.

The real issue about this incident is not whether Miss Kitt
was discourteous or unpatriotic or publicity-seeking; it is whether she was
speaking the truth. I believe that she was.

As the furor deepened, Kitt got more defensive about heractions:

"People have the feeling that I yelled and was impolite;
that's not true at all. I raised my hand and Mrs. Johnson asked me my opinion.
I said, as unemotionally as possible under the circumstances, that we had been
hiding our heads in the sand, that we hadn't got to the core of the problem of
juvenile delinquency. Reality was being overlooked. As a citizen of my
country--thank heavens there is a country left that has the guts to let its
people say what they thing--as an actress, a Negro, whoever, I am entitled to my
opinion, particularly when it is asked of me."

Following the incident, nervous nightclub owners andproducers cancelled Kitt's contracts and, according to the New York Times,"recoiled at the mention of her name." Eartha was not contrite. "For years Iwent along with the idea that entertainers should not get involved withpolitics. Today, I realize that because of our contact with the public, we haveto speak out, to make those who are responsible more aware of what is happeningwhere they perhaps cannot see. Particularly someone like myself, who has livedthe life of poverty."

Kitt began a lengthy tour of Europe but eventually was ableto get gigs in the United States. Although the "activist" label she neversought stayed with her, she returned to entertaining with her ultra-sexy stagepersona. It wasn't until 1975 that she learned, via a front-page story in theNew York Times, how she had been closely watched by the CIA:

The Central Intelligence Agency compiled a dossier of
secondhand gossip about entertainer Eartha Kitt's social life at the request of
the Secret Service in 1968 but produced no evidence of foreign intelligence
connections. The CIA's report was prompted by Miss Kitt's criticism of the
Vietnam war to Lady Bird Johnson during a White House luncheon on January 18,
1968.

Miss Kitt was depicted in the report as having a "very nasty
disposition" and as being a "spoiled child, very crude, and having a vile
tongue." Miss Kitt, who is black, was said in the report not to associate with
other black persons and to have "bragged" that she had "very little Negro
blood."

The CIA document noted that Miss Kitt signed an
advertisement in support of the late Dr. Martin Luther King's civil rights
drive in the South, and then observed that "a number of persons identified in
the past with the Communist Party" had also endorsed the ad.

Eartha was horrified by the allegations which includedcharges from the CIA that she was a "sadistic nymphomaniac." She spoke out:

This is too much. This is more than I can or will take. I am
determined to do my part in stopping the gradual erosion of American freedom.
If this is not done, the day when the enemies of freedom--be they Communist,
Fascist, or what have you--walk right in and take over our country will come
sooner than most of us are inclined to think.

As for reports of the CIA's invasion of my right to privacy,
I am insulted, disappointed, and annoyed, but I don't find it particularly
surprising. This is only one of a number of hardships that I have had to endure
since making those remarks in 1968.

Following my little talk at the White House, most of my
nightclub and hotel engagements in this country were canceled--even though
contracts had been entered into. That I should be singled out appears, at first
glance, to be puzzling. Scores of Hollywood, television, and music
personalities, both American and foreign-born, have been far more critical of
America's foreign and domestic policies than I have. The difference, of course,
is that I am not Barbara Howar or Jane Fonda or Candice Bergen. I am a black
woman.

I have always known that racism was widespread in America;
after all, I spent most of my childhood in South Carolina on a cotton
plantation and in the streets of Harlem. But it took the aftermath of the 1968
incident to prove to me just how deeply racial prejudice is rooted in the
American national character.

Because I am black, I had to be taught a lesson, and put
back into my place as a singing, dancing, mindless automaton who saw no evil,
did no evil, and most important, publicly spoke no evil.

In my case, the CIA apparently didn't even have accurate
information. For example, the news stories said the agency had learned I did
"not associate with other black persons." That's nonsense. I have always taken
an interest in the black community, even before it became fashionable to do so.
I taught dancing at the Harlem YWCA as early as 1952, and have been teaching a
dance class in Watts for almost 10 years.

I don't regret anything that I've said or done. I have
suffered a lot financially, but I have survived. I only have pity and sympathy
for those who tucked their moral tails in between their legs and cuddled up to
the Johnson and Nixon administrations' immoral and unjust policies.

How can you not admire a woman with such guts? She didn'tstep foot in the White House again until Jimmy Carter invited her there in1978. In 2006, she even returned there to light the Christmas tree with GeorgeW. Bush.

Kitt's personal life was never a happy one, at least not interms of men. She used to sum up her love life in six words: rejected, ejected,dejected, used, accused, abused.. But her brief marriage to William McDonaldproduced her beloved daughter Kitt, and she was very close to her grandchildrenbefore she died.

There are so many other fascinating details about EarthaKitt's life--triumphs and challenges, scandals and tragedies, hersupport of Israel and Jewish causes, but I'll end with a quote from the firstof her three autobiographies. This is from her 1956 book called "Thursday'sChild."

"I think I am an example of what can happen to someone who
tries. I am a Negress out of the cotton fields. I had enough ambition within
myself to try to create a better world--in spite of the depressions and the
suppressions, and I had my share. I hope that I can encourage others to try,
and that you don't have to crush anybody to get there, you don't have to push
through too harshly."

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