Fadiman, Annalee (1916–2002)

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Fadiman, Annalee (1916–2002)

American screenwriter and war journalist. Name variations: Annalee Whitmore; Annalee Whitmore Jacoby; Annalee Jacoby Fadiman or Annalee Whitmore Fadiman. Born Annalee Whitmore, May 27, 1916, in Price, Utah; died Feb 5, 2002, in Captiva, Florida; dau. of Leland Whitmore (bank president) and Anne Sharp Whitmore (librarian); graduate of Stanford, 1937; m. Melville Jacoby (Time magazine correspondent), 1941 (killed near Darwin, Australia, during WWII); became 2nd wife of Clifton Fadiman (tv moderator and book reviewer for The New Yorker), 1950 (died 1999); children: son Kim, daughter Anne.

While in college, was the 1st woman to be managing editor of the Stanford Daily newspaper; moved to Hollywood and cowrote screenplay for Andy Hard Meets Debutante (1940); went to China to report on the war for Liberty magazine (1941); became foreign correspondent for Life and Time magazines and co-authored Thunder out of China with Theodore H. White; after the war, appeared on radio quiz show "Information Please."