By DWIGHT GARNER
The Italian journalist
Oriana Fallaci (1929-2006) wrote all sorts of things during her long career:
novels, polemics, war dispatches, truth-dealing celebrity profiles.
But her Christiane Amanpour
meets Joan Didion reputation rests on her confrontational interviews, mostly
with political figures, which were repackaged in best-selling books in the
1970s and 80s. Fallaci’s questions could resemble rectal probes.
She began an interview with
the actress Gina Lollobrigida by stating, “I don’t think you’re as stupid as
people say.” With Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, she asked: “Do you know you are
so unloved and unliked?”
Her interviews were
guerrilla achievements and global events. She was witty, well-prepared,
antagonistic; she got people to say things they ordinarily would not.
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger regretted his 1972 interview with Fallaci after he referred to
himself in it as a “cowboy who leads the wagon train by riding ahead alone on
his horse.” This displeased President Richard Nixon and prompted what passed at
the time for a sizable scandal.
Interviewing Ayatollah
Khomeini in Iran in 1979, Fallaci wore a chador. When she criticized the
condition of women in Iran, Khomeini said, “If you do not like Islamic dress
you are not obliged to follow it. The chador is only for young and respectable
women.”
Fallaci tore it from her
head, saying, “That’s very kind of you, Imam. And since you said so, I’m going
to take off this stupid, medieval rag right now.”
Cristina De Stefano Credit
Francesco Castaldo
Fallaci was sometimes criticized for being a poseur and a
narcissist. But there was no one like her and there still isn’t.
Fallaci is the subject of a
short new biography, “Oriana Fallaci: The Journalist, the Agitator, the
Legend,” by the journalist Cristina De Stefano. Written in Italian, it has been
translated into English by Marina Harss.
It’s the first authorized
biography we have of Fallaci, with access to new personal records, and welcome
for that reason. It is not particularly well-written or thoughtful but it gets
her story onto the page and, thanks to its subject, is never dull.
Fallaci was tiny (five feet
one, 92 pounds) but had an explosive personality. She was called La Fallaci.
She did not take well to editing. She did not suffer fools.
She was born in Florence,
where her father was a cabinetmaker and part of the anti-fascist resistance
during World War II. As a young girl she became a courier for the resistance,
smuggling hand grenades inside heads of lettuce.
Her mother was intelligent
but stunted; she was forced to cook and clean for her husband’s extended
family. Fallaci said she became a journalist, then largely a man’s profession,
in part to vindicate her mother………………..
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/10/16/books/review-oriana-fallaci-biography-cristina-de-stefano.html
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