Sandra Hochman

Sandra Hochman
Born (1936-09-11) September 11, 1936
Manhattan, New York City
Nationality American
Education Bennington College, Columbia University, Sorbonne University
Known for Poet, Novelist, Screenwriter, Lyricist, Film Producer, Journalist, Educator
Notable work Walking Papers, Manhattan Pastures
Spouse(s) Ivry Gitlis (d. 1960). Harvey Leve (m. 1965; d. 1970)
Children Ariel S. Leve
Website sandrahochman.com
Signature

Sandra Hochman (born September 11, 1936 in New York City) is an award winning American author, poet, journalist, novelist, educator, screenwriter, lyricist and documentary film maker. Her first autobiographical novel Walking Papers was very well received and Philip Roth called it a masterpiece. She has published 7 books of poetry and is the first female to receive the Yale Series of Younger Poets Competition. She is the highest paid female journalist in America. She had written for The New York Times, Life (magazine), People (magazine), New York (magazine) and many more. She created the Foundation You're an Artist Too, which was an after school program held weekly at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Her film Year of The Woman is the first feminist film ever made. She co-produced it with Porter Bibb, the producer of The Rolling Stones documentary Gimme Shelter. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. described it as “the greatest combination of sex and politics ever seen in a film.”`

Life

After she graduated from the Cherry Lawn boarding school, she went on to graduate from Bennington College. She also has a master's degree in comparative literature from Columbia University. When she was living in Paris she studied at the Sorbonne. She was poet-in-residence at Fordham University, and City College of New York.

When she was young she met Israeli violinist Ivry Gitlis. They were married in Israel, and soon after they lived in Paris. They were stars in the Paris world of culture which she writes about in her book Paris 1958 - 1960. After she and Gitlis were divorced she married Harvey Leve, a Harvard University lawyer who was the head of the treasury department in Hong Kong. They had a daughter, the writer Ariel Leve. After they divorced, Harvey was an international lawyer in Thailand and later Indonesia. He is now retired and lives in Bali. Their daughter, who is a award winning journalist for the London Times, travels between New York and Bali.

Sandra is also a journalist as well as a poet. She was one of the first women to write a humor column for Harpers Bazaar Magazine. She also wrote her own column alternating with Gloria Steinem.

Her documentary, the first and only documentary about the women's movement, was made in 1972 at the Democratic Convention. It was shown all over the world including Paris, London and New York. Arthur M. Schlesinger said that it is the best documentary ever made.

Her poems appeared in a two page spread in The New Yorker. She was one of the youngest poets to have her collected poems (Earthworks) published by the Viking Press. Ms. Huffington showed her film in 2017. She had also had musicals produced on and off Broadway. Her upcoming one woman play based on her memoir My father, My friend is going to be directed by Julie Arnell in June of 2018. She created her own foundation, "You're an Artist Too" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art to teach poetry to children ages 7–12. She ran this program for 15 years. She had lived in Paris and Hong Kong and now lives in Manhattan.

Awards

You're An Artist Too

Hochman Created the Foundation You're An Artist Too which was an after school program held weekly at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was for children for ages 8–12 and it successfully ran for 15 years. Her Foundation received a generous donation from the Uris Brothers Fund in the amount of 300 million dollars. Because the program was so popular, it received a two page review in The New York Times.

Works

Poetry

  • Voyage Home: Poems. Paris: Two Cities, 1960.
  • Manhattan Pastures. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1963. Yale Series of Younger Poets, v. 59.
  • The Vaudeville Marriage: Poems. New York: Viking, 1966.
  • Maps for The Skin. New York, Viking
  • Love Poems: Ch’ing Shih. Hong Kong: I Lin Wen Chu Yin Shua, 1966. 100 copies.
  • Love Letters from Asia: Poems. New York: Viking, 1968.
  • Earthworks: Poems 1960-1970. New York: Viking, 1970; London: Secker & Warburg, 1972. ISBN 978-0-436-19920-2
  • Futures: New Poems. New York: Viking, 1974.

Novels

  • Walking Papers. New York: Viking, 1971.
  • The Magic Convention. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1971.
  • Happiness Is Too Much Trouble: A Novel. New York: Putnam, 1976.
  • Endangered Species: A Novel. New York: Putnam, 1977. ISBN 978-0-380-42366-8
  • Jogging: A Love Story. New York: Putnam, 1979.
  • Playing Tahoe: A Novel. New York: Wyndham Books, 1981. ISBN 978-0-671-25358-5
  • Loving Robert Lowell. Nashville, Turner Publishing, 2017.
  • The Shakespeare Conspiracy Nashville, Turner Publishing, 2017.
  • Paris 1958-1960 (Memoir) Nashville, Turner Publishing, 2017.
  • My Father, My Friend (Memoir) Nashville, Turner Publishing, 2018.

Non-fiction

  • Sandra Hochman, Sybil Wong (1976). Satellite Spies: The Frightening Impact of a New Technology. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill. ISBN 978-0-672-52137-9.
  • Streams: Life Secrets for Writing Poems and Songs. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. 1978. ISBN 978-0-13-851261-3.
  • 23 Ways of Looking at a Company. New York, Lincoln Center

Children's Books

  • Timmy The Great. with Tad Danielak, New York, Fidelity Books, 1999.
  • The Magic Convention. Doubleday, New York, 1971

Journalism

Scriptwriting

Theater

Playwright

Musicals

Film

Reviews

  • Sandra Hochman and Art Buchwald are the best new comedy team since Hepburn and Tracy - or maybe Dressler and Beery - Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
  • Hilarious...absolutely brilliant. - Gail Rock, Ms. Magazine
  • Against the backdrop of political convention insanity, Ms; Hochman is strong and forceful but still fetchingly feminine - a serious poet of considerable depth. - Norma McLain Stoop. - AFTER DARK
  • Patches of Ms. Hochman's autobiographical poetry are stitched into the entire pattern of this colorful crazy-quilt documentary. - Liz Smith, COSMOPOLITAN
  • The film is well done with an asset in its taut editing that keeps the material bouncing along, neat lensing and an overall revealing look at an interesting woman demanding her place at the very seat of political power. - VARIETY
  • ...the film has vigor, filled with both colorful footage and provocative talk. - CUE
  • Miss Hochman and her crew of camera people and cheerleaders are a lot of fun, especially when they intrude on a staff meeting of CBS News assault Mike Wallace, John Hart and Roger Mudd...The news stalwarts try to keep a straight face. You don't have to. - PENTHOUSE
  • Most eloquent is the silent somber scenes of Veterans against Vietnam. - NEW YORK POST
  • Year of the Woman is the rare species, a passionate documentary. A current of electricity runs through the entire film, and it should excite, enrage and even polarize. - Kathleen Carroll, LEASURE and the ARTS
  • Douglas Rogers (16 April 2004). "The troublemaker". The Guardian.
  • Douglas Rogers (July 4, 2004). "Lights, Camera, Sexism!". The Washington Post.
  • STEVE PERSALL (January 16, 2004). "It's finally the 'Year of the Woman'". The St. Petersburg Times.
  • "Savion Glover to Direct New Musical Timmy the Great in NYC Industry Reading", Playbill, Kenneth Jones, 14 Jul 2004
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