Frances Spatz Leighton (born Frances Ornstein; September 4, 1919 – April 6, 2007) was an American author, ghostwriter, and journalist. She ghostwrote several memoirs and accounts of Washington D. C. life, writing over 30 books, including My Thirty Years Backstairs at the White House (1961) and My Life with Jacqueline Kennedy (1969). She was born in Ohio and attended Ohio State University, but did not graduate. Leighton soon moved to Washington, D.C., where she worked as a journalist for several publications, including The American Weekly. She ghostwrote her first memoir in 1957, of a chef for the President of the United States.
Biography
Early life
Frances Ornstein was born on a dairy farm in Geauga County, Ohio, on September 4, 1919.[1][2] Her parents were Bertha Schwartzstein, and Joseph Ornstein, a Polish-born Jew.[1][3] She had one sister, Rose, who died at age 27,[4] and one brother, Jack, who became a professor of modern languages and linguistics at the University of Texas at El Paso.[5]
Ornstein went to the local Thompson High School, graduating in 1937.[6] Ornstein attended Ohio State University for several years but dropped out shortly before her graduation. While at Ohio State, she was a member of the Verse Writer's Guild of Ohio, hosted a show on the college's radio station and wrote poetry. At the time her goal in life was "to conduct a newspaper, poetry and philosophy column." After dropping out, Ornstein moved to Washington, D.C.[2]
The first book she ghostwrote was published in 1957, after TheAmerican Weekly gave her an assignment to write a profile of François Rsavy, Dwight D. Eisenhower's chef. Leighton came up with White House Chef which was described as "chatty and surprisingly candid" and selected for preservation in an underground vault by the Library of Congress.[7][8][9] In 1959 she collaborated with Jane Barkley, the wife of Alben W. Barkley, to write White House Menus and Recipes.[7]
After working on several books, from 1962 to 1965 she published none, working instead on magazine articles.[7] In 1962 she was the Washington editor of Good Housekeeping and contributing to the Ladies' Home Journal and The Week.[10] By 1969 Leighton had been involved in ghostwriting 16 books.[8] In a profile published that year, The New York Times described her as "one of those people one occasionally meets whose unflagging energy and overwhelming bounce make you feel desperately in need of a nap." It continued to say that she knew "absolutely everything about and everybody in Washington." She told the paper that "I think I'm just hung up on living other people's lives" in response to a question about why she chose to ghostwrite so many books. It took her round three months to write an average book and by 1969 she was approached frequently with requests to ghostwrite memoirs.[8] Around the same time, Leighton began contributing to Mid-South Magazine.[7]
For the memoirs that she wrote, Leighton earned the nicknames "Queen of Female Ghosts",[13] "The 'Ghost' of Washington",[8] and "Washington's classiest ghost".[9]
Personal life
Leighton was married for six years to a staffer for Earle Clements.[13] By 1969, she was described as a "divorcee".[8] In February 1984, she married Kendall King Hoyt (d. 2001), a retired Air Force colonel.[1][2]
Leighton was an amateur painter[9] and gave lectures in her later life. She died in Arlington, Virginia, on April 6, 2007, aged 87, of heart failure.[2][14] Her will established a trust to divide money between the town of Thompson and the Ledgemont School District to improve the local library.[6]
Notable works
Leighton wrote several books of her own and was involved in the publication of over 30 books.[2] She wrote a fictional children's book called The Memoirs of Senator Brown, a Capitol Cat, about a cat who was elected to serve in Congress.[8]
In 1962 Citadel Press published I Married a Psychiatrist. Leighton told the press that the idea for the book came when she was walking her border collie, named "Tiger Lil" and walked by a neighbor who was a psychiatrist, Frank Caprio. She wrote the book from a story told by Louise Pfister, the wife of Caprio's wife. After meeting him, Leighton said that his psychiatric advice "changed my life". In 1965 Paramount Pictures announced that it was working on a $2 million movie adaptation of the book, to be directed by George Sidney.[13]Debbie Reynolds was signed to star in the film in early 1966,[17] but plans for the film were shelved after Reynolds got into a fight with the producers.[7][18]
My Life with Jacqueline Kennedy
Mary Barelli Gallagher worked as the personal secretary for Jacqueline Kennedy from 1957 to 1964. She wrote a 700-page autobiographical memoir, initially not intending to publish it. When Gallagher decided that she wanted her stories to be published, she approached Leighton through the National Press Club. The two spent around six months revising the manuscript into a 396-page book that was published as My Life with Jacqueline Kennedy in 1969 to generally negative reviews.[2][19]The New York Times called the book "a worm's-eye view of history commercially packaged by a backstairs ghost" and noted that Gallagher provided "the venom" and "details" to Leighton, who "blended them together with the precision of a hack."[19] Through the process, Gallagher and Leighton became friends and would remain as such until Leighton's death.[2]
A treasury of White House cooking. New York: Putnam. 1972. OCLC1029564675.
Miller, William; Leighton, Frances Spatz (1978). Fishbait: the memoirs of the congressional doorkeeper. New York: Warner Books. ISBN978-0-446-81637-3. OCLC3935990.
Szostak, John M; Leighton, Frances Spatz (1980). In the footsteps of Pope John Paul II: an intimate personal portrait. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. OCLC893972389.
Collier, Oscar; Leighton, Frances Spatz (1997). How to write and sell your first novel. Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books. ISBN978-0-89879-770-1. OCLC994017827.