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Washington Post, August 1, 2020
As a casualty of the McCarthy era, Lee Grant was afraid to talk. Not anymore.
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Director Lee Grant in 1997. (Hope Runs High Films)

By
Ann Hornaday ( https://www.washingtonpost.com/people/ann-hornaday/ )
Movie critic
July 31, 2020 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
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There was a moment, just before Lee Grant accepted the Academy Award for her 
supporting performance in the iconic 1975 movie “Shampoo,” when she knew her 
life had changed. She was making her way to the stage, and a thought blazed its 
way into her consciousness.

“It was probably the end of my great, beautiful, gorgeous 12 years in 
Hollywood,” Grant recalled recently, noting that she was 49 when she won her 
Oscar. “I realized, as a woman actor, that my career was probably really over.”

Grant was speaking at AFI Docs, where she was honored at the Guggenheim 
Symposium ( https://youtu.be/gAgkR9rOBiY ) for her work directing documentary 
films, which defined most of her career through the 1980s and 1990s. Six of 
those features will screen over the next six weeks through AFI Silver’s virtual 
cinema ( 
https://hoperunshigh.vhx.tv/products/afi-silver-presents-down-and-out-in-america
 ) , as the program “20th Century Woman: The Documentary Films of Lee Grant.”

Now in her 90s, Grant appeared at the Guggenheim Symposium by way of Zoom, 
looking every bit as hip as she was 50 years ago, when she was part of a 
chapter in American cinema ( 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2020/07/23/film-industry-is-crisis-it-can-learn-lot-1970s/?arc404=true&itid=lk_inline_manual_8
 ) that changed the medium and the business but also reinvigorated a career 
that had been cut viciously short during the McCarthy era.

Grant had just made a smashing film debut in William Wyler’s 1951 drama 
“Detective Story” when she spoke at the funeral of the actor J. Edward 
Bromberg, noting that the stress of being called before the House Un-American 
Activities Committee most likely led to his early death. For the next 10 years, 
she was blacklisted as a suspected communist, even though she wasn’t 
ideological. “I married a communist writer,” she explained, adding that it was 
the intellectual engagement of her first husband, Arnold Manoff, and his 
friends that attracted her. “I hadn’t become a communist because I didn’t 
understand it.”

Lee Grant accepts the Oscar awarded to her as best supporting actress for her 
role in “Shampoo,” at the Academy Awards in 1976. She explains to the audience 
she wore a wedding dress because she wanted a bride's luck. (AP)

Grant received her first Oscar nomination for her poignantly funny performance 
in “Detective Story.” But the career that should have taken off was effectively 
destroyed. (“I’d been blacklisted from the time I was 24 until the time I was 
36,” she noted, “which is really a Hollywood actor’s lifetime in film.”) For 
the next decade she worked when she could, in theater and occasionally TV, 
until she was hired on the hit soap opera “Peyton Place.” As the blacklist 
began to loosen and eventually disappear, she said “yes to everything,” to 
quote the title of her memoir. Grant’s insatiable appetite for work allowed her 
to work with some of the era’s most legendary directors, including Hal Ashby 
(“The Landlord,” “Shampoo”), and do some of the era’s most fabulous schlock.

She still cracks up remembering her big line in the 1978 disaster flick “The 
Swarm,” in which she played a TV news reporter: “The bees are coming!” She 
laughed so hard doing the scene that the director made her go collect herself. 
“It was the funniest lowest point,” she recalled, “and I was absolutely 
grateful for the chance to do it and bring home the paycheck.”

By then, Grant had enrolled in the American Film Institute’s newly minted 
Directing Workshop for Women, where she gravitated toward adaptations of August 
Strindberg (“The Stronger”) and Tillie Olsen (“Tell Me a Riddle”). In 1979, she 
began filming her first documentary, “The Willmar 8,” an account of women going 
on strike against the bank where they work in a small Minnesota town. It was 
the astonishingly assured debut of a natural documentarian; Grant won another 
Oscar for directing “Down and Out in America,” her 1986 film about the social, 
economic and political fallout of the Reagan era, that kicks off AFI Silver’s 
six-week series. Those films also exemplified an oeuvre that gravitated toward 
tough, issue-oriented investigations of everything from poverty and inequality 
to sexual orientation and women’s issues. And all reflected a singular style, 
one that combined Grant’s native curiosity with disarming intimacy and 
compassion.

“Maybe because of my background as an actor, I so identify with who I’m talking 
to and what’s coming at me,” she explained. “Whatever style there is comes out 
of my identification with what’s being said to me.”

Lee Grant talks to Ann Hornaday during the 2020 Guggenheim Symposium at AFI 
DOCS. (AFI Docs)

Perhaps most meaningfully, Grant never appears on screen in her documentaries, 
and only rarely allows her voice to be heard. Rather, her subjects and the 
films themselves become her emotional instrument. Even after her heady days of 
near-constant work in Hollywood, it wasn’t until she began to direct that she 
truly found the voice that had been silenced decades ago. “I’d had to shut up 
for so long,” she said, describing the paranoia and paralyzing self-doubt that 
she suffered while being blacklisted. “You’re worried that if you open your 
mouth, somebody’s name is going to come out and hurt them. So getting to do 
documentaries was such a door [swinging] open for me. I could ask anything, I 
could say anything and I could address some of the things I felt deeply about 
in a very real way.”

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