Sign in to wowOwow

Enter the email address that you used when registering at wowOwow.
The password field is case sensitive. Click here if you have forgotten your password.

Please register for wowOwow

Newsletter subscriptions
Sign up to receive wowOwow's weekly newsletter and get our best picks delivered right to your inbox. Our newsletter content is hand-picked by the wowOwow editorial team and provides the top features, news, and commentary from our site. Subscribing to our newsletter is free and safe. We will never share your email or other information with a third-party without your direct consent.
By registering, you indicate that you have read and agree
with our privacy policy and terms of service.

Liz Smith | 04/09/2008 9:08 am

'Ann Richards Is With Us in Spirit; She Can Never Die'

Liz Smith

On April 21, the wonderful and dynamic Ann Moore, who is a titan at Time, Inc., will be holding a private invitation-only lunch for certain VIPs who were appreciators of the late Governor of Texas – Ann Richards. At that time a few worthies will talk about what Ann meant in their lives and reminisce and cry a little and laugh a lot.

Click here to see my "Ann Richards Photo Album"

Ann’s daughters, Cecile and Ellen, will be with us for this get-together where we’ll also try to raise a bit of dough for Ann’s lasting creation – the Ann Richards School for Young Women Leaders, which operates out of 2206 Prather Lane, Austin, Texas, 78704. (If you wanted to send a donation, nothing would please the spirit of Ann Richards more. And you can get the school newsletter at www.annrichardsschool.org.)

2008_0403_Liz_AnnRichards_booksigning0001_0.jpg

Thinking on things Ann, as I always am, I wanted to share something she wrote to me in March 2004. It is eerily prescient:

“Liz, I do not think you have to be concerned about Bush becoming a great president in history. My present greatest fear is that we are headed toward a serious financial depression worse than anything since the 30s. I know enough about markets and the economy just to be dangerous, and I see no light at the end of this tunnel. We cannot invade and rebuild Iraq, restore Afghanistan, control Korea, clean up Iran, etc. all on our own. We cannot offend all the world to the point where they don’t eat our Fritos or drive our John Deeres, and it looks to me as if that is where we are headed. I believe that we are about to bring the Labor Party to its knees in Great Britain, and Tony Blair may be in such a crack that he will be forced out by his own party. So far, we look like a bunch of inept nincompoops at the UN, with the inability to muster a paltry majority on the Security Council. Well, enough of that – too depressing.

“I worry about you, Liz. Are you still refusing to exercise, drinking those martinis at night and white wine at lunch and eating only from the brown and white food groups? LOVE, Ann.”

In spite of her depressing financial prediction, before her surprising and untimely death Ann rallied in spirit and did the usual things that endeared her to everyone she met. She had a Tom DeLay doll made into a piñata and gave it personally to her friend George Clooney … she encouraged her significant other, the writer Bud Shrake, to finish up his collected works and now, though Ann is gone, his Land of the Permanent Wave: An Edwin ‘Bud’ Shrake Reader is in the bookstores from The University of Texas Press. Ann would be so proud.

Bud wrote me the other day: “I have always coped because I pretended Ann was off on a trip to India or somewhere. The day after she died, I had delivered to my door a box of grapefruit she’d bought for me. But now, I am beginning to realize that maybe she isn’t coming back.”

Bud, it’s not quite the same thing, but Ann is with us in spirit. She can never die. Even as we speak, her school gathers momentum.

The artist Peter Rogers is doing a portrait of Ann from photographs. (It will be superior to the painting hanging in the State Capitol in Austin with all those criminals and bums who have come before and after Ann as governors.)

And the Emmy-winning actress Holland Taylor is perfecting her one-woman play about Ann to tour the nation with it.

Note: Don’t forget to read my nationally syndicated column!!

78 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Karen Gast
Like several others, I first learned of this website by watching Charlie Rose. Remember the Mount Rushmore question? I remember answering in my head: Ann Richards.
By Karen Gast on 04/10/2008 7:45 am
Tamara Jacobs
I keep hoping Ann will start channeling her humor and good common sense. She does make one proud to be a Texan. She is sorely missed..
By Tamara Jacobs on 04/10/2008 9:26 am
Linda Easton
I would like to hear from mothers who are raising daughters in today’s world regarding their relationship with their daughters.
By Linda Easton on 04/10/2008 9:55 am
Jacque Fuller
I was privileged to hear Ann speak toward the end of her life at the graduation of my niece from the University of Texas. She was as ever inspirational and very very witty. I also found you through Charlie Rose. Great idea!
By Jacque Fuller on 04/10/2008 11:07 am
louise cooper
i too listened to ann richards on larry king live, i am a very practical person and i enjoyed her down to earth precise, and straightforward comments, — would be nice to have other women like her around. who could do a lot to help change the country, scares me to about this recession we are heading into and to know someone like ann realize it also is really scary
By louise cooper on 04/10/2008 1:24 pm
SK HILL
Ok, I’ll try again. I moved to Austin during Ann’s first run for Governor and was thrilled to get here in time to vote for her. She was, and is, a true inspiration. I love the local photo of her on her new Harley on her 60th birthday. I saw the round table on Charlie Rose last night. I look forward to visiting this site often.
By SK HILL on 04/10/2008 2:58 pm
Leigh Finder
What a Wonderful Choice Holland Taylor is! When I think of her and try to capture her voice, doesn’t she already sound a lot like Ann? I would have cancelled anything I could to stay home and watch Ann Richards if I knew she was appearing on TV. How I loved her humor! She could make me feel good about the mess we were and are in.
By Leigh Finder on 04/10/2008 5:38 pm
(Sandra) Sandy Graham
Without Ann Richards I would never have made it through the depression caused by physical ailments leading to the loss of my career. Ann gave me the courage and strength to build myself up by calling out to other women for support. Ann taught me that. I miss her so. I keep her picture on my desk and gain encouragement every day from her smile. Thanks Ann. You are my heroine. Sandy Graham, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
By (Sandra) Sandy Graham on 04/10/2008 7:05 pm
YellowKitty Cinnamombunz
One of my ongoing fantasies for years was to be able to sit at a table at someplace like Scholtz’s Bier Garten between Ann Richards & Molly Ivins. What in heaven could top that? Those two did more than anything to awaken my slumbering political soul, and they did it by delivering some well-placed punches to my democratic funny-bone. Two true hoots … and smarter than anything.
By YellowKitty Cinnamombunz on 04/10/2008 10:10 pm
Beachlady ydalhcaeB
She was one heck of a woman that’s for sure. I can still hear her voice…..
By Beachlady ydalhcaeB on 04/10/2008 10:12 pm
Deborah Behrens
I remember checking the news headlines on my computer in the wee hours of the morning and reading that Ann Richards had just died of cancer. I literally said out loud, “Oh, no!” And immediately felt sad, as if a great colorful light had been snuffed out, leaving us in a world filled with nothing but beige. I wrote to a friend of mine who knew her well to share the shock. My sister lives in Austin and had long ago worked on some of Ann’s events. She was a great lady and a great dame. A woman with a big appetite for life and zero tolerance for bullshit. The last of a breed. When Molly Ivins left us the next year, I felt the same pang of loss — these straight shooting Texas firebrands who knew “Shrub” and his clan for what they truly were and who understood better than anyone the “good ol’ boy” game of politics. Our world has been much dimmer without their clear insight.
By Deborah Behrens on 04/11/2008 2:11 am
alice ruth
Ann Richards and Molly Ivans—we Texas women couldn’t ask for better role models for “living” a life.
By alice ruth on 04/11/2008 7:55 am
Kay Sara
It would be great to have Ann Richard daily quotes (and other witty brilliant women) on this site. Ann Richards was so honest, and funny - a real woman of substance.
By Kay Sara on 04/11/2008 10:00 am
Kay Sara
Millicent Fenwick is another great woman - and so witty.
By Kay Sara on 04/11/2008 10:02 am
Annette Wade
I always felt like Ann Richards spoke for me. I worked on both her campaigns for Governor (just stuffed envelopes and made phone calls) but I was so proud to participate. Her spirit is sorely missed everywhere but especially in Texas! She, Molly Ivins, Liz Carpenter and others are women to be loved and admired. They make us proud of our gender because of their intelligence, veracity and sense of humor.
By Annette Wade on 04/11/2008 3:02 pm