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Question of the Day | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

What is the best advice your dad ever gave you?

© Shutterstock
Candice Bergen

Candice Bergen | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Candice Bergen's Dad: Don't Rely on Your Looks

My father, bless him, always said, "Candy, it’s the beautiful women who commit suicide. Don’t rely on your looks. They don’t last and you’re left with nothing but misery. Develop your interests. Follow your curiosity." Of course, I was 10 or 11 when he started telling me this so I lived in fear of becoming a beauty. Still, it did armor me against vanity, against excessive focus on face. And I did follow my interests and my curiosity and that certainly served me well. He also said, and said a lot, "Candy, don’t get married too young. Travel. Pursue your photography. Write. Explore life first. Don’t make the mistake of settling down too young." Well, I didn’t get married till I was 35 and some thought it would never happen so my father had an impact that I’ve been appreciating more and more as I get older.
Judith Martin

Judith Martin | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

How to Travel Well With Judith Martin's Dad

Travel tips:

1. For an oral history of the place, look for an archaeologist sweating in the sun and buy him a drink.
2. To find out about nuances in the local political situation, look for Jewish names on shops and say hello in Yiddish.
3. Immediately after boarding an airplane, go to the bathroom. There is plenty of time, it’s clean, and there is no line.

My father was good at travel because of a lesson he taught by example: Instead of clinging to a safe job in a politically stifling climate, and even though he had only modest savings and looming college tuition for two adolescent children, he picked us all up, set out for the unknown, and made such a success of it that when he eventually returned home, he got a job that he loved.

Joan Ganz Cooney

Joan Ganz Cooney | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Joan Cooney: I Didn't Have Any Acting Talent

The best piece of advice my father ever gave me was not to become an actress back in my high school acting days. It made me focus on doing something behind the scenes, and since I didn’t have any acting talent, that was where I belonged.

Cynthia McFadden

Cynthia McFadden | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Cynthia McFadden's Dad: Anyone Can Have a Job They Don't Like ...

I was the first in my family to be able to go to college. On the day I graduated from law school, my very proud father said, "Just remember one thing little girl: Anyone can have a job they don’t like. It’s your responsibility to go out and find work that means something to you."

Joan Juliet Buck

Joan Juliet Buck | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Joan Juliet Buck: Posture? Easy

Stand up straight and fuck the begrudgers (the first easier than the second).

Mary Wells

Mary Wells | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

What Mary Wells Hated to Hear

My father told me, when I was 12, that when I was grown up I would be pretty – a terrible thing to say to a 12-year-old. I disliked him for that for a long time. But it kept me hopeful and I never counted on my beauty for any success.

Marlo Thomas

Marlo Thomas | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Danny Thomas to Daughter Marlo: 'Run Your Own Race, Baby'

Looking back, I think the most amazing thing about my father as a parent was how he included his children in his work. Most men of that era left their home and kids and went off to their jobs. Not my father. He would often take us to work at the studio with him. He let us sit in when the writers gathered for meetings in our home. He shared his passion for his work with us, and we knew he genuinely enjoyed our company.

I can still remember sitting on the floor, watching story conferences, as he and his comedy writers shaped his nightclub act or knocked around ideas for an episode for his series. Sometimes I’d laugh out loud at a joke and he’d say, “You like that?” He’d get such a kick out of my getting the joke.

My father was truly interested in his children. He wasn’t at all a “kids-are-supposed-to-be-seen-and-not-heard” kind of guy. Unusual for a powerful man.

Growing up around all of this made my entry into the business so much easier. By the time I started working, it wasn’t a foreign land to me. I knew the lingo; I had learned how to shape a good story. And I understood the most important thing about comedy: As my father would say, “The audience will go down any yellow brick road with you, as long as you don’t lie to them. Don’t veer off that road of truth to get a laugh. Have respect for the audience, and they’ll stay with you.”

Sometimes I’d laugh out loud at a joke and he’d say, 'You like that?' He’d get such a kick out of my getting the joke.

There’s a story I’ve told before about my relationship with my father that dramatizes how he influenced me and helped to shape my life:

When I was a little girl, around seven or eight, my father made a movie with Margaret O’Brien. It was summertime and he often took me to the set with him. I would cue him on his lines as we drove to MGM, with the car windows open and the heady mix of Old Spice and a Cuban cigar swirling about us. On the set I would play jacks with Margaret between takes, and when the bell rang I would join the crew in their silence as the cameras rolled and the boom mic moved into position to record the dialogue I knew by heart.

I was in awe of my father and sinfully envious of Margaret O’Brien. I wore pigtails. I wanted freckles. I wanted to be Margaret O’Brien. Ten years later, at age seventeen, I got my chance.

I played the lead in Gigi in a summer stock production at the Laguna Playhouse south of Los Angeles. The excitement of finally being a real actress was painfully short lived. All the interviews and all the reviews focused on my father. Would I be as good as Danny Thomas? Was I as gifted, as funny … would I be as popular? I was devastated.

I loved my Dad, my problem was Danny Thomas. So I went to him and said, "Daddy, please don’t be hurt when I tell you this. I want to change my name. I love you but I don’t want to be a Thomas anymore."
I tried not to cry during the long silence that followed. Then he said, "I raised you to be a thoroughbred. When thoroughbreds run they wear blinders to keep their eyes focused straight ahead with no distractions, no other horses. They hear the crowd but they don’t listen. They just run their own race. That’s what you have to do. Don’t listen to anyone comparing you to me or to anyone else. You just run your own race."

The next night as the crowd filed into the theater, the stage manager knocked on my dressing room door and handed me a white box with a red ribbon. I opened it up and inside was a pair of old horse blinders with a little note that read, "Run your own race, Baby."

Run your own race. He could have said it a dozen other ways. “Be independent.” “Don’t be influenced by others.” But it wouldn’t have been the same. The words he chose touched my heart and have remained with me all through my life. Whenever I’m at a crossroads, I ask myself, “Am I running my race or somebody else’s?” What a gift he gave me. I give it to you: Run your own race and … Happy Father’s Day.

Julia Reed

Julia Reed | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Politics Was Child's Play in the House of Clarke Reed

When I was growing up, my father’s most frequent mantra was, “We’re going to build a two-party system in the South.” It may not sound so exciting now, but it was a big deal then.

Click here to see some of my favorite photos of my dad.

Daddy was the chairman of the Republican Party in Mississippi (when he took over in the mid-’60s, that old thing about the entire membership being able to fit into a phone booth was true), and, over the years, a driving force in the party’s rise in the South. When I was born, there hadn’t been a two-party system in the South for almost 100 years. We were the “Solid South” and the bad guys were the one-party Dems. Its leaders included such racist demagogues as our governor Ross Barnett and our senator, Jim Eastland, who reassured the folks back home that the Civil Rights Act would never get past his suit pocket, which he then thumped loudly for effect. This kind of stuff had left the region isolated and ostracized and essentially another country economically and politically for my father’s entire life — most of the Democrats did not even attend their own convention since their values were so out of sync with the National Party. (Daddy’s friend Hodding Carter, then a newspaper publisher in our hometown, Greenville, was his counterpart on the Democratic side, leading a group called the Loyalist Democrats.)

Hodding once wrote that Daddy had managed to build the Republican party in the South with “smoke and mirrors,” making it seem more important than it really was for just long enough that the reality came to match the perception. When Nixon became president, he played a key role in desegregating the schools. (My main memory of that time is of a bunch of guys from the Justice Department holed up for months on end in an apartment Daddy kept downtown above his office for such purposes.) After Hurricane Camille ravaged the Mississippi Gulf Coast in 1969, Nixon planned a fly-over of the destruction. Daddy told Nixon aide Bryce Harlow that if the president did not stop and get off the plane, he shouldn’t bother to come at all — a lesson our current president would have done well to heed almost three decades later. Nixon did stop and became the first sitting president to do so since Teddy Roosevelt came on a hunting trip and famously refused to shoot a bear — that’s how long it had been since we mattered.

Usually this involved standing on a table in our living room and passing a bottle of scotch between them ...

He took me to see Nixon that day — he took me, thank God, pretty much everywhere. It seems like half my childhood was spent in the bar at the Hay-Adams listening to guys from the OEO and HEW and the RNC and other such initials talk. (I also had a reading list — I’m pretty sure I was the only girl in the fourth grade to have written an essay on Whittaker Chambers, whose Witness Daddy had read to me aloud.) In 1976, he took me to my first convention, the one at which he was blamed for singlehandedly denying the nomination to Ronald Reagan in favor of Gerald Ford. To this day, he shuns notion that he had that much power (and I tell the ridiculous number of people who still harbor bad blood over his decision that they ought to thank him — Reagan would surely have lost to Carter and there might well have never been a subsequent Reagan Revolution.) It was a painful time for him, but he made his decision on principle — Reagan had personally assured him that he would never go for an ideologically split ticket and afterwards chose Sen. Schweiker from Pennsylvania, who boasted a higher ADA rating even than Mondale as his running mate. It was an entirely cynical — and miscalculated — choice on Reagan’s part, as Mississippi and Pennsylvania were the two remaining uncommitted delegations he was after.
As you can see from the above paragraph, I soaked up an awful lot of minutiae and I learned a lot — about principle, about political instinct, about showmanship. He was not a real showman like the fathers of Marlo or Candice, but he could put on what he called his “act,” a mixture of great charm, understated erudition and a big dose self-effacing humor, whenever it was called for. He was a “true believer” who believed in the West over Communism and Right over Left, but he enjoyed himself, always, and never took himself too seriously and that’s why he was so effective. In the early days, when they often joined forces to end our long stretch as national joke, he and Hodding would stage dramatic mock debates for the benefit of the increasingly curious national press. Usually this involved standing on a table in our living room and passing a bottle of scotch between them, and it was so entertaining that Daddy’s friend Bill Buckley saw it and put them on Firing Line.

Also, unlike Danny Thomas or Edgar Bergen, he wasn’t THAT famous, so it was always a plus for me and never a minus. I was known as “Clarke Reed’s daughter” in a world where that still remains helpful in my career. (It is also helpful at dinner parties. A few weeks ago I was at a dinner at the Botanical Garden that included such current notables as John Thain, and my dinner partner looked at my place card, heard my accent and promptly asked me if I were Clarke Reed’s daughter. Turns out he’d been in the Ford administration and had known him well, and the two of us spent the rest of the evening discussing our shared opinion that Dick Cheney had a stroke and the fact that Donald Rumsfeld is an asshole. Talk about an icebreaker.)

Though Daddy no longer spends all his time “saving the free world” (his stock answer when I was a kid and I asked him where he’d been), he still maintains the act and it is a mighty thing to behold. At his 60th birthday party, my friends and I were the Satin Dolls and serenaded him to the tune of that song. The first line was, “Silver-haired cool cat, he slays me.” Twenty years later he still does. The Dolls plan to reunite at his 80th in August.

Liz Smith

Liz Smith | 06/13/2008 12:00 am

Liz Smith's Father Told Her Not to Fight Fair

My father was very feisty and temperamental. He was little, 5’6”, so he had to scrap his way through life, especially since he had a girl’s name, Sloan. He often said to us: “If anyone messes with you, don’t try to fight fair. Just grab a wrench or a pipe or a rock and knock their brains out. Survive!”

My mother would cry when he said this because she believed in turning the other cheek. She was Mrs. Non-Violence. Hung between Scylla and Charybdis. I have never been able to do the correct thing when it comes to taking advice.

 

Click here on this text to read my nationally syndicated daily column.

Read more about: Advice, Father's Day, Holidays

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

Frannie Em
Dad, Thanks for: Making a great place to grow up in and teaching me: To have money in my pocket so that I am not dependent on someone I don’t want to be dependent on. You don’t have to answer questions you don’t want to, but if you do, you must tell the truth. Have integrity Mix a little compost in to break up the soil Use two types of beans when you make chili Don’t believe anyone who tells you you’re not intelligent and my favorite, because it was so typically him: Don’t let the bastards get you down, they are not worth it.
By Frannie Em on 06/13/2008 12:31 am
C A Rose
Ahhhhhhhhh! Frannie, the old, ‘Non Illegitimati Carborundum.’ Thanks! I forgot all about that. My step-father taught me that one too.
By C A Rose on 06/13/2008 1:12 am
Frannie Em
C A Rose They were of a generation weren’t they? One time my son called me from Iraq really troubled about all that was happening and the political situation all around him, and I told him what his grandpa told me. He repeated it in latin. “Yeah, all right.” My dad had a sign in his office behind his desk.
By Frannie Em on 06/13/2008 12:33 pm
Maggi D
I envy you all the wonderful relationships that you had with your fathers. You were luckier than you know. The only two things I remember my father saying directly to me are: at 12yrs old “Beauty is only skin deep and boy do you need skinning” and at 36yrs old bearing a child out of wedlock “I am glad your mother is not here to see this, but I love you for not having an abortion”. Dad never was a great one for guidance. But he wasn’t around enough when I was growing up to do too much damage. I wonder if having a strong father image has helped you women achieve your successes? Do some of us succeed because of our fathers and others inspite of them? What would Freud say about all this - lol?
By Maggi D on 06/13/2008 12:51 am
siasp surate
Maggie, I love your comment about what Freud would say lol. I think despite the reason or cause of the success of a woman Freud would say it was all because of penis envy. By success I do not mean what he meant which was that women should stay home and have boy babies because that was the closest she was going to get to having a penis. He was quite an interesting guy.
By siasp surate on 06/13/2008 5:00 am
Maggi D
Freud is the father of Psychology and he was not a very good father. Between the cocaine addiction and his addiction to his penis he probably was not one that we should use for advice lmao.
By Maggi D on 06/13/2008 2:12 pm
Frannie Em
maggi d Thanks for reminding us what was behind freud.
By Frannie Em on 06/13/2008 3:30 pm
Peggy Sue
Maggi, great question. My sister and I remember our dad very differently. So is it nurture or nature? I really would like an answer to that one.
By Peggy Sue on 06/13/2008 8:00 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
I think it’s pretty well established that both nature and nurture play significant roles with genetics playing a larger role than previously thought. You and your sister are individuals therefore you related to your father in different ways just as he related to both of you differently.
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 06/13/2008 9:45 am
K O
Dear Maggi, I hope you don’t mind that I quoted you on another thread… your comment last week regarding an analogy of resisting the temptation to respond to a rather misogynistic poster and a dieter to a chocolate sundae was so perfect. You continue to add such wit to this place.
By K O on 06/13/2008 9:09 pm
kermie b
I don’t remember my father very well. He was strict, quick to anger, and his idea of discipline was to sit me down on the couch and tell me how much I had disappointed him. I hated that couch. I am the youngest child of three daughters and two sons. My brothers had their lives planned out by him. He believed an education was wasted on girls because they would just get married, have children and make a home. I grew up resenting his view of girls. I grew up resenting his idea of how I disappointed him. I grew up not wanting children or a family or a home to “make.” I grew up with none of those things and without him, and yet I am still happy. So, what is the best advice he ever gave me? Never, ever, think like him.
By kermie b on 06/13/2008 12:55 am
phyllis Doyle Pepe
And aren’t you the lucky one to realize father doesn’t always “know best”–––what a plucky one you are. I salute you!
By phyllis Doyle Pepe on 06/13/2008 9:50 am
K O
So, some learned by example, and you, by what not to do. What is important is that you are happy.
By K O on 06/13/2008 9:11 pm
C A Rose
My father was killed when I was 2 mos old. My mother married my step-father when I was 2 yrs old. The thing that stands out the most for me is if you borrow money you ALWAYS pay it back with interest. The first time I had to borrow money from my parents Dad made me sign a promissory note and charged me 2% below prime interest. He never let me off the hook, even though he could have. Looking back, it made me more responsible . My problem was that they were the only ones I was responsible to. I was lousey handling my own money. Lately, I hear stories about my mom’s friends who have loaned their life savings to their children over the years and never got a penny back. They are the ones that are struggling in their retirement years and are doing without. It makes me sad. Don’t get me wrong, I was a wild child of the 60’s and did more wrong than good. When it came to money and family though, I sure learned there were consequences. Thanks to my step-father’s good planning my mom is self-sufficient. Hmmmmm…did I mention I am an only child and live with my mother? I’m sure glad I payed back those loans!
By C A Rose on 06/13/2008 1:07 am
Frannie Em
C A My parents loaned me money and I had to pay it back. They didn’t charge interest, but they made me pay it back. It was one of the best lessons for me as a young woman. It made me not want to get into debt. I did at times, but not to a great extent and always paid it back. Slowly, but surely. We have tried to teach our sons that, but they just do their money they way they want to and have big lessons at the end. I don’t think I will lend them large sums of money when they are older.
By Frannie Em on 06/13/2008 12:42 pm