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<text id=89TT0243>
<title>
Jan. 23, 1989: Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Interviews
Jan. 23, 1989 Barbara Bush:The Silver Fox
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 22
COVER STORY: The Silver Fox
</hdr>
<body>
<p>And now for something completely different: a down-to-earth
First Lady
</p>
<p>By Margaret Carlson
</p>
<p> I had a small crisis this week.
</p>
<p> I was staying at a very stylish hotel in New York City where
I knew they always had a bathrobe in the closet, so I left mine
at home. I had called room service for coffee, then discovered
there was no robe. When the coffee came, I took a sheet off the
bed and wrapped it around myself toga style to answer the door.
I can imagine what the waiter thought. I can just see him going
back to the kitchen and saying, "You'll never guess what I saw
in Room 1712!"
</p>
<p>-- From the campaign diary of Barbara Bush
</p>
<p> America, meet Barbara Bush, taking center stage in national
life just in the knick of time. Nancy Reagan had many good
qualities, but she was, well, something of a strain: those
rail-thin looks, that hard-edged show-biz glitter and no
children or grandchildren around to mess things up. The country
may be ready for a First Lady who is honest about her size
(14), her age (63) and her pearls (fake). She sports sweats on
the weekends with no intention of jogging, does her own hair,
likes takeout tacos, devours mystery novels, poaches at the net
in mixed doubles, teases her husband and speaks her mind. When
she is home near her own bathrobe, she wears it outside to walk
the dog.
</p>
<p> Barbara Bush knows that the two-mile move from the Vice
President's 1893 Victorian mansion on Embassy Row to 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue is more than a change of Zip Codes. As she
puts color-coded stickers on the furniture and pictures to
signify what goes, what stays and what gets tossed out in this
latest move, she is already nostalgic over life as Second Lady.
"I got away with murder," says the woman who allowed as how
Nancy Reagan should have simply replaced the White House china a
piece at a time instead of buying a whole new set, and who
suggested that her husband strip down to disprove rumors that he
was wounded during a tryst. As she prepares for her new post,
she says, "I'm now slightly more careful about what I say."
(Pause) "Slightly."
</p>
<p> On its face, First Ladyhood looks easy enough: one gets to
live in a big house with a large yard, travel a lot and throw
fancy dinner parties. Someone else cleans up. But the job--unpaid and with no days off--has its pitfalls. The person a
pillow away from the presidency is held up to an undefined
ideal; she bears all America's conflicting notions about women
as wives, mothers, lovers, colleagues and friends. A First Lady
should be charming but not all fluff, gracious but not a
doormat, substantive but not a co-President. She must defend
her husband and smile bravely when he says stupid things. She
must look great, even fashionable, when a shower and clean
clothes would suffice for anyone else; possess perfect children
though such critters do not exist in nature; and traipse around
the globe in a suit and sensible pumps when she would rather be
home with a good book. She has both a day and a night job, but
is not allowed a profession of her own. Hardest of all, she has
to appear to love every minute of it.
</p>
<p> Yet, in an era when the concept of First Lady seems like a
stuffy anachronism, Barbara Bush may prove to be the right woman
in the right place. She has projects--literacy, cancer
research, education--that predate her husband's bug for
politics. As she heads for 64, with no regrets about having
poured her energies into raising her family, she seems to have
enough heart left over to suffer fools gladly. Years of good
works behind her, she is the embodiment of the kinder, gentler
world that her husband so gauzily evoked during the campaign.
</p>
<p> Like many political wives, Barbara has devoted her life to
her husband, the first man she ever kissed, with whom she has
survived a wartime separation, 44 years of marriage, 29 moves,
the death of a child, public rumors of his infidelity and the
rigors of three national campaigns. Through it all, she has
remained defiantly independent. Her Secret Service code name--Tranquility--belies the fact that she has several hot
buttons. Criticism, particularly of her husband, moves her to
anger, as it did in 1984, when she suggested to reporters
questioning the Bushes' wealth that a word that rhymes with
rich might be an appropriate label for Geraldine Ferraro. She
can cut off an interview with a wave of the hand, having been
burned once too often by those who talk sweetly but interview
harshly (as when Jane Pauley asked her, "Your husband is a man
of the '80s, and you're a woman of the '40s. What do you say to
that?").
</p>
<p> She refers to Ann Richards, who delivered a stinging
critique of her husband at the Democratic National Convention,
as "that woman." As for Ted Kennedy's famous "Where was
George?" line, Barbara can only say, "He shouldn't even say
George Bush's name." Though she has spent much of her life in
Texas, this product of tony Rye, N.Y., can still summon a
patrician bearing to cut the uppity down to size. The next
President says she is "more direct" than he is. Says campaign
manager and Republican Party Chairman Lee Atwater: "She can spot
a phony a mile away." Her children have a nickname for her: the
Silver Fox.
</p>
<p> Barbara and George Herbert Walker Bush have striking yet
compatible differences. He hates to quarrel; she once liked it.
She kids him about being too big for his britches, especially
his style of britches. She particularly goes after the cowboy
boots he sports for both day and evening wear. "They've got his
initials in gold on the side--just two of them, not four of
them--and the Lone Star State star. In color." He kids her
about suspending the usual rules of conduct when it comes to
her English springer spaniel, Millie. "That dog literally
comes between us at night," he complains. "She wedges right up
between our heads, and Bar likes it. She's failing with the
discipline. She was better with the kids than she is with the
dog." Millie is pregnant, Bush announced last week.
</p>
<p> George grumps about having to pack a few boxes to be shipped
to the summer house in Kennebunkport, Me.; Barbara meticulously
plans every move and every trip. "She's the type of person,"
says son Marvin, "who always wanted us to get to the airport an
hour early. Dad likes to get to the airport five minutes before
departure." She was so organized--rarely missing one of the
kids' games, throwing labor-intensive birthday parties,
volunteering for scoutmaster--that a friend says she could
have run General Motors with time left over. "She always made
me feel like a slob," said Marion Chambers, an acquaintance from
the Bushes' days in Midland, Texas. Barbara writes thank-you
notes the minute she gets home. While other people throw
mementos from trips into a box, Barbara has arranged hers in a
series of more than 60 giant scrapbooks. It's a wonder she
doesn't have more enemies.
</p>
<p> Barbara may spoil the dog, but she criticizes George for not
disciplining the kids enough. She still posts the rules of
conduct on the doors at Kennebunkport in case anyone has
forgotten them. The kids agree that their mother ruled the
court of common pleas while George rode the circuits and was
brought in only for major infractions.
</p>
<p> But having five children close together made Barbara more
than a one-minute manager. It gave her a sense of humor, a
playful, teasing manner (the secret of a strong marriage, she
says), and a casual attitude toward how many people the pot
roast can feed. Says Marvin Bush, now 32: "Everyone always
wanted to come over to our house." She loves to have her five
children and ten grandchildren around her; she is flexible
about George's 5,000 closest friends dropping by. On a few
hours' notice two weeks ago, Bush brought Senator Nancy
Kassebaum, Treasury Secretary Nick Brady, Senator Lloyd Bentsen
and lawyer-Democrat Bob Strauss home to dinner. One of the best
things about moving to the White House, Barbara says, is that
the vice-presidential mansion "has one guest bedroom. Now I'm
going to have a lot more."
</p>
<p> While Barbara's humor is clever, Bush's can be prep-school
puerile. Several weeks ago, at a private dinner at the Chinese
embassy, the President-elect brought a novelty gag, a dollar
bill attached to a long fishing line that appears to be free
for the taking on the floor. When a waiter went for the bait,
Bush quickly snatched it out of reach. Bush and his host, the
Chinese Ambassador, found the gag great fun. Barbara, whose
humor tends to be verbal, rolled her eyes and turned to the
Ambassador: "You're going to have your work cut out for you
with the new Administration."
</p>
<p> The humor has served her well in politics. In her campaign
stump speech, she regularly poked fun at herself, telling
audiences that, if recognized at all, she is confused with Mrs.
George Shultz. After the Ferraro crack, she opted for an
immediate apology and told reporters that "the poet laureate
has retired." Though public criticism of her hair, weight and
wrinkles have hurt her, she has turned such remarks to her
advantage. After her hair turned white in her early 30s, she
began dyeing it "warm brown," although it was a nuisance for
someone who swam frequently and shampooed every day. "One
time," recalls Marvin, "I came home, and it was brown and
orange, and it was like, `Whoa, Mom, what happened?' "
Eventually, she just gave up the coloring--"It was
ridiculous," she said.
</p>
<p> Barbara's clothes are attractive, but she will never be
known, as her predecessor was, by her designer affiliation. To
keep from hyping Seventh Avenue, she broke with tradition and
did not issue a press release about her Inaugural gown in
advance, although details leaked out.
</p>
<p> As for weight, well, she enjoys eating too much ever to be
as svelte as she once was. She laments that the campaign added
13 lbs. to her 5-ft. 8-in. frame. During the Bushes' Florida
postelection vacation, photos appeared of her swimming in the
type of bathing suit popular with matrons in the '50s. Later,
she jokingly asked photographers to cap their lenses--"My
children are complaining all over the country." When she told a
reporter that her trademark pearls were $90 fakes worn to hide
her wrinkles, it was a comment on the universal regret at aging
and the hopeless human foible of trying to hide it.
</p>
<p> Barbara Bush has been training for her new job as long as
her husband has been prepping for his. The third of four
children of a father who worked his way up the ladder to become
president of the McCall Corp., which among other things owned
McCall's magazine, and a mother happy to entertain and garden in
suburban Rye, Barbara attended public and private schools. She
finished at Ashley Hall, a South Carolina prep school where
neglecting to wear white gloves was virtually a punishable
offense. At a party in Greenwich, Conn., during Christmas break
her senior year, she met George Bush, recently graduated from
Andover. A generic dancer--she complains that whatever the
tempo, he does the fox-trot--George asked her to sit out a
waltz. They sat down and fell in love. The two became engaged
that summer in Kennebunkport. It was a secret engagement, Bush
says, meaning "the German and Japanese high commands weren't
aware of it." But after Bush was shot down over the Pacific in
September 1944, Barbara dropped out of Smith in her sophomore
year to marry him at the First Presbyterian Church in Rye. "I
married the first man I ever kissed," she says. "When I tell
this to my children, they just about throw up."
</p>
<p> After Bush graduated from Yale in 1948, the couple packed up
their Studebaker and with their son George headed west to make
their way in the oil fields of Texas. The first stop was Odessa,
and a one-bedroom apartment where they shared a bathroom with
a mother-daughter team of prostitutes. Then it was Midland,
where Bush would make a small fortune by Texas standards. After
moving to Houston in 1958, he sold his stake in Zapata
Off-Shore in 1966 for $1 million.
</p>
<p> While in Texas, Barbara suffered her biggest losses. In 1949
her mother died in a freak accident: her father, trying to keep
a cup of coffee from spilling off the dashboard, lost control
of the car. Then one day in the spring of 1953 the Bushes'
second child, Robin, 3, woke up feeling too tired to go out to
play. The doctors diagnosed leukemia and gave her two weeks to
live. She hung on eight months, with Barbara, whose hair began
turning white, sitting by the bedside at Memorial Hospital in
New York City and Bush commuting on weekends. Friends say they
handed their grief back and forth, acting alternately as mourner
and supporter. Barbara says, "George held me tight and wouldn't
let me go. You know, 70% of the people who lose children get
divorced because one doesn't talk to the other. He did not allow
that." By then they had the two boys, George, born in 1946, and
Jeb, in 1953. Three more children in quick succession--Neil,
34, Marvin and Dorothy, 29 (all her children, she emphasizes,
were planned)--helped ease the pain.
</p>
<p> There would be two terms for Bush in Congress, from 1967 to
1971, a lost race for the Senate, and a stint at the U.N. in
1971 before Barbara developed her public persona. Until then
she was so shy she once cried over having to speak to the
Houston Garden Club. Sunk deep in diapers and dishes for so
long, she lacked confidence. "George was off on a trip doing all
these exciting things," she said, "and I'm sitting home with
these absolutely brilliant children who say one thing a week of
interest." By contrast, when Bush was appointed U.S. envoy to
China in 1974, she became an important part of the enterprise.
For the first time without car pools and PTA meetings, she
could give everything to the post. She loved the challenge of
breaking out of the small foreigners' enclave in Beijing into
the prohibited city around them, riding bikes everywhere,
practicing Tai Chi, studying Chinese, breaking a long-standing
legation taboo by playing tennis with foreign officials of
lesser rank.
</p>
<p> After China, the return to Washington, where Bush would
head up the CIA, was something of a letdown. Barbara went from
being included in everything to being shut out. "Why would he
tell me any secrets," she joked, "when he says I begin every
sentence with `Don't tell George I told you this, but...' ?"
</p>
<p> Living over the store as First Couple, the two will once
again be spending a lot of time together. Barbara will not have
to find a cause since she already has so many, in part as a
result of events in her own life. Her son Neil's dyslexia first
got her interested in fighting illiteracy. In 1984 she wrote a
book, C. Fred's Story, a surprisingly wry look at Washington
life as told by her first dog, after publisher Nelson
Doubleday assured her it would be a good way to promote her
literacy efforts. C. Fred could have been a disaster, but
Barbara's wit and candor made it work. "I didn't have to squeeze
it out of her. There was no ghostwriter," says editor Lisa Drew.
"And it came in on time." The book sold 15,000 copies; Barbara
donated her share of the profits to literacy charities.
</p>
<p> Robin's leukemia got Barbara involved in medical activities.
She has been on the board of Atlanta's Morehouse School of
Medicine since 1983, and she spearheaded a $15 million
fund-raising drive there. Years ago, quietly, Barbara
befriended a woman at a Washington hospice and went to see her
every week for several years until she died. She went to Atlanta
during a spate of murders of children to comfort the grieving
mothers. For more than 30 years, she has visited cancer wards
at Christmastime to play with children--her way of honoring
Robin.
</p>
<p> Barbara will probably never sit in on Cabinet meetings a la
Rosalynn Carter or get people fired, as Nancy did. But a spousal
"Dear, I wouldn't do that if I were you," delivered with a
raised eyebrow, can often defeat a stack of position papers.
During Bush's postelection vacation, he was asked whether he had
received any advice about his new job. He smiled broadly and
pointed to his wife, standing nearby in tennis shoes and sweats.
Barbara raised her eyebrows and said, "Just kidding." Replied
Bush: "No, she's not."
</p>
<p> Long before President Bush begins his official day by
conferring with top aides or national-security advisers, he will
already have had his first briefing of the day--in bed. Each
morning, as they have for years, the Bushes awake to country
music early--about "5 and change," says Marvin--and take
coffee, juice and the papers in bed while they watch the news
shows. Together they discuss the hot news of the day, and she
weighs in on everything from policy to personnel. "He clears his
mind by talking to her," said one aide who knows them both. "It
helps him."
</p>
<p> Barbara has been most influential on issues that concern her
deeply or where her husband is behind the curve, like AIDS, the
homeless, civil rights and education. In the late 1950s, she
battled segregationist innkeepers who refused to let the
family's black baby-sitter stay with them in the same hotel.
She was instrumental in the appointment of the only black in
Bush's Cabinet, Dr. Louis Sullivan, whom she came to know from
her work at Morehouse.
</p>
<p> It was Barbara's visits to AIDS hospitals in Harlem that
nudged her husband into endorsing additional federal funds for
fighting the disease when the Reagan Administration was still
balking. Similarly, after an early debate when her husband
brushed aside a question about the homeless with boiler plate
about housing, Barbara exhorted him to make homelessness a
campaign issue. "She really talked hard at him," said an aide,
"and rode him until he got it right." Barbara's interest in
children and literacy, meanwhile, helped Bush commit himself to
being the "education President." "Every time he says `Head
Start,' that's Bar," says Sheila Tate, Bush's transition
spokeswoman.
</p>
<p> Barbara tries to mask her views where they differ from her
husband's. Her preferred line on abortion is "I'm not going to
tell you my opinion," a perhaps pointedly transparent admission
of her pro-choice views, since if she agreed with Bush she would
presumably say so. She disagreed behind the scenes with his
hardball campaign tactics, masterminded by Jim Baker, Atwater,
Roger Ailes and others. Late in the general-election campaign,
aides sensed Barbara's unseen hand after speeches were rewritten
in a softer tone. "There were drafts of speeches that went into
the suite at night and came out the next morning with changes,"
an aide recalls.
</p>
<p> Some staffers credit Barbara with getting George to suddenly
pledge cleaner campaign tactics at a fund raiser last fall at
Bob Hope's Hollywood spread. The announcement so stunned aides
that they disappeared on purpose afterward. But Barbara wasn't
all softball. When Bush was resisting advice to air the now
famous "straddle ad" in New Hampshire that showed Iowa caucus
victor Robert Dole flip-flopping on taxes, Barbara finally
chimed in, "I don't see anything wrong with that ad." It ran,
and Bush took the state by 10 points.
</p>
<p> She won't be guided by astrology, but, like Nancy Reagan,
Barbara will take control of her husband's schedule when he
begins to suffer, as she did on the eve of the election in
November. As Michael Dukakis mounted a last-minute "double
red-eye," flying nearly coast to coast and back again on
election eve, Bush's handlers argued for a similar marathon.
But Barbara put her foot down. "People are going to vote the
way they're going to vote," she said. "We're going to Texas."
</p>
<p> No First Lady escapes microscopic scrutiny, and before the
new family pictures are hung in the second-floor family
quarters at the White House, Barbara Bush is likely to offend
someone or other, perhaps for her informality, perhaps for her
patrician noblesse oblige. Yet First Ladies are more than the
sum of their good works. They offer a glimpse into the heart of
a President--if she loves him, he can't be all that bad--and
they often reflect the culture of the times. After eight years
of new-money flash and glitz, of appearances over substance, of
friends over family, Barbara Bush's unspoken message may be as
important as anything she may do: there is honor in motherhood;
it is O.K. to be a size 14; a lined face is the price of living;
and growing old is nothing to get frantic about. No small
contribution, that.
</p>
<p>-- Michael Duffy/Washington
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>