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TIME: Almanac 1995
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sh_hite.000
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<text id=94HT0018>
<title>
OCt. 12, 1987: St. Joe to Fifth Avenue
</title>
<history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1980s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
St. Joe to Fifth Avenue
October 12, 1987
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Martha Smilgis--Reported by Jeanne McDowell/New York, with
other bureaus.
</p>
<p> The salon is modeled after a room in a 15th century
Italian palace. Carved cherubs adorn the ceiling. The walls
are decorated with brocade and wood panels. A black Steinway
grand piano sits next to tall windows overlooking Manhattan's
Fifth Avenue. Within this setting, Author Shere Hite is a
slight, willowy figure, resembling nothing so much as a fey,
reclusive maiden on leave from a Renaissance fair. It is an
exquisitely crafted image, graceful, faintly otherworldly,
eccentric. The $1.5 million, four room duplex apartment is a
monument to the success of her two earlier Hite Reports.
</p>
<p> At the center of Hite's life these days is a West German
concert pianist more than 20 years her junior, Friedrich
Horicke, 24, whom she married 2 1/2 years ago. Unlike her
disgruntled respondents in Women and Love, Hite is euphoric
about her husband. "With some people you feel like the whole
world is open and everything is possible," she says. "That's
how I feel with Fred."
</p>
<p> Hite says in her marriage there is none of the emotional
violence she describes in Woman and Love. Because Horicke was
raised with sisters who did the household chores, Hite did set
down firm domestic rules. "He has learned to live with
them,"she says laughing. "He even changes light bulbs without
being asked." Her husband is supportive of her work. On the
rare occasions when he insults her or sulks, Hite says, she
reminds him, "Fred, you're doing that thing!"
</p>
<p> The soft-spoken sexologist is more reluctant to discuss
the details of her splintered childhood. Hite was born Shirley
Diana Gregory in 1942 in St. Joseph, Mo. Her father Paul
Gregory, a serviceman and flight controller, and her mother
divorced shortly after the end of World War II. Her mother
later married Raymond Hite, a truck driver, who legally
adopted her. After 2 1/2 years that marriage dissolved.
Throughout the turmoil, Shere (short for Shirley) lived on
and off with her grandparents, who, after a 30-year marriage,
also divorced. Her grandfather, Alexander Hurt, acted as a
surrogate father, although Shere remembers that she was too
shy to call him Daddy.
</p>
<p> When Shere was 14, she became frustrated with her
grandparents and joined an aunt and uncle in Daytona Beach,
Fla. An intelligent and resilient child with a flair for
music, she was a piano soloist at her baccalaureate ceremony
at Daytona Beach's Seabreeze High School in 1960. With money
supplied by her grandfather, she attended the University of
Florida, where she earned bachelor's and master's degrees in
history with honors.
</p>
<p> Hite moved to New York City in 1968 to pursue a doctoral
degree in history at Columbia University. Dissatisfaction with
the program (she says a professor falsely accused her of
plagiarism) and hard pressed for money, she turned to a
modeling career with the Wilhelmina agency. Life on the
modeling circuit was fast and daring ("it was a time when
women believed they should have sex freely like men did.").
She accepted offers to pose nude for Oui and Playboy magazines
because the money was good. Hite blames "society" and skin
magazines for exploiting women. She says now that the
experience was "extremely painful and embarrassing."
</p>
<p> Her transformation into a feminist came after she posed
as a secretary for a typewriter ad with the tagline, as Hite
recalls, "The typewriter is so smart she doesn't have to be."
On impulse, Hite read a pamphlet in the NOW office. The Myth
of Female Orgasm, and decided to create a questionnaire on the
issue for a NOW-sponsored "speak-up." As she read the woman's
responses about their sexuality, "a whole picture of the
universe began to fall into place," says Hite. "Without
feminism I don't what I would be doing today. It gave me the
belief in myself."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>