Marjorie Hershey RIP
Michael Eisenstadt
michaele@mx1.pair.com
Tue, 05 Aug 2003 06:36:26 -0500
August 3 Statesman obit:
Reflecting on the style and grace of Marjorie Hershey, who passed away
in Austin, July 31, 2003, a friend of hers wrote: ``I loved that woman
the minute I laid eyes on her.'' Marjorie Bern Larsen Hershey was a
rarity in Texas - she had the breeding, home decor, and sometimes the
air of American gentility. A distant relative of President James
Monroe-and the Dr. Mudd who attended Lincoln assassin John Wilkes
Booth-Marjorie grew up in Bethesda, Maryland, and in an antebellum
farmhouse called Belleville in verdant Virginia countryside. She lived
and traveled in Europe for some years. But she remarked wittily on her
rhythms of hanging out laundry in her back yard in Austin, and was
always walking blocks for favored candidates in league with her friend,
mentor, and Democratic precinct chairman, a union carpenter. Her often
quoted role model was an aunt of old Southern school named Laura
Bonifant. But Marjorie's alter ego was Henrietta- for many years her nom
de plume as Austin's most acerbic and avidly read gossip columnist.
Marge was educated in Bethesda, Washington, D.C., Paris, and Austin. She
took her degree at the University of Texas in economics. She arrived in
Austin in 1962 with a passion for literature, the music of Cole Porter
and Bobby Short, and strongly held political persuasions. She was
president of the Central Texas chapter of the ACLU. She taught English
at the university, worked as a researcher and writer for comptrollers
Bob Bullock and John Sharp, and for the River City Sun and Third Coast,
delighted in the barbs and sallies that flowed from Henrietta's
semi-secret pen. One column began: ``Q: What do you get when you combine
Lassie, Rin Tin Tin, and the South Texas Nuclear Project? A: Two
moneymakers and a dog.'' Marge's parties and Christmas Eve celebrations
in her Brykerwood home were legendary. Her political champions included
former Travis County commissioner John Milloy and Senator Gonzalo
Barrientos. Among writers and reporters, her many friends included Billy
Lee Brammer, author of Austin's best-known novel The Gay Place. Brammer
wrote a friend a letter in 1969, describing a party that struck him as
long on disaffection and cynical poses, except for one: ``Marge looking
soulful and marvelously unpolluted.'' Her Austin haunts moved from
Scholz Beer Garten to the Raw Deals to the Texas Chili Parlor. With
friends she regularly traveled to Chicago and she often returned to her
beloved homes and family in Maryland and Virginia. Marjorie had severe
health problems for forty years; even they were gist for her hooting,
bawdy laugh. Hurtling toward the Mayo Clinic, she once raced through an
airport in Rochester, New York, only to learn from a cabdriver that the
famous hospital is in Rochester, Minnesota. Marjorie was a great beauty,
fair-skinned in the extreme, appearing almost fragile. Yet late in her
life she could be found in July heat hiking three miles up a rough trail
of Turkey Creek with a friend and five dogs. She was generous and
good-hearted and valiant in the past year's fight. Austin has lost one
of its all-time great characters: always a class act. Marjorie is
survived by her son, Jeffrey Michael Hershey of Austin; her brother,
Eric Bonifant Larsen of Bethesda; and numerous cousins. She was
remembered Monday morning, at 11:00 a.m., at Weed- Corley-Fish, 3125 N.
Lamar. Another service will follow at Emmanuel Episcopal Church in her
second home of Powhatan. The family requests that in lieu of flowers,
memorials be sent to the Texas Nurses Foundation, 7600 Burnet Rd. #440,
Austin 78757. Arrangements by Weed-Corley- Fish Funeral Home, 3125 N.
Lamar, 452-8811. You may view memorials at http://www.wcfish.com