Current:Home > reviewsProjects featuring Lady Bird Johnson’s voice offer new looks at the late first lady -MomentumProfit Zone
Projects featuring Lady Bird Johnson’s voice offer new looks at the late first lady
View
Date:2025-04-14 03:20:06
DALLAS (AP) — Texas college student Jade Emerson found herself entranced as she worked on a podcast about Lady Bird Johnson, listening to hour upon hour of the former first lady recounting everything from her childhood memories to advising her husband in the White House.
“I fell in love very quickly,” said Emerson, host and producer of the University of Texas podcast “Lady Bird.” “She kept surprising me.”
The podcast, which was released earlier this year, is among several recent projects using Johnson’s own lyrical voice to offer a new look at the first lady who died in 2007. Other projects include a documentary titled “The Lady Bird Diaries” that premieres Monday on Hulu and an exhibit in Austin at the presidential library for her husband, Lyndon B. Johnson, who died in 1973.
Lady Bird Johnson began recording an audio diary in the tumultuous days after her husband became president following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. The library released that audio about a decade after her death. It adds to recorded interviews she did following her husband’s presidency and home movies she narrated.
“I don’t know that people appreciated or realized how much she was doing behind the scenes and I think that’s the part that’s only just now really starting to come out,” said Lara Hall, LBJ Presidential Library curator.
“Lady Bird: Beyond the Wildflowers” shows library visitors the myriad ways Johnson made an impact. Hall said the exhibit, which closes at the end of the year, has been so popular that the library hopes to integrate parts of it into its permanent display.
In making her podcast, Emerson, who graduated from UT in May with a journalism degree, relied heavily on the interviews Johnson did with presidential library staff over the decades after her husband left the White House in 1969.
“Just to have her telling her own story was so fascinating,” Emerson said. “And she just kept surprising me. Like during World War II when LBJ was off serving, she was the one who ran his congressional office in the 1940s. She had bought a radio station in Austin and went down to Austin to renovate it and get it going again.”
The new documentary from filmmaker Dawn Porter, based on Julia Sweig’s 2021 biography “Lady Bird Johnson: Hiding in Plain Sight” and a podcast hosted by the author, takes viewers through the White House years. From advising her husband on strategy to critiquing his speeches, her influence is quickly seen.
Porter also notes that Johnson was “a fierce environmentalist” and an advocate for women. She was also a skilled campaigner, Porter said. Among events the documentary recounts is Johnson’s tour of the South aboard a train named the “Lady Bird Special” before the 1964 election.
With racial tensions simmering following the passage of the Civil Rights Act, President Johnson sent his wife as his surrogate. “She does that whistle-stop tour in the very hostile South and does it beautifully,” Porter said.
“She did all of these things and she didn’t ask for credit, but she deserves the credit,” Porter said.
The couple’s daughter Luci Baines Johnson can still remember the frustration she felt as a 16-year-old when she saw the message hanging on the doorknob to her mother’s room that read: “I want to be alone.” Lady Bird Johnson would spend that time working on her audio tapes, compiling her thoughts from photographs, letters and other information that might strike her memory.
“She was just begging for the world to give her the time to do what she’d been uniquely trained to do,” said Luci Baines Johnson, who noted that her mother had degrees in both history and journalism from the University of Texas.
“She was just beyond, beyond and beyond,” she said. “She thought a day without learning was a day that was wasted.”
Emerson called her work on the podcast “a huge gift” as she “spent more time with Lady Bird than I did with anyone else in my college years.”
“She’s taught me a lot about just what type of legacy I’d like to leave with my own life and just how to treat people.”
“Every time I hear her voice, I start to smile,” she said.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- How Travis Barker Is Bonding With Kourtney Kardashian's Older Kids After Welcoming Baby Rocky
- Accused of biting police official, NYC Council member says police were the aggressors
- Woman dead, her parents hospitalized after hike leads to possible heat exhaustion
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Comedian Bob Newhart, deadpan master of sitcoms and telephone monologues, dies at 94
- What is swimmer’s itch? How to get rid of this common summertime rash
- 15 months after his firing, Tucker Carlson returns to Fox News airwaves with a GOP convention speech
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- This week on Sunday Morning (July 21)
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Former Trump executive Allen Weisselberg released from jail after serving perjury sentence
- NC State Chancellor Randy Woodson announces his retirement after nearly 15 years in the role
- What's it like to train with Simone Biles every day? We asked her teammates.
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- The 2025 Ram 1500 Tungsten 4x4 High Output pickup goes hard
- Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders announces trade mission to Europe
- Shocking video shows lightning strike near a police officer's cruiser in Illinois
Recommendation
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
Dubai Princess Blasts Husband With “Other Companions” in Breakup Announcement
Grateful Dead, Bonnie Raitt, Francis Ford Coppola to receive Kennedy Center Honors
How to get your kids to put their phones down this summer
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Some GOP voters welcome Trump’s somewhat softened tone at Republican National Convention
Adidas apologizes for using Bella Hadid in 1972 Munich Olympic shoe ad
Trump’s convention notably downplays Jan. 6 and his lies about election fraud