Braudy's father Bernard Orr worked for the Philadelphia Housing Authority and actively supported local artists such as Dox Thrash. He was Vice President of the American Jewish Committee and his Master's thesis at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania became the book Technological Unemployment, an early look at how advances in technology were replacing human labor. He was the principal of a vocational night school whose students were largely African-American. Braudy's mother Blanche Orr taught history at Germantown High School, whose students were also largely African-American, and went back to school to become a reading supervisor because her students needed better reading skills. Braudy now lives with film editor Joe Weintraub.[3]
Braudy had been commissioned by Playboy magazine in 1969 to write an "objective" piece on the feminism movement. Her final article was viewed as controversial by male Playboy editors.[5] The debate continued up to Hugh Hefner; who wrote in a memo (covertly distributed by female Playboy employees) that he felt the article needed to focus more on the "highly irrational, emotional, kookie trend" of feminism because "these chicks [are] the natural enemy of Playboy." He argued that radical feminists were rejecting the Playboy way of life.[7] Braudy later wrote an article published in Defiance and Glamour magazine in which she analyzed the contents of Hefner's memo and criticized his approach to women.[8][9]
Braudy was an editor and writer at Ms. magazine. She edited the October 1975 men's issue of Ms. whose cover featured Robert Redford's back.[10]
In 1977, Braudy became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press (WIFP).[11] WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization. The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women-based media.
On January 18, 2018, Braudy accused former colleague Michael Douglas of sexual harassment in an article for The Hollywood Reporter. She contended that during her time at Stonebridge Productions, she was "subjected to sexual harassment by Douglas that included near-constant profane and sexually charged dialogue, demeaning comments about her appearance, graphic discussions regarding his mistresses," and finally masturbating in front of her.[19]
Douglas had published a preemptive denial of the claims in the Hollywood Star ten days earlier, saying he "felt the need to get ahead" and explain his concerns about the validity of the story. He stated: "I don't have skeletons in my closet, or anyone else who's coming out or saying this. I'm bewildered why, after 32 years, this is coming out, now."[20]
The New York Times published an email from Braudy about her experience working for him. She wrote that Douglas "believed his power was so much greater than mine that he could pull icky/unwelcome sexual pranks without consequence and even take pleasure in my extreme discomfort.”[21]
In popular culture
In 2016, Braudy's reflection on the Playboy incident "Up Against the Centerfold: What It Was Like to Report on Feminism for Playboy in 1969" was published in Jezebel.[5]Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker described it as "amaaaazing."[22]
Between Marriage and Divorce: A Woman's Diary. New York: William Morrow, 1975. ISBN978-0688029609.
Who Killed Sal Mineo? A Novel. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1982. ISBN978-0671610098.
What the Movies Made Me Do: A Novel. New York: Alfred Knopf, 1985. ISBN978-0394532462.
This Crazy Thing Called Love: The Golden World and Fatal Marriage of Ann and Billy Woodward. New York: Alfred Knopf, 1992. ISBN978-0394532479.
Basis for two television episodes on "A Crime To Remember" and "Power, Privilege & Justice."[27]
Family Circle: The Boudins and the Aristocracy of the Left. New York: Alfred Knopf, 2003. ISBN978-0679432944.[28]
Based on the story of Kathy Boudin, who was imprisoned for her part in the Brink's robbery (1981). Braudy was inspired to write the book because Kathy Boudin had been a classmate at Bryn Mawr.[29]Family Circle got a "largely positive reception" despite being criticized by friends of Kathy Boudin.[30] The book was nominated by Alfred A. Knopf for the Pulitzer Prize. It was later the subject of a 2014 Guardian article criticizing The New York Times and others for republishing findings on the break-in of FBI headquarters in Media, Pennsylvania that damaged J. Edgar Hoover's reputation beyond repair. The break-in's perpetrators had been revealed 11 years prior by Braudy in her nonfiction book.[31]
Prefaces
Sartre, Jean-Paul Essays in Aesthetics. Transl. Wade Baskin. Pref. Susan Braudy. Open Road Media, 2012. ISBN9781453228562.
Gibran, Kahlil. The Treasured Writings of Kahlil Gibran. Pref. Susan Braudy. Open Road Media, 2011. ISBN9781453235539.
Gibran, Kahlil. Tears and Laughter. Ed. Martin Wolf. Pref. Susan Braudy. Open Road Media, 2011. ISBN9781453228531.
^Klemesrud, Judy (January 8, 1982). "The evening hours". The New York Times. Retrieved March 4, 2015.
^"Lady in Charge". The Southeast Missourian. January 26, 1981. p. 5. Retrieved March 4, 2015.
^TCM Archive Materials, "Susan Braudy", No date, Accessed 10 March 2015
^"Susan Braudy" "Who's Who In America", Accessed 10 March 2015
^Braudy, Susan (May 21, 1978). "PAPERBACK AUCTION: WHAT PRICE A 'HOT' BOOK?; STAR PROPERTIES". The New York Times. Retrieved June 18, 2021. It was the winter before last that Howard Kaminsky, president of Warner Books Inc., a paperback publishing house, asked Paula Diamond, subsidiary‐rights director at Harper & Row, over a lunch of fettuccine and white wine to tell him the name of the "hot book" on her spring list.....The big question is: How high can prices for "star" properties soar? What can the market bear? Says Peter Mayer, "For better or worse, the paperback companies have a best‐seller mentality. It's the star system. Prices will continue to rise because retail prices are rising and because we all have more capital to spend."...Says one of them dolefully "The real victim in all of this is the average book and the early efforts of promising writers — and this is a great, great sadness."
^O'Rourke, William (July–August 2004). "Review of Susan Braudy, Family Circle: The Boudins and the Aristocracy of the Left". American Book Review. 25 (5).