Popular TV chef and author
Julia Child was born Julia on August 15, 1912, in Pasadena,
California. The oldest of three children, Julia was known by several
pet names as a little girl, including Juke, Juju and Jukies. Her
father John McWilliams, Jr., was a Princeton graduate and early
investor in California real estate. His wife, Julia Carolyn Weston,
was a paper-company heiress whose father served as lieutenant
governor of Massachusetts. Julia Child lived a privileged childhood.
She was educated at San Francisco's elite Katherine Branson School
for Girls, where at a towering height of 6 feet, 2 inches she was the
tallest student in her class. She was a lively prankster who, as one
friend recalled, could be really, really wild. She was also
adventurous and athletic, with particular talent in golf, tennis and
small-game hunting. In 1930, she enrolled at Smith College in
Northampton, Massachusetts, with the intention of becoming a writer.
"There were some famous women novelists in those days," she
said, "and I intended to be one." Although she enjoyed
writing short plays and regularly submitted unsolicited manuscripts
to the
New Yorker, none of
her writing was published. Upon graduation she moved to New York,
where she worked in the advertising department of the prestigious
home furnishings company W&J Sloane. In 1941, at the onset of
World War II, Julia moved to Washington, D.C., where she volunteered
as a research assistant for the Office of Strategic Services , a
newly formed government intelligence agency. In her position, Julia
played a key role in the communication of top secret documents
between U.S. government officials and their intelligence officers.
She and her colleagues were sent on assignments around the world,
holding posts in Washington, D.C., China and Colombo, Sri Lanka. In
1945, while in Sri Lanka, Child began a relationship with fellow
employee Paul Child. In September of 1946, following the end of World
War II, Julia and Paul returned to America and were married. In 1948,
when Paul was reassigned to the U.S. Information Service at the
American Embassy in Paris, the Childs moved to France. While there,
Julia developed a penchant for French cuisine and attended the
world-famous Cordon Bleu cooking school. Following her six-month
training which included private lessons with master chef Max Bugnard
Julia banded with fellow Cordon Bleu students Simone Beck and
Louisette Bertholle to form the cooking school L'Ecole de Trois
Gourmandes (The School of the Three Gourmands). With a goal of
adapting sophisticated French cuisine for mainstream Americans, the
trio collaborated on a two-volume cookbook. The women earned a $750
advance for the work, which they received in three payments. The
original publisher rejected the manuscript, however, due to its
734-page length. Another publisher eventually accepted the 3 pound.
cookbook, releasing it in September 1961 under the title
Mastering
the Art of French Cooking. The book was considered
groundbreaking, and remained the bestselling cookbook for five
straight years after its publication. It has since become a standard
guide for the culinary community. Julia promoted her book on the Boston public television station
near her Cambridge, Massachusetts, home. Displaying her trademark
forthright manner and hearty humor, she prepared an omelet on air.
The public's response was enthusiastic, generating 27 letters and
countless phone calls a remarkable response, a station executive
remembered, given that station management occasionally wondered if 27
viewers were tuned in. She was then invited back to tape her own
series on cooking for the network, earning $50 a show.
Andrea,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your history on Julia Child, she was an interesting woman. I noticed some punctuation problems as well as a run-on sentence. Also, you just left the story as a cliff hanger, you didn't tell anything about her being on tv and when she died. Lastly, I can tell where you copy and pasted stuff. You need to write these in your own words or I will have to give you a zero.
Your word count was excellent at 569 words. Your score was 19/25.
love mommy