Francine Gottfried
This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (September 2017) |
Francine Gottfried (born 1947) is a former clerical worker in New York City's Financial District. Gottfried gained rapid recognition in September 1968 when an escalating number of men started observing her during her daily commute. Referred to as the "Wall Street's Sweater Girl" by the press, her appealing physique became the focal point that attracted crowds whenever she appeared in the financial district.
Fame
Gottfried started working at Chemical Bank in the Financial District of Manhattan on May 27, 1968. By late August, a small band of admirers had noticed her as she traveled the same route each day. They timed her daily arrival and spread the word to their co-workers. For three weeks, the crowd of gawkers grew steadily larger until, on September 18, there were 2000 people waiting to watch her stroll by.[1]
By this point, the crowd itself had become the phenomenon drawing the crowd. On September 19, over 5000 Financial District employees left work and poured into the streets at 1:15pm to watch Gottfried exit the New York City Subway station and walk to her job at the Chemical Bank New York Trust Company's downtown data processing center.[2] Police closed the streets and escorted her through the mob, which damaged three cars as men climbed on their roofs to gain a better view. Stockbrokers and bankers leaned out of windows overlooking Wall Street to watch as trading came to a virtual halt. "Ticker tapes went untended and dignified brokers ran amok," wrote New York magazine.[3] Photographers from all the daily papers and Life,[4] Time, and New York[2] took her picture. "A Bust Panics Wall Street As The Tape Reads 43" read a headline in the Daily News.
The following day, Friday, September 20, the corner of Wall and Broad was jammed with 10,000 spectators and press who waited for Gottfried in vain.[5] Her boss had called and asked her to stay home to put a stop to the disturbances. Gottfried, who lived at home with her parents in Williamsburg, Brooklyn,[2] was not seeking fame and started taking a different route to work.[6] "I think they're all crazy," she was quoted as saying. "What are they doing this for? I'm just an ordinary girl."[7] On October 4, publicists took other busty women to Wall Street as rivals for Gottfried's attention: Mrs. Geri Stotts, an office manager flown in from Burbank, California by a Los Angeles radio station,[8] and Ronnie Bell, a stripper in a New York burlesque house.[9]
Responses
Although Gottfried made it clear to interviewers that she was willing to entertain movie and modeling offers, her 15 minutes of fame were soon over and she quickly faded into obscurity. Brief accounts of the crowd-gathering phenomenon she triggered subsequently appeared in a number of sociological and pop historical books, some treating it as a survival of the so-called "bosom mania" of the 1950s.[10] A folk song about her, slyly contrasting the crowd that went to see her with the one welcoming presidential candidate Richard Nixon nearby, was published in Broadside magazine. Artist and prankster Joey Skaggs offered a facetious show of support by hanging a 50-foot black bra from the U.S. Treasury building on Wall Street opposite the stock exchange. She dined with the Apollo 10 astronauts, and Esquire awarded her a "Dubious Achievement" award, depicting her with other "dubious achievers" on the cover of the January 1970 issue. She was referenced as a cultural icon of the era in Thomas Hauser's novel Finding the Princess.
The events of September 1968 made an impression on second-wave feminists in the city, and in March 1970, they retaliated in a raid on Wall Street which they dubbed the "Ogle-In", in which a large group of feminists, including Karla Jay, Alix Kates Shulman, and a number of women who had participated in the sit-in at Ladies Home Journal a few weeks before, sexually harassed male Wall Streeters on their way to work with catcalls and crude remarks.[11]
References
- ^ Rozgonyi, Tim (August 15, 2015). "Throwback Thursday from the Tampa Bay Times: Pandemonium on Wall Street, ca. 1968". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2022-10-30.
- ^ a b c Sloane, Leonard (October 14, 1968). "Boom and Bust on Wall Street". New York Magazine. Vol. 1, no. 28. pp. 32–33. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
- ^ "Contents". New York Magazine. October 14, 1968. p. 3. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
- ^ "Winners and Losers". Life. No. Incredible '68: An Almanac. Time Inc. 10 January 1969. p. 101. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
- ^ "10,000 Wait in Vain for Reappearance of Wall Street's Sweater Girl," New York Times, Sept. 21, 1968
- ^ Allen, Michael O.; Pienciak, Richard T. (May 4, 1997). "Fleeting Infamy, Many Called, Few Frozen In Spotlight". Daily News. New York City. Archived from the original on May 6, 2008.
- ^ MacCannell, Dean (2002-04-12). Empty Meeting Grounds: The Tourist Papers. Taylor & Francis. p. 246. ISBN 9780203412145.
- ^ Liotta, Louis (4 October 1968). "Geri Was Sent To New York". Getty Images. Archived from the original on 7 October 2016. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
- ^ "Another Boom, Bust Day on Wall Street". Observer–Reporter. Washington, Pennsylvania. Associated Press. October 5, 1968. pp. A–5. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
- ^ Iconicity: essays on the nature of culture: festschrift for Thomas A. Sebeok on his 65th birthday (Stauffenburg Verlag, 1986), p. 430–431.
- ^ Jay, Karla. Tales of the Lavender Menace, (Basic Books, 1999), pp. 132–133.