Peter Bogdanovich was an Oscar-nominated movie director and actor whose films, ego and off-camera exploits encapsulated the personality-driven excesses of 1970s Hollywood filmmaking. Peter Bogdanovich at the 1999 New York City premiere of “RKO 281.” (Ron Galella/Getty Images) Albright died March 23 in Washington, D.C., at 84. I can’t,” she told The Washington Post in 1997. Albright did not like to talk about her parents’ choice to keep her in the dark, but when she did, it was in the voice of a blunt-edged diplomat who understood how the 20th century robbed some people of agency, and how they did what they had to do to reclaim it. Her parents were Czech immigrants who had converted from Judaism to Catholicism and then Episcopalianism to avoid persecution before fleeing Europe. Crucial to her worldview was her refugee story, which she did not fully grasp until after her time in the limelight. But regardless of her gender, Albright’s moves as a part of Bill Clinton’s administration left a lasting mark on U.S. The “first woman secretary of state in the United States” label will always follow Madeleine Albright, especially because of her success in such a male-dominated field of policy. (Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images) Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, pictured here in 2018, died March 23, 2022.
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