A legend in political reporting, Helen Thomas has covered every president since
John F. Kennedy, earning the nickname "First Lady of the Press." Now in her 80s, the
venerable journalist sits down to review her life and career in depth for the first time,
engaging in a one-on-one interview with award-winning director Rory Kennedy, when
THANK YOU, MR. PRESIDENT: HELEN THOMAS AT THE WHITE HOUSE
Presented during an election season that finds the press playing a critical role in
the future of the nation, THANK YOU, MR. PRESIDENT: HELEN THOMAS AT THE
WHITE HOUSE traces the reporter's journey from her modest beginnings as the daughter
of illiterate immigrants to her status as fearless journalist who stands up to the most
powerful men in the world. Reflecting on her storied career, Thomas offers illuminating
insights into the distinct personalities and foibles of the presidents she has covered, and
remembers some of the scandals that have rocked the White House over the years.
The fact that Rory Kennedy, niece of John F. Kennedy, directed the film and
interviewed Thomas seems particularly appropriate, given the fact that JFK was the first
president Thomas covered (and was one she greatly revered). Their conversation is
supplemented by archival clips of Thomas in action, as well as photos.
For more than six decades, Thomas has held a front row seat at White House
press conferences, covering nine presidents. "I think that presidents deserve to be
questioned, perhaps irreverently, to bring them down a size," Thomas says of her own
role in the White House Press Corps, believing strongly that the White House press
conference is the only forum where a president can be questioned on a regular basis and
held accountable for his actions.
When she started working in Washington, Helen Thomas was one of a handful of
women in the White House Press Corps. She joined United Press International (UPI) in
1943, and began covering presidents in 1960. While the tradition of opening and closing
a news conference had been around since the Roosevelt era, Thomas became the first
woman to both open a news conference with the first question and conclude the session
with "Thank you, Mr. President," making the practice her signature. She recalls the first
press conference where she used the closing, saying, "I could see President Kennedy
was struggling. So, finally, I got up, and I said, 'Thank you, Mr. President.'...I got him off
the hook."
Although Thomas admits she is sometimes star-struck, she adds, "I know I'm not a
friend to these people." When Richard Nixon publicly congratulated her for being
appointed the first female chief of UPI, instead of asking something uncontroversial,
Thomas posed a hard-hitting question, "even after the President was so nice to me."
While THANK YOU, MR. PRESIDENT focuses primarily on Thomas's illustrious
career as a journalist, it also offers glimpses of her life outside work. Born in 1920 to
Syrian émigrés who could not read or write, Thomas says her mother and father instilled
a strong sense of justice in her. When she saw her first byline in her high school paper,
she knew she was hooked for life, and thought, "This is it." At the time, Thomas never
imagined she would cover the White House, but she says she always wanted "to cover
history and not fires in Detroit."
Idolized by many and despised by some, Thomas is a determined, steadfast
journalist who maintains the utmost respect for the office of the presidency, even while
knowing it is her job to ask the tough questions. After more than six decades of presiding
over the White House Press Corps, she remains true to her journalistic ideals, noting, "If
we don't ask the questions, then they won't get asked."
THANK YOU, MR. PRESIDENT: HELEN THOMAS AT THE WHITE HOUSE is
produced by Rory Kennedy, Liz Garbus and Jack Youngelson; directed by Rory Kennedy;
line produced by Amy Shatsky; story editor, Mark Bailey; director of photography, Tom
Hurwitz; editor, Sari Gilman. For HBO: supervising producer, Jacqueline Glover;
executive producer, Sheila Nevins.
