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Hope Elaine Ryden (August 1, 1929 – June 18, 2017) was an American documentary producer and wildlife activist. She contributed to various publications including National Geographic, Audubon, Smithsonian, Defenders and The New York Times. [1] She specialized in photographing animals such as beavers and coyotes across North America.
Jun 26, 2017 · Hope Elaine Ryden was born on Aug. 1, 1929, in St. Paul, Minn. Her father, E. E. Ryden, was a Lutheran minister who helped unify four denominations to form the Lutheran Church of America.
Author-Naturalist Hope Ryden has spent years in the field, studying and photographing North American wildlife. Her behavioral findings have been published in National Geographic, Smithsonian, and Audubon magazine, and her books have been translated into German, Swedish, Finnish, Norwegian, Dutch, Spanish, Italian and Russian.
Losing Hope Ryden is calamitous for the wild animals she loved so deeply, and whose lives she so intimately understood from her years with them in the wild. As a compassionate observer of their individuality, Hope was able to communicate their personhood even to people who didn’t agree that animals had any.
- Known For Film Work Before Winning Acclaim as Author
- Parents Wrote & Composed
- Early Success in Safety Film
- From Kate Smith Hour to Pan Am
- Served Stars
- From Pan Am to Newsreels
- Cinema Vérité
- Mission to Malaya
- Civil Rights Movement
- Operation Noah
HYANNIS, Massachusetts––Hope Elaine Ryden, 87, author and/or photographer for 26 books mostly on wildlife subjects, and a frequent photo contributor to National Geographic, died on June 18, 2017 in Hyannis, Massachusetts from complications of hip surgery.
Sharing their interest in music, the senior Rydens either wrote or translated from Swedish more than 40 hymns for publication in various Lutheran, Methodist, Episcopalian and Presbyterian hymnals. E.E. Ryden was also author of The Story of Our Hymns (1930) and The Story of Christian Hymnody(1959, and from 1945 to 1958 was secretary of the Commissio...
First mentioned in print in 1949 as maid-of-honor at a sister’s wedding, Hope Ryden initially pursued a career very different from the work for which she became best known. While earning a degree in English in 1951 from the College of Iowa, Hope Ryden starred opposite Milburn Stone (1904-1980) in A Closed Book, a well-received film mini-drama promo...
Also aspiring to success in television acting, then a rapidly expanding field, Hope Ryden relocated to the New York City area. She won a career break as assistant to singer Kate Smith on The Kate Smith Hour, where her work was praised by syndicated critic Earl Wilson for adding “sparkle” to the last year of the show in 1954, but appears to have wor...
Among the 111 passengers were mime Marcel Marceau, actresses Jeanne Moreau, Liliane Montevecchi, and Maureen O’Hara, singer Eartha Kitt, writer/politician Pierre Salinger, two-time world heavyweight boxing champion Floyd Patterson, and National Football League Hall of Fame quarterback Johnny Unitas. Pan Am on the 25th anniversary of the flight, in ...
Jet travel also brought more frequent flights and much shorter layovers for air crews at flight destinations. Hope Ryden had become accustomed to using her multi-day layovers abroad to develop her photography skills. Feeling overworked, she made the return flight from Paris, resigned from Pan Am, became a freelance photographer, and in 1961, recall...
The “cinéma vérité” style of making newsreels is usually traced to the 1922 Robert J. Flaherty documentary Nanook of the North, which followed the lives of an Inuit family on the Ungava peninsula of northern Quebec, and could be described as a direct, if chronologically distant ancestor of “reality television.” “Hope Ryden joined Drew Associates in...
Hope Ryden enjoyed her biggest success as a documentarian with Mission to Malaya(1963). “Seeking to combat the growing tide of anti-American sentiment overseas, President John F. Kennedy in 1961 founded the Peace Corps in part to present an alternative vision of the Ugly American stereotype that had taken root in several corners of the world,” wrot...
Continued the Robert Drew & Associates web site, “It is telling that Ryden was the only female ‘Associate’ at that time at Drew Associates, meaning she was a partner in the company. Ryden spoke privately years later about the difficulties of being a woman in the ultra-competitive world of making films, though she said that Drew was a huge supporter...
The story began when Jan Michels, the then-secretary of the Surinam SPCA, described in a letter to then-Massachusetts SPCA president Eric H. Hansen how the completion of the Afobaka Dam had begun to inundate 870 miles of dense rainforest, leaving thousands of animals stranded on fast-disappearing small islands and in the tops of trees. Michels soug...
Jun 18, 2017 · Hope Ryden. August 1, 1929 – June 18, 2017. North American wildlife lost one of their staunchest advocates with the death in June of esteemed author and naturalist Hope Ryden. AWI is honored to have worked with Hope: From the 1980s through 2004, she served on the board of trustees of AWI’s lobbying arm, the Society for Animal Protective ...
Jun 28, 2017 · Hope Ryden, whose lifelike photographs of North American beavers, coyotes, mustangs and other wildlife helped elevate them into poster animals for conservation campaigns, died on June 18 in Hyannis, Mass. She was 87. The cause was complications of hip surgery, her brother, Ernest E. Ryden, said. Read the rest of this article HERE.