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Betty Ford On her final day as first lady, Betty Ford told Kennerly her idea for the Cabinet Room table.

David Hume Kennerly

  • History & Archaeology

Tabled Resolution

Betty Ford had a what-the-hell moment—and an accomplice in photographer David Hume Kennerly

  • By William Booth
  • Smithsonian magazine, June 2008

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    Related Topics

    American History

    Photojournalists

    Gerald Ford

    20th Century

    1970s

    Photo Gallery

    Betty Ford

    Tabled Resolution

    Explore more photos from the story


    Video Gallery

    David Hume Kennerlys Extraordinary Career

    David Hume Kennerly’s Extraordinary Career

    The prize-winning photographer reflects on his images of politics and political figures in a telephone conversation


    Related Links

    David Hume Kennerly's Web site

    Related Books

    Extraordinary Circumstances: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford

    by David Hume Kennerly
    Center for American History
    University of Texas, 2007

    More from Smithsonian.com
    • Model Arrangement

    On January 19, 1977, the White House was filled with cardboard boxes, moving men and staff gathering for bittersweet goodbyes. People remember the cold. The Washington Post would report that the capital was "glistening with ice" as President Gerald R. Ford went about his last full day in office. He granted a pardon to Iva D'Aquino, a Japanese-American woman convicted of being one of the radio propagandists known collectively as "Tokyo Rose." He telephoned Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to say goodbye. He awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Donald Rumsfeld, his secretary of defense, the youngest in history at age 43. In a photograph taken that day by David Hume Kennerly, you see Rumsfeld flanked by his family. His son, Nick, is wearing sneakers in the Oval Office. It was a different time. The president himself favored plaid pants.

    "I walked over to the West Wing to say goodbye to members of the staff who had served President Ford so well," Betty Ford, now 90, recalled in a written remembrance she sent from her home in Rancho Mirage, California, where she and her husband moved after they left Washington. "On the way back to the family quarters I passed by the empty Cabinet Room and thought, 'You know, I've always wanted to dance on the Cabinet Room table.'"

    Kennerly was 29 years old, bearded, funny, loyal, profane and talented. He had already won a Pulitzer Prize for work he'd done in Vietnam in 1971 for United Press International and was working for Time magazine when, on the night of Ford's hurried inauguration after President Richard M. Nixon resigned in August 1974, the new president asked him to be the White House photographer. Over the next 895 days of the Ford administration, Kennerly grew close to the president, who died in 2006, and he remains friendly with Betty Ford. When she voiced her idea about dancing on the Cabinet Room table to him, he recalls, "I said, 'Well, nobody's around.'" There was a Secret Service agent discreetly outside the door.

    Betty Ford: "So I took off my shoes, hopped up there, and struck a pose."

    Kennerly: "She said, 'I just think I'm going to do this.' Then she's on the table. She's a tiny woman, really, in very good shape. Very graceful, as a former dancer with the Martha Graham company. She got up there."

    Kennerly snapped a few frames in black-and-white with his small Leica Rangefinder camera. The photographs show the long oval table, the studded leather chairs and what appear to be ...candy dishes? He snorts. "Ashtrays! The president had his pipe. Tip O'Neill with his cigars. Dick Cheney [then White House chief of staff] smoked cigarettes like a chimney. I smoked. Everybody smoked."

    Kennerly says he does not know why Betty Ford danced on the table, but he has a guess. "Very few women have had a seat at that table," he says. "I bet you could count them on one hand at that point, and knowing her support for the Equal Rights Amendment"—she endorsed it—"she was tap-dancing in the middle of this male bastion. She was storming the walls of the gray suits and gray-haired eminences."

    Betty Ford: "It was a wonderful and whimsical ending to that magical time I spent as the first lady."

    On January 19, 1977, the White House was filled with cardboard boxes, moving men and staff gathering for bittersweet goodbyes. People remember the cold. The Washington Post would report that the capital was "glistening with ice" as President Gerald R. Ford went about his last full day in office. He granted a pardon to Iva D'Aquino, a Japanese-American woman convicted of being one of the radio propagandists known collectively as "Tokyo Rose." He telephoned Soviet Communist Party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev to say goodbye. He awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Donald Rumsfeld, his secretary of defense, the youngest in history at age 43. In a photograph taken that day by David Hume Kennerly, you see Rumsfeld flanked by his family. His son, Nick, is wearing sneakers in the Oval Office. It was a different time. The president himself favored plaid pants.

    "I walked over to the West Wing to say goodbye to members of the staff who had served President Ford so well," Betty Ford, now 90, recalled in a written remembrance she sent from her home in Rancho Mirage, California, where she and her husband moved after they left Washington. "On the way back to the family quarters I passed by the empty Cabinet Room and thought, 'You know, I've always wanted to dance on the Cabinet Room table.'"

    Kennerly was 29 years old, bearded, funny, loyal, profane and talented. He had already won a Pulitzer Prize for work he'd done in Vietnam in 1971 for United Press International and was working for Time magazine when, on the night of Ford's hurried inauguration after President Richard M. Nixon resigned in August 1974, the new president asked him to be the White House photographer. Over the next 895 days of the Ford administration, Kennerly grew close to the president, who died in 2006, and he remains friendly with Betty Ford. When she voiced her idea about dancing on the Cabinet Room table to him, he recalls, "I said, 'Well, nobody's around.'" There was a Secret Service agent discreetly outside the door.

    Betty Ford: "So I took off my shoes, hopped up there, and struck a pose."

    Kennerly: "She said, 'I just think I'm going to do this.' Then she's on the table. She's a tiny woman, really, in very good shape. Very graceful, as a former dancer with the Martha Graham company. She got up there."

    Kennerly snapped a few frames in black-and-white with his small Leica Rangefinder camera. The photographs show the long oval table, the studded leather chairs and what appear to be ...candy dishes? He snorts. "Ashtrays! The president had his pipe. Tip O'Neill with his cigars. Dick Cheney [then White House chief of staff] smoked cigarettes like a chimney. I smoked. Everybody smoked."

    Kennerly says he does not know why Betty Ford danced on the table, but he has a guess. "Very few women have had a seat at that table," he says. "I bet you could count them on one hand at that point, and knowing her support for the Equal Rights Amendment"—she endorsed it—"she was tap-dancing in the middle of this male bastion. She was storming the walls of the gray suits and gray-haired eminences."

    Betty Ford: "It was a wonderful and whimsical ending to that magical time I spent as the first lady."

    Normally, Kennerly would see contact sheets of everything he shot, but not this time. "The next day I was out of a job when Jimmy Carter was inaugurated at noon," he says. So the picture disappeared—for 16 years—into the archives at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It was first published in Kennerly's book Photo Op (1995) and republished in his recent Extraordinary Circumstances: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford.

    Kennerly, now 61 and working as a contributing editor for NBC, was initially hesitant to publish it at all. "As we all found out later, the first lady had a drinking problem," he says. "And in the intervening years, she confronted it—very brave—and talked about her alcoholism and wrote her book and started the Betty Ford Center and all that. I did not want people to put a martini glass in her hand and say here she is drunk on the Cabinet Room table. That would just be wrong. Because that is not what happened."

    So, in 1994, Kennerly showed the photograph to the former president. "And it's like one of those cartoon moments where his eyes come bulging out, and he goes, 'Oh, Betty isn't going to like this.' Remember, he knows her better than anybody. I'm sunk. But he doesn't say anything when she comes in, and she looks at the picture and she starts laughing. She says, 'Oh, I forgot all about this. That is so great.' And I ask her, you won't mind? And Mrs. Ford says, 'No! It's a terrific picture.'

    "Then President Ford says, 'Well, Betty, you never told me you did that.' And she smiles at him and says, 'There's a lot of things I haven't told you, Jerry.' "

    William Booth, a reporter for the Washington Post, covers arts and culture from Los Angeles.


    1 2


    Related topics: American History Photojournalists Gerald Ford 20th Century 1970s

     
    Comments

    I am so happy to see that someone finally recognizes the Fords. Gerald Ford was very likely the best (if not the only honest) politician who has ever lived. It is truly sad that he never recieved the credit for which he deserved. He was a wonderful man who deserves respect. Betty Ford is truly a hero in her own right. She endured terrible pressure & being in the "spotlight" surely had taken it's toll. She is a wonderful woman who can see well beyond her own troubles only to help someone else. Betty figured out how to "fix" her own problems & turned that into a nationwide "help plan" without showing the expected show of shame, which comes from the indiscreet whispers & back-stabbing of supposed friends. I find you, Mrs. Ford, an inspiration & someone I wish that I could emulate with nothing less than the utmost respect. Congrats Mrs. Gerald (Betty) Ford...you & your husband have truly made a difference, (especially to me) & yet to very many of the masses (asses), whether they are aware of that or not. I truly believe that every US citizen owes you & President Ford that long overdue Thank You. xoxo Claire Hall

    Posted by Claire Hall on July 19,2008 | 06:31 AM

    Great...i'd totally forgotten this. although i'm a big Obama fan, i was just telling those youngsters who are touting the Obama's inagural dance as the best, most romantic ever, that they are dead wrong. They have to see how Betty Ford threw her scarf/stole around the president's neck and pulled him to her. I would love to see a video of that but can't find it any where. I love Betty Ford...our most under appreciated first lady.

    Posted by tallulah on January 24,2009 | 07:32 PM

    I'm doing a report over Betty Ford and this picture is great for my report. Talk about HUMOR!!! Lol!

    Posted by Alice on March 11,2010 | 07:16 PM

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