The Japan Times - Ruth Westheimer, trusted authority on sex, dies at 96: media

EUR -
AED 3.824588
AFN 79.136766
ALL 98.140077
AMD 415.198572
ANG 1.877
AOA 951.206991
ARS 1090.486799
AUD 1.659721
AWG 1.8769
AZN 1.77027
BAM 1.950501
BBD 2.102797
BDT 127.004944
BGN 1.953324
BHD 0.39241
BIF 3035.319506
BMD 1.041276
BND 1.409278
BOB 7.196276
BRL 6.188404
BSD 1.041475
BTN 90.0418
BWP 14.404795
BYN 3.408257
BYR 20409.00937
BZD 2.092026
CAD 1.498131
CDF 2962.430314
CHF 0.943919
CLF 0.037409
CLP 1032.216479
CNY 7.572367
CNH 7.581864
COP 4431.930925
CRC 523.779474
CUC 1.041276
CUP 27.593814
CVE 110.686698
CZK 25.153579
DJF 185.055798
DKK 7.460576
DOP 63.945061
DZD 140.671177
EGP 52.386801
ERN 15.61914
ETB 131.252866
FJD 2.409304
FKP 0.857581
GBP 0.845332
GEL 2.978331
GGP 0.857581
GHS 15.826542
GIP 0.857581
GMD 76.012826
GNF 9013.2845
GTQ 8.050129
GYD 217.785169
HKD 8.109879
HNL 26.555912
HRK 7.684146
HTG 136.001156
HUF 410.658428
IDR 16916.257323
ILS 3.689343
IMP 0.857581
INR 90.03044
IQD 1364.071545
IRR 43837.718673
ISK 146.1015
JEP 0.857581
JMD 163.41602
JOD 0.738683
JPY 163.003944
KES 134.845315
KGS 91.059658
KHR 4197.383338
KMF 492.107326
KPW 937.148505
KRW 1495.704412
KWD 0.321027
KYD 0.867938
KZT 542.528625
LAK 22699.816611
LBP 93225.179411
LKR 311.006529
LRD 202.997191
LSL 19.253261
LTL 3.074617
LVL 0.629857
LYD 5.117886
MAD 10.409115
MDL 19.423137
MGA 4914.822946
MKD 61.54156
MMK 3382.023792
MNT 3538.25592
MOP 8.354362
MRU 41.526221
MUR 48.367306
MVR 16.046045
MWK 1808.174035
MXN 21.340061
MYR 4.618578
MZN 66.548137
NAD 19.253034
NGN 1621.266858
NIO 38.316373
NOK 11.742495
NPR 144.06728
NZD 1.837827
OMR 0.400823
PAB 1.041475
PEN 3.871987
PGK 4.167447
PHP 60.981808
PKR 290.151533
PLN 4.223677
PYG 8237.619457
QAR 3.791277
RON 4.975738
RSD 117.149829
RUB 103.345661
RWF 1449.456176
SAR 3.905965
SBD 8.824531
SCR 15.005455
SDG 625.806941
SEK 11.454817
SGD 1.411314
SHP 0.857581
SLE 23.636636
SLL 21835.036753
SOS 595.086376
SRD 36.527702
STD 21552.310629
SVC 9.113241
SYP 13538.670384
SZL 19.253458
THB 35.249276
TJS 11.398458
TMT 3.654879
TND 3.327403
TOP 2.438771
TRY 37.117542
TTD 7.074813
TWD 34.06045
TZS 2629.22167
UAH 43.741759
UGX 3832.605711
USD 1.041276
UYU 45.576175
UZS 13541.794113
VES 57.991537
VND 26125.614546
VUV 123.622376
WST 2.916434
XAF 654.182811
XAG 0.033784
XAU 0.000378
XCD 2.814101
XDR 0.802424
XOF 654.430405
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.329891
ZAR 19.275575
ZMK 9372.736948
ZMW 29.030431
ZWL 335.290443
  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.49

    -0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.96

    -0.17%

  • BCC

    -1.2000

    127.92

    -0.94%

  • GSK

    -0.3500

    33.43

    -1.05%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.58

    -1.9%

  • NGG

    -1.5400

    60.05

    -2.56%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    36.57

    -0.44%

  • RIO

    -0.6100

    61.12

    -1%

  • AZN

    0.2400

    68.2

    +0.35%

  • RBGPF

    0.1600

    62.36

    +0.26%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.42

    +2.02%

  • BP

    -0.3900

    31.13

    -1.25%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.15

    -1.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    49.26

    -0.59%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    8.38

    -2.03%

Ruth Westheimer, trusted authority on sex, dies at 96: media
Ruth Westheimer, trusted authority on sex, dies at 96: media / Photo: John MACDOUGALL - AFP/File

Ruth Westheimer, trusted authority on sex, dies at 96: media

Ruth Westheimer, the wildly successful sex therapist who became a pop culture phenomenon in the 1980s with her bluntly delivered advice on how to spice up your life in the bedroom, has died, US media reported Saturday. She was 96.

Text size:

People magazine, quoting her publicist and sometime co-author Pierre Lehu, said she died on Friday. It gave no cause of death, but other reports said she died at home in New York City with family members present.

The German-born Westheimer, who lost both of her parents in the Holocaust, reached fame only in her 50s when she began hosting a pioneering radio show in New York City called "Sexually Speaking."

Known simply as Dr. Ruth, she capitalized on her late-in-life fame, going on to host a television show, appear in many films and coach millions of fans in some 40 books about how to have a more satisfying sex life.

Westheimer's diminutive stature – she was only 4-foot-7 (1.4 meters) – her matronly appearance and her cheerful demeanor made her an easily trusted conduit for straight talk about intimacy.

Her life contained many chapters, including a harrowing escape from Nazi Germany as a Jewish refugee, a stint as a sniper in the Israeli army, and another as a housekeeper in New York City before obtaining her doctorate from Columbia University and embarking on life as a sex therapist.

She was active well into her 90s, explaining to People magazine in 2023 how she remained youthful and relevant: "Talking about sex from morning 'til night! That keeps you young."

- From sniper to sex therapist -

The only child of Orthodox Jewish parents, Karola Ruth Siegel was born on June 4, 1928 in Wiesenfeld, Germany.

When she was 10, the Nazis took her father to a concentration camp shortly after the anti-Jewish pogrom known as Kristallnacht. As the drumbeat of war grew louder, her mother and grandmother put her on a train for an orphanage in Switzerland. She never saw her parents again.

After the war, she emigrated to what was then British-controlled Palestine and joined an underground Zionist group, training for military action. She was badly wounded in an explosion during the war that ended with Israel's independence.

In 1950, she moved with her new husband, an Israeli soldier, to Paris, where she studied at the Sorbonne. Newly divorced, she emigrated to New York City and began raising a daughter, Miriam, from a brief second marriage.

Her third marriage in 1961 was to a fellow Jewish refugee and Holocaust survivor, Manfred Westheimer, a union that lasted until his death in 1997. They had a son, Joel.

After her studies, Westheimer worked with pioneering sex therapist Helen Singer Kaplan before launching her New York radio show in 1980.

In less than two years, she became a household name with nationally syndicated radio and television shows.

The tiny Jewish dynamo -- offering frank talk about female orgasm, masturbation, homosexuality, consent and other bedroom topics -- reached a nation eager for plainspoken answers.

Her nonjudgmental nature put people at ease, and her advice was often pithy and direct: have sex before dinner, enjoy and share fantasies, and be flexible with partners with differing appetites for sex.

She shunned the word "normal," suggesting that anything between two consenting adults done in privacy was fine. She also supported legalized prostitution, which generated some controversy.

Her book "Sex for Dummies" was published in 17 languages.

- 'Very good shooter' -

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, some chafed at Westheimer's attitudes on consent.

"This idea that once you are aroused and have already started that you should then ask, 'Can I touch your left breast, or your right breast?' is just nonsense," she told The Guardian in 2019.

Westheimer adored her children and grandchildren, and shared her complicated history with them, including as a sniper fighting for Israel's independence.

"I was a very good shooter. I once went with my grandson to a county fair where you shoot a water pistol at the clown's mouth. We came home with 12 stuffed animals and a goldfish," she said.

In 2009, Playboy magazine listed her as Number 13 in its list of the 55 most important people in the sex field from the past 55 years.

A one-woman play based on Westheimer's life, "Becoming Dr. Ruth," ran off-Broadway in 2013, and a documentary, "Ask Dr. Ruth," was released in 2019.

She popped up regularly on television shows, including "Ally McBeal" and "Melrose Place," and had cameos in numerous movies.

Westheimer always communicated her gratitude for surviving the Holocaust, and felt it was her duty to offer something in return.

"I did not know that my eventual contribution to the world would be to talk about orgasms and erections, but I did know I had to do something for others to justify being alive," she told the Harvard Business Review in 2016.

S.Yamamoto--JT