Leaming, born in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, on May 22, 1943, graduated from Haddonfield Memorial High School in Haddonfield, NJ, in June 1961, and earned her B.A. degree from
Smith College in 1965 and her Ph.D. from
New York University in 1976. She wrote her doctoral dissertation,
Engineers of Human Souls, on the transition to
socialist realism in the Soviet cinema of the 1930s. She was a long time professor in the Department of Theatre and Film at
Hunter College in
New York City until she left to devote herself to writing full-time. Her articles have appeared in
Vanity Fair, and
The New York Times Magazine. Leaming won the Emery Reves Award of the International Churchill Society for her book
Churchill Defiant: 1945-1955. She also was awarded the Prix Litteraire 2000 by the Syndicat français de la critique de cinéma for her biography of
Marilyn Monroe which was published by Albin Michel in France under the title
Marilyn, une femme. In 1985, Leaming's authorized biography of
Orson Welles was described by
Anna Quindlen, writing in
The New York Times Book Review, as "a biography that splendidly evokes a good deal of the man, his work and his time."
Kirkus Reviews saw it as "a distinguished gift to American arts and letters." The
Los Angeles Times called Leaming's 1992 biography of
Bette Davis "a strong, poignant biography that has truth-telling power." Leaming's 1995 biography of
Katharine Hepburn was said by
Entertainment Weekly to tell the actress's story "with an empathy and acuity desperately rare in biographies of film stars." In 1998, Leaming published her biography of Marilyn Monroe which
Molly Haskell, writing in
The New York Times Book Review, said "restores Marilyn's humanity, gives flesh-and-blood, intelligence and initiative, to the archetypal
dumb blonde." In 2006 Leaming turned from the film world to the world of politics and history with her biography
Jack Kennedy: The Education of a Statesman.
Christopher Hitchens declared in
The Atlantic Monthly: "The great merit of Barbara Leaming's new book is to demonstrate how dependent the young Kennedy became upon a charmed circle of British noblemen, and also how obsessed he became with the need to match himself with that greatest of Anglo-American aristocrats, Winston Churchill." In the London
Sunday Telegraph, Christopher Silvester wrote of Leaming's JFK book, "No previous biographer has focused so sharply on Kennedy's attempts to apply Churchillian thought during his years in the
White House." Leaming next told the story of
Winston Churchill's last ten years of public life in her book
Churchill Defiant. Writing in
Finest Hour: The Journal of Winston Churchill, Richard M. Langworth said, "Leaming's insight is extraordinary." Leaming's
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis: The Untold Story appeared in 2014.
The Boston Globe review commented that the book, "provides suggestive evidence that her subject suffered from the clinical symptoms of
post traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD." Leaming reconstructed the life of John F. Kennedy's sister Kathleen in her 2016 biography of
Kick Kennedy, a book described by
The Wall Street Journal as "strikingly original." Summarizing Leaming's career as a biographer, the Canadian magazine ''
Maclean's'' wrote in 2014 that "Leaming has built a formidable reputation for shaping biographies of outsized figures" that are "masterfully rendered and enticing." == Life ==