From a New York Times obit by Annabelle Williams headlined “Barbara Litrell, 77, Dies; Publisher of Magazines for Women Who Work”:
Barbara J. Litrell, a publisher of women’s magazines that focused not on hair and makeup but on the contributions women made to the work force, died on July 4 at her home in Cottonwood, Ariz….
Ms. Litrell became publisher of McCall’s, then owned by The New York Times Company, in 1991. Kate White, who was editor in chief during Ms. Litrell’s tenure there, recalled her as relentlessly positive.
“When we wouldn’t get certain advertising business,” Ms. White recalled, “she would say to the person, ‘Tell me what we have to do next time to make it happen.’”Ms. Litrell, she said, was “on fire with the idea of helping women and empowering them.”
Ms. Litrell moved on to become publisher of Working Mother and Working Woman. She became president of the magazines’ parent company, MacDonald Communications, in 1999.
A news release announcing her appointment said that under her leadership, advertising pages in 1999 increased more than 15 percent for Working Woman and about 25 percent for Working Mother.
Ms. Litrell thrived in the glossy heyday of a print media that was not always friendly to women. Female editors and executives were often siloed in fashion or human-interest topic areas.
Working Woman and Working Mother took a different approach, focusing on women’s roles as active participants in the workplace….
Under Ms. Litrell’s stewardship, Working Mother ran pieces on topics like the lives of female breadwinners (“Don’t Call Him Mr. Mom”), investment advice (“Maximize Your 401(k)” and child care (“A New Twist on Tears.”
Barbara Jean Gallichio was born in 1944 in Manhattan to Rocco and Genevieve Gallichio. Her mother was a homemaker, and her father worked as a shoe repairman.
She grew up in the Bronx and attended Preston High School, a Roman Catholic school for girls there, and Good Counsel College. After earning a degree in French in 1965, she went on to work for seven years as a French teacher. She married Mr. Litrell, an accounting employee at Cablevision, in 1972.
Ms. Litrell joined The Times’s advertising department in 1972. She began by working the phones and steadily climbed the ranks, becoming the marketing director of The New York Times Magazine in 1987 and the group sales director of The Times in 1989.
She retired in 2000 and two years later moved with her husband to Sedona, Ariz….While in Arizona, Ms. Litrell became involved in local politics and was elected to the City Council in 2010. She served for four years….
Ms. Litrell continued to speak out on women’s issues. In a 2017 letter to the editor published in azcentral.com, the digital home of The Arizona Republic, she argued that female senators could make more progress on health care legislation than men.
“I’ll bet 21 women senators can do what 13 men behind closed doors could not,” she wrote.
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