California Historical Society’s Anthea Hartig

I Don’t Have a Case of the Mondays

Anthea Hartig is the executive director of the California Historical Society. Before participating in an a panel on how people re-invent spaces, she talked partying in 1920s Berlin, optimistic Mondays, and reading in the bathtub in the Zócalo green room.

Q:

What is your favorite day of the week?


A:

Monday, because everything still feels filled with hope and promise.


Q:

What year, past or future, would you time travel to if you could?


A:

I would time travel to 1928. I would be in Berlin, because I think that the recovery—the rawness of World War I—was still very much present, but the freedom and artistic output before the crash just must’ve been a sight to behold. And I’d hear Josephine Baker live in Paris!


Q:

What’s your guilty pleasure?


A:

Reading in the bathtub.


Q:

Who’s your favorite figure in California history?


A:

Aimee Semple McPherson. She created the Foursquare Church and created this incredible cult around herself. She declared herself a pastor, choreographed sermons. She’d ride in dressed as a traffic cop on a motorcycle. She was just radical and in charge and large.


Q:

What do you collect?


A:

I collect early-20th-century lusterware ceramics.


Q:

What’s the last bet you won?


A:

I can’t remember. I have an outstanding one for $90 that my mom’s going to turn 90. But I can’t remember the last bet I won.


Q:

What food won’t you eat?


A:

Lamb.


Q:

What’s the strangest job you’ve ever had?


A:

Working as a secretary for an office—running an anti-proposition campaign.


Q:

If you couldn’t live in California, where would you go?


A:

New Zealand.


Q:

Where would we find you at 10:00 on a typical Sunday morning?


A:

At the breakfast table reading The New York Sunday Times.