Joan Berman Cutler

Philanthropist
1930 – 2010
Joan Cutler and her husband Ted at a Chrons & Colitis Foundation benefit, 2006.
Courtesy of Alan Dine Photography.

by Ellen Cutler Calmas

Let me start by apologizing publically to my mother for using the “G” word, “grandmother,” in the papers.

She was “Joany” to everyone, including all our children.

She was Joany to so much of Boston.

She was the prettier half of Joan and Ted, and half of an amazing couple that brought about so many full-fledged improvements for the City of Boston.

As so many people have suggested, my mother was a presence. Not only that she had a presence, but that she was one.

She was a force of one within a room, within a community, within a family, within all our lives.

She had a profound, distinct, meaningful and memorable relationship with each of her immediate family members, and each of her many nearest and dearest friends… We were all her favorites.

At her core, my mother was a pragmatist, a realist, a consensus builder, and a friend. She was unique in her devotion to friends as family and family as friends. To her credit, she was the adopted mother of many people who needed to fill a void in their lives. She voided out a lot that many people were missing—she always thought she got a lot back in return.

My mother would be spitting mad at all of us for letting out her age, something she valiantly a.k.a vainly hid for many years.

Yet while we joke about her reluctance to age, the poignancy behind the veneer is telling in that my mother always wanted to live, to be with the “hip” crowd, to know what was real, to make a difference in peoples’ lives, especially her family’s, and to share it all with my father because their marriage was so critically important to them both.

My father was the center of her world, and her decisions about even the smallest of things centered on what would make him happy. The life they built together was a reflection of that devotion along with their devotion and joy at being together with everyone on the Cape. We should all be lucky enough to have what they shared.

…It may surprise many of you to know that my mother was a woman of great emotions—but unless it was laughter or concern you’d never get to see it. Nor would she let you have too many other outward feelings yourself—not if they could possibly disrupt the equilibrium she worked so hard to maintain for all of us.

Joany was a one of a kind lady. She would say “phew, they threw away the mold” but she was also so proud when she saw glimpses of herself in all of us. She loved that my brothers and I clearly look like her side of the family and that sometimes the G-kids do too.

She loved everyone’s whacky senses of humor and being with my dad as the orchestrators of our whacky family times.

She loved that we’d come together by choice, not obligation, and could really enjoy each other. She loved that we’d leave eventually and she and dad could be alone.

She’d literally give you the shirt off her back—or take yours if she liked it.

She was rather fond of pretty things.

My mother was also the queen of “didyaever”—didyaever have a headache, a broken this, a lousy that?

Didyaever have the same experience that she did too so she could affirm her momentary kvetch was insignificant.

But Joany was never really one to complain. And to answer the question so many people have asked, she really wasn’t sick. She had a lot of pain from her neck and back, but she’d never tell you so.

She’d put on those great looking Manolos with the ridiculously pointy heels that made her fabulous legs look fabulous. She’d have her hair done, get a facial, take a nap, have a little shot of something to smooth a few lines. She’d do anything to maintain her classic beauty, but she’d never complain.

She’d tell you to get over whatever ill came your way as “part of life’ and ‘things we just have to deal with.’ And she lived her life that way too.

She’d defer to dad on a lot of things, but not without a high decibel discussion.

She’d do most anything to make us and dad happy. She was amazing that way. She’d do the same for friends or anyone she thought was worth the time, which meant most everyone.

Ellen Cutler Calmas is the daughter of Joan and Ted Cutler.

by Jonathan Soroff

In the history of the Four Seasons, the valets have never parked as many cars as they did for the hordes who came to pay their respects to the family of Joan Cutler, the Boston philanthropist and socialite who died in September at her home on Cape Cod.

A clear indication of how deeply she’ll be missed, that statistic pales in comparison to the amounts of money she gave away with her husband, Ted, to such causes as the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation, Emerson College, the Greater Boston Food Bank, Boston Ballet, Silent Spring Institute and countless others, not to mention such civic-minded gestures as funding the lighting of the trees along the Comm. Ave. Mall (a charmingly extravagant gift to the citizens of Boston, and one for which the Cutlers received inexplicable criticism).

But far from being a checkbook Patron Lady Bountiful, Joan Cutler gave her time and energy, leveraging her connections and her fearlessness in asking other people to donate to worthy causes. And unlike many women who attend galas and benefits to see their names in print or climb some invisible social ladder, she genuinely enjoyed herself and was as friendly with the person who sold her the ball gown as she was with the society crowd she wore it around.

A tremendous light has gone out. Boston is a poorer place for it. And if she’d been alive to see all those cars being parked at the Four Seasons in her honor, Joan Cutler would’ve been incredulous (and slightly embarrassed) by all the fuss, and she would’ve said something along the lines of: “All this, and we’re not even raising money for charity?”

Originally published in the “Last Scene” column in the Improper Bostonian.

Topics: Philanthropy
3 Comments

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

Joany was one of the most important women in my life. There has never ever been anyone anywhere, that has impacted my life to this very day. I have beautiful Casablanca Lilly’s that bloom every summer. They were planted to remind me of her beautiful soul, and her love of them ever summer on Cape Cod. Not a week goes by where I don’t say to my self, make sure things are done Joany style! Never half way, and if you couldn’t do it right, she was there to help make it right. I love and miss her all the time. Whenever I use my origins lilac eyeshadow, my eyes well up, as she loves it and thought it was so stylish…she asked for 2 and gave me extra to get 2 for myself. Joany gave me her brand new BMW to use on many occasions visiting my mom in Boston, to make sure I was safe. She would say, “take it! It just a thing” That was Joany. I could go on and on and on. It’s been almost 12 years, however her voice is always in my memory. Joany, I love you and will never forget how you made me feel like family❤️

Joan Culter was one of the most amazing people I can say I had the pleasure of meeting. Today I took my daughter on a college tour of Emerson, and there in lobby of the Majestic theatre sits a beautiful painting of Joan and Ted. I was truly humbled when I looked at this beautiful painting of such a loving couple. My heart broke thinking about how much Boston misses this great, fun, generous, cool lady...but more how much her family must miss her. I knew Joan not really well, but she made such a huge impression on me, I have to say that heaven is very lucky to have her in attendance now.

Joan Culter was one of the most amazing people I can say I had the pleasure of meeting. Today I took my daughter on a college tour of Emerson, and there in lobby of the Majestic theatre sits a beautiful painting of Joan and Ted. I was truly humbled when I looked at this beautiful painting of such a loving couple. My heart broke thinking about how much Boston misses this great, fun, generous, cool lady...but more how much her family must miss her. I knew Joan not really well, but she made such a huge impression on me, I have to say that heaven is very lucky to have her in attendance now.

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Joan Berman Cutler, 1930 - 2010." (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/weremember/cutler-joan>.