Gay Bryant


Gay Bryant is a British-born editor and writer. She is credited with launching the 'glass ceiling' concept of gender barriers when editor of Working Woman

Early life

Bryant was born in Newcastle-on-Tyne, England. She attended St. Clare’s in Oxford for a year, intending to be a writer. In London, she became a junior fashion editor at Queen. During this period, she met playwright/director/social entrepreneur ED Berman and worked with him at the Mercury Theatre in North London. In 1969 she began a publishing career in New York.

Career

Gay Bryant came to the US magazine world as part of the team that launched Penthouse. Before she was thirty, he began a feminist magazine, New Dawn, and continued making new publications thereafter; she was a founding editor of Working Woman and author of The Working Woman Report/Succeeding in Business in the 80's. She is credited with popularizing the "Glass ceiling" concept. She was also the first female editor of Family Circle, then America's largest women's magazine. She edited numerous other magazines, notably Mirabella, the iconic magazine for smart women. She still is a VP at the New York Times Magazine Group and an executive editor at Murdoch Magazine groups in America and Australia.
Gay Bryant first used the term Glass Ceiling in March 1984; she was the former editor of Working Woman magazine and was changing jobs to be the editor of Family Circle. In an Adweek article written by Nora Frenkiel, Bryant said, "Women have reached a certain point—I call it "the glass ceiling". They're in the top of middle management and they're stopping and getting stuck. There isn't enough room for all those women at the top. Some are going into business for themselves. Others are going out and raising families."
Also in 1984, Bryant used the term in a chapter of the book The Working Woman Report: Succeeding in Business in the 1980s. In the same book, Basia Hellwig used the term in another chapter.

Awards

She has written numerous articles and three books:
Bryant was married to the African-American writer, Charles Childs, with whom she has two children.