Anthony Rossi Dolan died this month (see an obituary). An article by Lee Habeeb in Newsweek on March 20, 2025 titled Remembering Tony Dolan: President Reagan’s Chief Speechwriter told us:
“You probably don’t know his name, but you know his work. He penned or had a hand in some of the greatest speeches of the 20th century, serving as President Ronald Reagan’s chief speechwriter. The ‘Ash Heap of History’ speech. The ‘Tear Down This Wall’ speech. The ‘Evil Empire’ speech. They all had Tony Dolan’s fingerprints, his handprints, all over them.
Prior to working for Reagan, Dolan was the youngest journalist in American history to win the Pulitzer Prize for his work at the Stamford Advocate in the late 1970s exposing the Mafia’s grip on the city’s local government – from the local police force straight through to city hall.”
Another article by Amanda J. Rothschild at The Hill on March 22, 2025 is titled From Reagan to Trump, a speechwriter’s legacy lives on in Washington. Yet another article by James Kirchick at Rolling Stone on July 28, 2022, about his gay younger brother Terry, is titled These ultraconservative brothers pulled strings in Reagan’s Washington. Then one of them was outed as gay.
Even earlier, as a sophomore at Yale, Anthony had an album of folk songs, described by Wayne Liebman in the Yale Daily News on December 12, 1967 in an article titled Sophomore Cuts Album.
There is a thirteen-minute YouTube video with Peter Robinson and Christopher Buckley of the Hoover Institution [at Stanford] reminiscing about him titled Anthony Dolan (1948-2025).
The portrait came from Wikimedia Commons.