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Lawyer who helped a Loving couple

Philip Hirschkop has spent his legal career fighting injustice. Being Jewish makes him root for the underdog, he told Deirdre Norman.

February 23, 2017 15:06
Oscar-nominated Ruth Negga and Joel Edgerton in Loving.
5 min read

At 80 years of age, lawyer Philip Hirschkop still has the bulk and the presence of a prize fighter — a build that Pulitzer Prize-winning author Norman Mailer, who Hirschkop defended for demonstrating against the Vietnam war, once called a “powerful short body” that “put double weight in the back of every remark.”

There is no doubt that Hirschkop relishes the good fight. In a legal career spanning more than 50 years, he has battled to end miscegenation laws, to give women equal access to universities, to stop discrimination against people of colour and pregnant women, to end the war in Vietnam by protecting the rights of those who protested against the war, and to ensure that animals ranging from whales to orangutans are treated humanely.

He has represented celebrities including the Reverend Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition, child care expert Dr Benjamin Spock, and peace activist Abbie Hoffman.

But the Virginia lawyer is perhaps best known for winning a unanimous Supreme Court decision in the Loving vs Virginia case, a story behind the film Loving. This weekend Ruth Negga may win a Best Actress Oscar for her performance in the film.

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