Barbara Kellerman
Barbara Kellerman is an American academic, author, and leadership scholar renowned for her pioneering research on public leadership, followership, and the pathologies of ineffective or "bad" leadership. Holding a Ph.D. in political science from Yale University (1975), along with earlier degrees from the same institution and a B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College (1969), she has shaped the field through her roles at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government, including as founding executive director of the Center for Public Leadership (2000–2003) and current fellow there.[1] Kellerman's career encompasses leadership positions and teaching at diverse institutions, such as director of the Center for Advanced Study of Leadership at the University of Maryland (1998–2000), visiting professorships at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, New York University, and Uppsala University (as Fulbright Chair in American Studies, 1996–1997), and faculty roles at Tufts University, Fordham University, and others. She co-founded the International Leadership Association, fostering interdisciplinary dialogue on leadership studies. Her scholarship emphasizes contextual factors in leadership—such as power dynamics, follower agency, and societal conditions—challenging heroic leader narratives and highlighting how leadership can devolve in "hard times."[1][2] Among her most influential works are Bad Leadership: What It Is, How It Happens, Why It Matters (2004), which categorizes flawed leadership and its societal impacts; Followership (2008), a foundational text exploring followers' roles in enabling or constraining leaders; The End of Leadership (2012), critiquing the overemphasis on top-down authority in modern organizations; Hard Times: Leadership in America (2014), analyzing leadership failures amid economic crises; Professionalizing Leadership (2018), calling for rigorous, evidence-based training; Leaders Who Lust (2020), examining power abuses by ambitious figures; The Enablers: How Team Trump Flunked the Pandemic and Failed America (2021), on the role of enablers in leadership failures during crises; and Leadership from Bad to Worse: What Happens When Bad Festers (2024), tracing the escalation of poor leadership. She has authored or edited over a dozen books and contributed articles to outlets like the Harvard Business Review, New York Times, and Washington Post.[1] Kellerman's contributions have earned her prestigious honors, including the International Leadership Association's Lifetime Achievement Award (2016), the Wilbur M. McFeely Award from the National Management Association (2010), the Global Gurus Corps d'Elite Lifetime Achievement Award (2024), and annual rankings among the world's top 30 management professionals by Global Gurus International (2015–2024). A sought-after speaker, she has addressed audiences globally in cities from Beijing to Buenos Aires, and appeared on media platforms including CNN, NPR, BBC, and PBS, amplifying her insights on leadership's evolving challenges.[2][1][3][4][5][6]Early life
Family background
Barbara Rose Kellerman was born on 30 December 1949 in Manchester, Lancashire, England.[7] Her father, Ernst Walter Kellermann (1915–2012), was a Jewish physicist born in Berlin who was among the first students excluded from Berlin University under Nazi policies in 1933; he fled Germany that year, eventually settling in Leeds, where he became a senior lecturer in the Department of Physics at the University of Leeds.[8][9] There, he met his wife, Marcelle Georgine Kellermann (c. 1919–2015), a French-born writer and educator who had interrupted her university studies to join the French Resistance in 1942 and later developed innovative methods for teaching modern foreign languages in British schools.[10][11] The couple married in Manchester and raised three children there, including Barbara, her younger brother Clive, and younger sister.[10] The family's multicultural environment, shaped by her father's German-Jewish refugee experience and her mother's French Resistance background and literary pursuits—including memoirs like A Packhorse Called Rachel (2007) and The Interpreter (2014)—fostered Barbara's early exposure to diverse literature and languages.[10][12]Education and training
Kellerman, born to a Jewish father who had fled Nazi Germany and a French mother who had joined the Resistance, and who had settled first in Leeds with a brief stay in Manchester, completed her early schooling in the north of England.[13] To pursue a career in acting, she relocated to London and enrolled at Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama, where she received specialized training in performance techniques and theatre arts.[13][14] She graduated in the early 1970s, having participated in the college's student productions and workshops that built her expertise in classical and contemporary roles. The conclusion of her formal training around 1971–1972 paved the way for her entry into professional auditions.Career
Theatre
Kellerman began her professional stage career in the early 1970s, shortly after graduating from Rose Bruford College, where she honed her skills in classical and contemporary techniques. She started in repertory theatre at regional venues across Britain, gaining experience in a variety of roles that showcased her range in ensemble productions. These early engagements laid the groundwork for her transition to more prominent stages, emphasizing her ability to portray nuanced female characters in both dramatic and comedic contexts. A significant milestone in her theatre career came with her association with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) during the late 1970s and 1980s, where she performed in several acclaimed productions. In 1977, she played the role of Katharine in Terry Hands' production of Shakespeare's Henry V at the Aldwych Theatre in London, following its premiere at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon; her portrayal of the French princess highlighted her command of linguistic subtlety and emotional depth in a key historical drama.[15] Kellerman continued her RSC tenure with the role of Annabella in John Ford's Jacobean tragedy 'Tis Pity She's a Whore in 1978, directed by Ron Daniels at The Other Place in Stratford-upon-Avon. This intense performance as the passionate and conflicted protagonist demonstrated her versatility in handling psychologically complex, taboo-breaking characters from early modern English literature.[16][15] Her work with the RSC culminated in the 1983–1984 season, where she portrayed Rosaura in John Barton's adaptation of Pedro Calderón de la Barca's Life's a Dream (La vida es sueño), first at The Other Place and later transferring to The Pit in London. As the disguised noblewoman navigating themes of identity and illusion, Kellerman's role underscored her affinity for philosophical and allegorical works from the Spanish Golden Age, blending physical agility with intellectual intensity.[17][18] Through these RSC productions and her foundational repertory experience, Kellerman established a reputation in British theatre for embodying authoritative, multifaceted female figures—often intelligent and resilient—in both Shakespearean classics and lesser-performed international or period pieces. Her stage work contributed to the RSC's tradition of innovative interpretations, influencing her later characterizations in other media by prioritizing layered emotional authenticity over superficial portrayals.Television
Kellerman's television career spanned several decades, beginning with guest roles in the 1970s and including notable appearances in science fiction, drama, and fantasy series. Her credits are listed below in chronological order by initial air date.| Year | Title | Role | Episodes/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1975 | Space: 1999 | Dr. Monique Bouchere | 1 episode ("Dragon's Domain") [19] |
| 1976 | The Glittering Prizes | Barbara Morris | 4 episodes [20] |
| 1977–1978 | 1990 | Delly Lomas | 8 episodes [21] |
| 1979 | The Professionals | Sylvie | 1 episode ("Runner") [22] |
| 1979 | Quatermass | Clare Kapp | 2 episodes [23] |
| 1980 | Hammer House of Horror | Laurie Morton | 1 episode ("Growing Pains") [24] |
| 1983 | The Mad Death | Anne Maitland | Miniseries (3 episodes) [25] |
| 1985 | My Brother Jonathan | Rachel Hammond | Miniseries (5 episodes) [26] |
| 1988 | The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe | The White Witch | Miniseries (6 episodes) [27] |
| 1989 | Prince Caspian and the Voyage of the Dawn Treader | Narnian Hag | 1 episode [28] |
| 1990 | The Silver Chair | Lady of the Green Kirtle | Miniseries (6 episodes) [29] |
| 1998 | The Bill | Melinda | 1 episode ("Powder My Nose") [30] |
| 2000 | Monsignor Renard | Mme. Dufosse | Miniseries (3 episodes) [31] |
| 2025 | Return to Narnia | Herself | Documentary on BBC Narnia series [32] |