Trinh Thi Ngo holds a portrait of her younger self...

Trinh Thi Ngo holds a portrait of her younger self at home in Ho Chi Minh City on Sept. 10, 2015. Known as "Hanoi Hannah" for her propaganda broadcasts during the Vietnam War, she died at age 87 on Sept. 30, 2016. Credit: AFP/Getty Images / STR

Trinh Thi Ngo, better known to U.S. servicemen as “Hanoi Hannah,” a radio propagandist who delivered daily broadcasts aimed at undermining American morale during the Vietnam War, died Sept. 30 in Ho Chi Minh City.

The Voice of Vietnam, her longtime radio station, announced her death and reported that she was 87. No cause of death was cited.

Ngo was the most famous of several North Vietnamese broadcasters who served the Communist cause over the radio waves. David Lamb, a respected foreign correspondent who covered the Vietnam War for the Los Angeles Times, once observed that “many considered her Hanoi’s most prominent Communist after Ho Chi Minh,” the revolutionary nationalist leader.

She had perfected her English during her youth in Hanoi, where she was born, studying under a tutor and swooning over American films such as “Gone With the Wind.” Hollywood fare far outdid the European cinema imported to Vietnam during French colonial rule, she found.

In 1954, after Vietnam gained independence through a guerrilla war waged against the French, the country was divided into the Communist North and the non-Communist South. The United States backed the South with advisers and eventually military forces in the ensuing conflict that became the Vietnam War.

Ngo, the daughter of what she described as a “nationalist bourgeois family,” soon joined the state-run, northern-based Voice of Vietnam. “I thought it was time for me to do something to contribute to the revolution,” she recalled in an account on her radio station’s website.

Because of her fluency in English, Ngo became a marquee personality on the Voice of Vietnam as it evolved increasingly into an instrument of propaganda wielded against U.S. forces and prisoners of war.

Her broadcasts recalled the earlier efforts of propagandists during World War II, known to American servicemen in the Pacific as Tokyo Rose and in Europe as Axis Sally. The United States used recordings of Marlene Dietrich, the German-born Hollywood star, such as the melancholy ballad “Lili Marlene.”

“This is Thu Huong calling American servicemen in South Vietnam,” Ngo would proclaim, using a name that she selected for herself and that meant “Autumn Fragrance.” She did not learn until later that her listeners had dubbed her “Hanoi Hannah.”

The broadcasts grew to run for a half-hour and included recordings from musicians such as Elvis Presley and Bob Dylan. Having attracted homesick troops with music, Ngo would read scripts, prepared by North Vietnamese officials, that chronicled American battlefield defeats, as well as antiwar activity and social upheaval at home.

“Defect, G.I. It is a very good idea to leave a sinking ship,” she said in one broadcast. “You know you cannot win this war.”

She aired statements from actress and antiwar activist Jane Fonda and delivered commentary on the sons of elite American families who had avoided wartime service. Relying on U.S. publications, Ngo also read lists of American casualties. A complete list of survivors was not available.

Ngo’s role in the war’s outcome, if any, was unclear. Among the servicemen who heard her was John McCain, the Navy officer and future Republican senator from Arizona who was held by the North Vietnamese as a prisoner of war for 5 1⁄2 years.

“I heard her every day,” McCain told the New York Times in 2000, recalling the loudspeaker that dangled from the prison ceiling. “She’s a marvelous entertainer. I’m surprised she didn’t get to Hollywood.”

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