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Diana Vreeland

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Diana Vreeland
Diana Vreeland (1979) by Horst P. Horst
Born
Diana Dalziel

(1903-09-29)September 29, 1903
Paris, France
DiedAugust 22, 1989(1989-08-22) (aged 85)
New York City, U.S.
Occupations
  • Magazine editor
  • fashion journalist
Years active1936–1989
Employer(s)Hearst Corporation and Condé Nast Publications
AgentIrving Paul Lazar
TitleEditor-in-chief of Vogue
Term1963–1971
PredecessorJessica Daves
SuccessorGrace Mirabella
Spouse
Thomas Reed Vreeland
(m. 1924; died 1966)
Children2, including Frederick Vreeland
MotherEmily Hoffman
Relatives
Awards
Websitewww.dianavreeland.com

Diana Vreeland (September 29, 1903[2] – August 22, 1989) was an American fashion columnist and editor. She worked for the fashion magazine Harper's Bazaar and as editor-in-chief at Vogue, later becoming a special consultant to the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She was named on the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1964.[3][4] Vreeland coined the term youthquake in 1965.[5]

Early life

[edit]

Born Diana Dalziel in Paris in 1903, she lived at 5 avenue du Bois-de-Boulogne (known as Avenue Foch post-World War I). Vreeland was the eldest daughter of an American socialite mother, Emily Key Hoffman, and a British stockbroker[6] father, Frederick Young Dalziel. Hoffman was a descendant of George Washington's brother, as well as a cousin of Francis Scott Key. She was also a distant cousin of writer and socialite Pauline de Rothschild (née Potter). Vreeland had one sister, Alexandra, who later married Sir Alexander Davenport Kinloch, 12th Baronet (1902–1982). Their daughter Emily Lucy Kinloch married Lt.-Col. Hon. Hugh Waldorf Astor (1920–1999), the second son of John Jacob Astor, 1st Baron Astor of Hever and Violet Astor, Baroness Astor of Hever.[7]

Vreeland's family emigrated to the United States at the outbreak of World War I, moving to 15 East 77th Street in New York, where they became prominent society figures. Vreeland was sent to dancing school as a pupil of Michel Fokine, the only Imperial Ballet master ever to leave Russia, and later of Louis Harvy Chalif. She performed in Anna Pavlova's Gavotte at Carnegie Hall. In January 1922, she was featured in the pages of her future magazine, Vogue, in a roundup of socialites and their cars. The story read, "Such motors as these accelerate the social whirl. Miss Diana Dalziel, one of the most attractive debutantes of the winter, is shown entering her Cadillac."[8]

On March 1, 1924, Diana Dalziel married Thomas Reed Vreeland (1899–1966), a banker and international financier,[6] at St. Thomas Church in New York. The couple had two sons: Tim (Thomas Reed Vreeland, Jr.) born 1925, who became an architect, as well as a professor of architecture at the University of New Mexico and then UCLA, and Frecky (Frederick Dalziel Vreeland), born 1927, who would become U.S. ambassador to Morocco.[9] A week before Diana's wedding, The New York Times reported that her mother had been named co‑respondent in the divorce proceedings of Sir Charles Ross and his second wife, Patricia. The ensuing scandal estranged Vreeland from her mother, who died in September 1927 in Nantucket, Massachusetts.[citation needed]

After the Vreelands' honeymoon, they moved to Brewster, New York, where they raised their two sons and remained until 1929, when they relocated to 17 Hanover Terrace, Regent's Park, London, previously the home of Wilkie Collins and Edmund Gosse. In London, she danced with the Tiller Girls and met Cecil Beaton, who became a lifelong friend. Like Syrie Maugham and Elsie de Wolfe, society women who ran their own boutiques, Diana operated a lingerie business near Berkeley Square. Her clients included Wallis Simpson and Mona Williams. She often visited Paris, where she would buy her clothes, mostly from Chanel, whom she had met in 1926. She was one of fifteen American women presented to King George V and Queen Mary at Buckingham Palace on May 18, 1933.[10] In 1935, her husband's job brought them back to New York, where they lived for the remainder of their lives.

As Vreeland would later recall, "Before I went to work for Harper's Bazaar, in 1936, I had been leading a wonderful life in Europe. That meant traveling, seeing beautiful places, having marvelous summers, studying and reading a great deal of the time."[11]

A biographical documentary of Vreeland, The Eye has to Travel,[12] debuted in September 2012 at the Angelika Theater in New York City.

Career

[edit]

Harper's Bazaar 1936–1962

[edit]

Vreeland began her publishing career in 1936 as columnist for Harper's Bazaar. Harper's Bazaar is a fashion magazine that women of every age can use as a style resource. It covers what's new to what's next on the work of stylists, photographers, and designers.[13] Its editor, Carmel Snow, had been so impressed with Vreeland's style and attire that she asked her to work at the magazine.[14] From 1936 until her resignation, Diana Vreeland ran a column for Harper's Bazaar called "Why Don't You...?,"full of random, imaginative suggestions. For example, she wrote, "Why don't you...Turn your child into an Infanta for a fancy-dress party?"[15] According to Vreeland, "The one that seemed to draw the most attention was [...] "[Why Don't You] [w]ash your blond child's hair in dead champagne, as they do in France?" Vreeland says that S. J. Perelman's subsequent parody of it for The New Yorker magazine outraged her then-editor, Carmel Snow.[16]

Vreeland "discovered" the then-unknown Lauren Bacall during World War II. The Harper's Bazaar cover for March 1943[17] shows the newly minted model (not yet a Hollywood star) Lauren Bacall, posing near a Red Cross office. Vreeland directed the shoot, later describing the image as "an extraordinary photograph, in which Bacall is leaning against the outside door of a Red Cross blood donor room. She wears a chic suit, gloves, a cloche hat with long waves of hair falling from it".[18] Ever focused on fashion, Vreeland commented in 1946 that "[T]he bikini is the most important thing since the atom bomb".[19] Disdainful of the typical approach to dressing in the United States in the 1940s, she detested "strappy high-heel shoes" and the "crêpe de chine dresses" that women wore even in the heat of the summer in the countryside.[20]

Until her resignation from Harper's Bazaar, she worked closely with Louise Dahl-Wolfe,[21] Richard Avedon, Nancy White,[22] and Alexey Brodovitch. She became the magazine's Fashion Editor. Richard Avedon recalled when he first met her, at Harper's Bazaar, she "looked up at me for the first time and said, 'Aberdeen, Aberdeen, doesn't it make you want to cry?' Well, it did. I went back to Carmel Snow and said, 'I can't work with that woman. She calls me Aberdeen.' Carmel Snow said, 'You're going to work with her.' And I did, to my enormous benefit, for almost 40 years."[23] Avedon said at the time of her death that "she was and remains the only genius fashion editor".[24]

In 1955, the Vreelands moved to a new apartment, which Diana had Billy Baldwin decorate entirely in red.[25] She said, "I want this place to look like a garden, but a garden in hell".[23] Regular attendees at the parties the Vreelands threw were socialite C. Z. Guest, composer Cole Porter, and British photographer Cecil Beaton.[23] Paramount's 1957 movie musical Funny Face featured a character—Maggie Prescott as portrayed by Kay Thompson—based on Vreeland.[26]

In 1960, John F. Kennedy became president and Vreeland advised First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in matters of style. "Vreeland advised Jackie throughout the campaign and helped connect her with fashion designer Oleg Cassini, who became chief designer to the first lady".[27] "I can remember Jackie Kennedy, right after she moved into the White House...It wasn't even like a country club, if you see what I mean--plain." Vreeland occasionally gave Mrs. Kennedy advice about clothing during her husband's administration, and small advice about what to wear on Inauguration Day in 1961.[28]

In spite of being extremely successful, Diana Vreeland was paid a relatively small salary by the Hearst Corporation, which owned Harper's Bazaar. Vreeland said that she was paid $18,000 a year from 1936 with a $1,000 raise, finally, in 1959. She speculated that newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst's castle in San Simeon, California, "must have been where the Hearst money went".[29]

Vogue 1962–1971 and the Metropolitan Museum of Art

[edit]

According to some sources, hurt that she was passed over for promotion at Harper's Bazaar in 1957, she joined Vogue in 1962. She was editor-in-chief from 1963 until 1971. Vreeland enjoyed the 1960s enormously because she felt that uniqueness was being celebrated. "If you had a bump on your nose, it made no difference so long as you had a marvelous body and good carriage."[23]

In December 1962 Rudi Gernreich first conceived of a topless swimsuit, but he didn't intend to produce the design commercially. It had more meaning to Gernreich as an idea than as a reality.[30] Gernreich had Peggy Moffitt model the suit in person for Vreeland, who asked him why he conceived of the design. Gernreich told her he felt it was time for "freedom—in fashion as well as every other facet of life," but that the swimsuit was just a statement. "[Women] drop their bikini tops already," he said, "so it seemed like the natural next step."[31] She told him, "If there's a picture of it, it's an actuality. You must make it."[32] Gernreich did, and he decided to call his design a monokini.[33][34]

Vreeland sent memos to her staff urging them to be creative. One said, "Today let's think pig white! Wouldn't it be wonderful to have stockings that were pig white! The color of baby pigs, not quite white and not quite pink!"[35] During her tenure at the magazine, she discovered the sixties "youthquake" star Edie Sedgwick. In 1984, Vreeland explained how she saw fashion magazines. "What these magazines gave was a point of view. Most people haven't got a point of view; they need to have it given to them—and what's more, they expect it from you. [...][I]t must have been 1966 or '67. I published this big fashion slogan: This is the year of do it yourself. [...][E]very store in the country telephoned to say, 'Look, you have to tell people. No one wants to do it themselves—they want direction and to follow a leader!'"[36]

After she was fired from Vogue, she became consultant to the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1971.[37] By 1984, according to Vreeland's account, she had organized twelve exhibitions.[38] Artist Greer Lankton created a life-size portrait doll of Vreeland that is on display in the Costume Institute's library.

Later years

[edit]

In 1984, Vreeland wrote her autobiography, D.V.[39]

In 1989, she died of a heart attack at age 85 at Lenox Hill Hospital, on Manhattan's Upper East Side in New York City.

Diana Vreeland Estate

[edit]

The Diana Vreeland Estate is administered by her grandson, Alexander Vreeland, Frederick's son. The responsibility was given to him by her sons, Fredrick and Tim. The official Diana Vreeland website was launched in September 2011. Created and overseen by her estate, DianaVreeland.com[40] is dedicated to her work and career, presenting her accomplishments and influence, and revealing how and why she achieved her notoriety and distinction.

Film portrayals

[edit]

Vreeland was portrayed in the film Infamous (2006) by Juliet Stevenson. She was also portrayed in the film Factory Girl (2006) by Illeana Douglas. Her life was documented in Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel (2011).

Diana Vreeland Parfums is featured in the opening scene of Ocean's 8.

References in media and pop culture

[edit]

In the 2023 documentary film, Donyale Luna: Supermodel, Vreeland features in a letter from Richard Avendon's personal archives about an exchange had where Vreeland rejects Avendon's photographs of Donyale Luna and compares the black supermodel to King Kong.[41]

In the 1941 musical Lady in the Dark by Moss Hart, Kurt Weill and Ira Gershwin the character of Alison Du Bois was based on Vreeland.[42]

Maggie Prescott, a fashion magazine editor in Funny Face (1957) is loosely based on Diana Vreeland.[43]

In the 1966 film Who Are You, Polly Maggoo?, Miss Maxwell (Grayson Hall) portrays an extravagant American expatriate fashion magazine editor. The film's director, William Klein, worked briefly for Vreeland and has confirmed the outrageous character in Polly Maggoo was based on Vreeland.[44]

In 1980, she was lauded in an article about social climbing in The New Yorker.

In 1982, she met over dinner with author Bruce Chatwin, who wrote a touching memoir of their dinner conversation in a half-page slice-of-life, entitled "At Dinner with Diana Vreeland".[45]

In the 1995 film To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar, Vida Boheme (Patrick Swayze) gives a copy of Vreeland's autobiography to a thrift-store clerk and tells him to "commit sections to memory". Later, the clerk quotes a passage that reads "That season we were loaded with pizazz. Earrings of fuchsia and peach. Mind you, peach. And hats. Hats, hats, hats, for career girls. How I adored Paris."

In October 1996, Mary Louise Wilson portrayed Vreeland in a one-woman play called Full Gallop, which she had written together with Mark Hampton.[46] The play takes place the day after Vreeland's return to New York City from her 4-month escape to Paris after being fired from Vogue. It was produced at the Westside Theatre in New York City, and directed by Nicholas Martin. Full Gallop ran at the Hampstead Theatre, London during September 2008, with Diana Vreeland again played by Mary Louise Wilson.[47]

In the 2011 book Damned by Chuck Palahniuk, the main character (Madison Spencer) receives a pair of high heels from the character Babette. "In one hand, Babette holds a strappy pair of high heels. She says, "I got these from Diana Vreeland. I hope they fit...".

Diana Vreeland has been impersonated twice as part of the Snatch Game challenge in RuPaul's Drag Race, by Robbie Turner in Season 8, and by Raja Gemini in Season 7 of All Stars.

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dwight, Eleanor (2002). Diana Vreeland. Harper Collins. p. 246. ISBN 0-688-16738-1.
  2. ^ She was coy about her age, and genuinely perplexed. Diana's confusion was the result of a misreading. The genealogist Philippe Chapelin of genfrance.com has clarified that there was no discrepancy and that Diana was born on September 29, 1903. The misunderstanding came from the abbreviation "7bre" in her bulletin de naissance, which Diana took to mean "July" but is actually shorthand for "September", "7 does not mean July but seven, that is French 'Sept.'" (similar abbreviations are used for all the other months of autumn), according to Amanda Mackenzie Stuart, Diana Vreeland – Empress of Fashion, London: Thames & Hudson, 2013, p. 338.
  3. ^ "World's Best Dressed Women". The International Hall of Fame: Women. 1964. Archived from the original on July 12, 2013. Retrieved April 29, 2013.
  4. ^ Zilkha, Bettina (2004). Ultimate Style – The Best of the Best Dressed List. Assouline. p. 90. ISBN 2-84323-513-8.
  5. ^ "youthquake - Wiktionary". en.wiktionary.org. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  6. ^ a b Diana Vreeland papers 1899–2000 (bulk 1930::-n1989), The New York Public Library – Archives & Manuscripts. Retrieved December 2, 2015.
  7. ^ "Alexandra Dalziel: Genealogics".
  8. ^ Bowles, Hamish. "Diana Vreeland – Voguepedia." Vogue Fashion, Features, and More on Vogue.com. Retrieved March 15, 2012. http://www.vogue.com/voguepedia/ Archived 2013-05-18 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Council of American Ambassadors Membership Frederick Vreeland" Archived 2010-09-17 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  10. ^ Stuart, Amanda Mackenzie (2013). Diana Vreeland – Empress of Fashion. Thames & Hudson. pp. 82. ISBN 978-0-500-51681-2.
  11. ^ Gilbert, Lynn (2012-12-10). Particular Passions: Diana Vreeland. Women of Wisdom Series (1st ed.). New York City: Lynn Gilbert Inc. ISBN 978-1-61979-985-1.[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "Watch Diana Vreeland: The Eye Has to Travel () online - Amazon Video". www.amazon.com. Retrieved 2016-03-28.
  13. ^ "Harper's BAZAAR | Hearst". www.hearst.com. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  14. ^ Vreeland, Diana (1985) [1984]. D. V. New York: Vintage. pp. 116–117. ISBN 0-394-73161-1.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ "The Divine Mrs. V". Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  16. ^ D.V., p. 122.
  17. ^ Harper's Bazaar March 1943", photography Louise Dahl-Wolfe.
  18. ^ "Lauren Bacall: The Souring of a Hollywood Legend". Retrieved September 24, 2009.
  19. ^ "Diana Vreeland 1906–1989" Archived 2013-08-31 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved September 24, 2009.
  20. ^ D.V., p. 144.
  21. ^ "National Museum of Women In The Arts Louise Dahl-Wolfe" Archived 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved September 13, 2009.
  22. ^ "Nancy White, 85, Dies; Edited Harper's Bazaar in the 60s". Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  23. ^ a b c d "The Divine Mrs. V".
  24. ^ "Diana Vreeland, Editor, Dies; Voice of Fashion for Decades", The New York Times, August 23, 1989.
  25. ^ "Diana Vreeland 1903–1989".
  26. ^ "The All Seeing Diana Vreeland". Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  27. ^ "Portrait of the Kennedys", Smithsonian Magazine, October 26, 2007. Retrieved September 24, 2009.
  28. ^ D.V., pp. 223–24.
  29. ^ D.V., p. 189.
  30. ^ Smith, Liz (January 18, 1965). "The Nudity Cult". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2013.
  31. ^ Bay, Cody (June 16, 2010). "The Story Behind the Lines". Archived from the original on 4 July 2013. Retrieved 22 January 2013.
  32. ^ "The Rudi Gernreich Book". Archived from the original on March 11, 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2013.
  33. ^ "The First Monokini: Trying to make the Topless Swimsuit happen in 1964". Messy Nessy Chic. 5 March 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2021.
  34. ^ Kalter, Suzy (May 25, 1981). "20 Remember Those Topless Suits? After a Cool-Out, Racy Rudi Gernreich Returns to the Fashion Swim". People Magazine. Archived from the original on 2011-01-10. Retrieved 14 January 2013. The photographer on location in Montego Bay finally persuaded an adventurous local to wiggle into the designer's latest concoction: tight-fitting black knit bottoms held up with—gasp!—nothing more than a pair of skinny suspenders.
  35. ^ Mahon, Gigi (1989-09-10). "S.I. Newhouse and Conde Nast; Taking Off The White Gloves". The New York Times.
  36. ^ D.V., p. 198.
  37. ^ Morris, Bernadine (7 December 1993). "Review/Fashion; Celebrating the Flair That Was Vreeland". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-05-26.
  38. ^ D.V., p. 229.
  39. ^ Vreeland, Diana (2011-04-19). D.V. (Reprint ed.). New York, NY: Ecco. ISBN 9780062024404.
  40. ^ "dianavreeland". dianavreeland.
  41. ^ Harris, Amanda (13 September 2023). "The new documentary Donyale Luna: Supermodel reveals that Vogue Editor-in-Chief Diana Vreeland once compared Donyale Luna to the fictional ape".
  42. ^ Bruce D. McClung: Lady in the Dark – Biography of a Musical (2007), p. 10.
  43. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: How did pink become a girly color?, 14 April 2015, retrieved 2021-09-14
  44. ^ Grayson Hall: A Hard Act to Follow (2006).
  45. ^ "Dinner with Diana Vreeland," in: Bruce Chatwin, What Am I Doing Here (New York: Viking, 1989).
  46. ^ "Dramatists Play Service, Inc". Retrieved February 18, 2017.
  47. ^ "Production of Full Gallop". Retrieved February 10, 2024.
[edit]
Media offices
Preceded by Editor of American Vogue
1963–1971
Succeeded by