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As the longest-running fashion magazine reaches a century and a half, Justine Picardie celebrates the women editors of Harper’s Bazaar

They painted their castles pink, started Andy Warhol’s career, commission­ed Henry James and invented what a fashion magazine could be. On the world’s oldest glossy’s 150th anniversar y, Justine Picardie, editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar, celebrates the

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Harper’s Bazaar celebrates its 150t h anniversar­y this year, and ever since it was founded in New York in 1867, the magazine has been shaped by a series of remarkable women, who seem to me to be as inspiring today as they were during their lifetimes. The first editor, Mary Louise Booth, set a high standard for those who followed her: for not only was she a distinguis­hed author, she was also a determined opponent of slavery, a tireless campaigner for women’s suffrage, and a literary powerhouse who published Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy and Wilkie Collins in the magazine.

Booth’s editorship proved that a fashion magazine could be as interested in brilliant fiction as it was in the latest Parisian couture; and subsequent editors continued in that fine tradition. Her successor was the eminent writer and poet Margaret Sangster, whose achievemen­ts included the serialised publicatio­n of Hardy’s Tess of the d’ Ubervilles in Harper’s Bazar (as it was known until it added the missing ‘a’ in 1929). Sangster was followed, in turn, by Elizabeth Jordan, an active suffragett­e and prolific novelist who developed a lasting friendship with Henry James on one of

Her eccentric Why Don’t You? column offered aphoristic advice such as, ‘Why don’t you wear a blue sapphire thistle in one ear and a ruby thistle in the other?’

her regular trips to London. (I rather like the sound of these expedition­s, when she would ensconce herself at Claridge’s for weeks on end, a nd dine wit h t he crea m of Br it ish high society.)

As you might imagine, the Bazaar archives are filled with treasures – some of which had been lost or forgotten, until we embarked on reading our way through the bound volumes of magazines, in preparatio­n for this momentous anniversar­y. I am now in my fifth year as editor, and thought I knew the archives reasonably well. But even so, I was astonished to discover a g reat many essays a nd shor t stor ies by Virg inia Woolf, Evelyn Waugh and Nancy Mitford, among others, and illustrati­ons by Cecil Beaton, Jean Cocteau, Salvador Dalí and Andy Warhol.

Bazaar has always been famous for its fashion expertise – indeed, it is the oldest fashion magazine in the world – but what is perhaps less well known is its commitment to art and literature. Its greatest editors – including the visionary Carmel Snow, who launched the careers of Diana Vreeland, Truman Capote and Richard Avedon – have understood that style is more powerful when seen in a wider cultural context, and that a sophistica­ted understand­ing of fashion and beauty does not preclude an interest in politics and current affairs. Snow was Bazaar’s longestser­ving editor (from 1933 to 1957) and remains the most influentia­l – her many claims to fame include coining the phrase the ‘New Look’ for Christian Dior’s debut collection in 1947.

But I’ve also grown fond of several other, less famous editors, whose distinctiv­e voices continue to speak from the pages of the bound volumes that surround me at my desk as I write now. Several of my favourites worked for the British edition of Bazaar (which launched in 1929, although the American magazine was available in this country before then, and in Paris). One of these redoubtabl­e women was the Hon Mrs James Rodney, who first appeared as a society columnist in 1932, then served as

1 Mary Booth, US editor, 1867-1889

November 2, 1867 was an historic moment in publishing: the inaugural Harper’s Bazar was launched as ‘a repository of fashion, pleasure and instructio­n’. The editor of this 16-page weekly was Mary Booth, who filled her fledgling magazine with stories by Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy. Booth was a campaigner for women’s suffrage and the abolition of slavery, and had been praised by Abraham Lincoln for her work during the Civil War.

2 Elizabeth Jordan, US editor, 1900-1913

Elizabeth Jordan was a suffragett­e and had been a reporter covering high-profile murder trials in 1890s New York before taking the helm at Bazar. She fostered a lasting friendship with Henry James after meeting him at a dinner at Claridge’s. James subsequent­ly contribute­d many articles to her magazine, including The Manners of American

Women, and Is There a Life After Death?

3 Carmel Snow, US editor, 1933-1957

A prodigious talent-spotter, Snow hired Alexey Brodovitch as her art director and Diana Vreeland as her fashion editor, and together they redefined what a fashion magazine could be. An intoxicati­ng mix of art, culture and high fashion attracted the greatest artists to Bazaar’s pages, from the photograph­ers Richard Avedon, Louise Dahl-Wolfe and Lillian Bassman, to Carson McCullers and Truman Capote, who contribute­d short stories, and Andy Warhol, who started at Bazaar as an in-house illustrato­r. She also championed Chanel, Schiaparel­li and Balenciaga.

4 Mrs James Rodney, British editor, 1939-1945

The Seattle-born Mrs Rodney came to London by way of Paris and Rome, and joined Bazaar as a society columnist before being appointed fashion editor in 1934. The London couturier Digby Morton complained bitterly that he kept tripping over her black poodle, invisible against the black carpet of her office. She devoted herself to the war effort, filling the windows of New York’s Fifth Avenue department stores with British fashion. She was a friend of fashion visionary Elsa Schiaparel­li and in the 1950s, after her marriage to a Scottish laird, painted several rooms of her castle in the designer’s trademark shocking pink.

5 Diana Vreeland, US fashion editor, 1936-1962

‘Vreeland invented the fashion editor,’ Richard Avedon once said. ‘Before her, it was society ladies who put hats on other society ladies.’ In her 26 years at

Bazaar, Vreeland revolution­ised notions of beauty by using off-beat models such as Anjelica Huston, and her collaborat­ions with Avedon (below left) and Louise Dahl-Wolfe gave rise to some of Bazaar’s most famous images, including the 1943 cover that launched Lauren Bacall’s career. Her eccentric

Why Don’t You? column offered aphoristic advice such as, ‘Why don’t you wear a blue sapphire thistle in one ear and a ruby thistle in the other?’

fashion editor until 1939, before taking over the editorship during the challengin­g years of the Second World War. A longstandi­ng friend and champion of Elsa Schiaparel­li (who often came to stay with her in London), Mrs Rodney was also a loyal supporter of British couturiers, including Norman Hartnell, and devoted her considerab­le energies to maintainin­g morale during the relentless bombing of the Blitz, when her editorial team combined their day jobs with war work for the Red Cross or as volunteer fire-wardens at night.

An unexpected consequenc­e of this immersion in Bazaar’s past is that the future seems somehow brighter than before. True, we may be living in uncertain times; but the bold and brave women of Bazaar have already endured myriad dangers, while continuing to shine a light throughout the most troubled eras, with their grace, wit and intelligen­ce. All of which means that we who follow in their (well-shod) footsteps will still hold true to Carmel Snow’s motto: ‘Elegance is good taste, plus a dash of daring.’

6 Ruth Ansel, US art director, 1963-1969

Ansel was Bazaar’s first female art director, and at 24, the youngest in the industry. She helped create the aesthetic of the Swinging Sixties: her pages popped with neon colour, she put Steve McQueen on the cover and Jean Shrimpton in a Nasa space suit. ‘A magazine is meant to reflect the time we live in,’ she said, ‘and if it’s a good magazine, it reflects it provocativ­ely. That’s what we did.’

7 Liz Tilberis, US editor, 1992-1999

British-born Tilberis, whose aim was to make ‘the most beautiful magazine in the world’, pulled together a ‘dream team’ that included Patrick Demarcheli­er and her creative director Fabien Baron to create a Bazaar that captured and defined the 1990s. The much-loved editor inspired loyalty and friendship from those who worked with her: including Diana, Princess of Wales, who posed for the magazine on several occasions, and Hillary Clinton, who wrote a moving tribute after Tilberis died of ovarian cancer in 1999.

 ??  ?? Anne Scott-James, British editor, 1945-1951 Scott-James became one of the most celebrated female journalist­s in Fleet Street. After working as an assistant at Vogue, and then as women’s editor of Picture Post, she accepted the editorship at Bazaar in 1945 – the same year that she gave birth to her first son, Max (Hastings). Scott-James published early stories and articles by John Mortimer and John Betjeman, and launched the food writer Elizabeth David’s career with a monthly column that ran for seven years.
Anne Scott-James, British editor, 1945-1951 Scott-James became one of the most celebrated female journalist­s in Fleet Street. After working as an assistant at Vogue, and then as women’s editor of Picture Post, she accepted the editorship at Bazaar in 1945 – the same year that she gave birth to her first son, Max (Hastings). Scott-James published early stories and articles by John Mortimer and John Betjeman, and launched the food writer Elizabeth David’s career with a monthly column that ran for seven years.
 ??  ?? Above A cover by Leslie Gill, from November 1956. Below A classic image by Richard Avedon, of Audrey Hepburn (April 1956); Alberto Rizzo’s cover of the January 1970 issue
Above A cover by Leslie Gill, from November 1956. Below A classic image by Richard Avedon, of Audrey Hepburn (April 1956); Alberto Rizzo’s cover of the January 1970 issue
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 ??  ?? Above March 1943 Harper’s Bazaar magazine cover, featuring Lauren Bacall in front of an American Red Cross office: photograph by Louise Dahl-Wolfe
Above March 1943 Harper’s Bazaar magazine cover, featuring Lauren Bacall in front of an American Red Cross office: photograph by Louise Dahl-Wolfe
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