The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fashion journalist finally gets his due in admiring new documentar­y

- By Ann Hornaday

“Fashion is fleeting, style remains.”

That is one of several arresting aperçus uttered by André Leon Talley, the charismati­c subject of “The Gospel According to André.” At 6-footplus, his prodigious frame draped in a breathtaki­ng collection of capes and caftans, the fashion journalist presents a literally largerthan-life figure throughout this admiring documentar­y portrait, which gives him his due not only as part of the New York vanguard that included artist Andy Warhol and fellow editors Diana Vreeland and Anna Wintour, but as an avatar for black excellence in postJim Crow America.

Following Talley from his stately White Plains home to Paris, Manhattan, Washington, D.C., and his birthplace of Durham, North Carolina, filmmaker Kate Novack creates a lively homage to the act of self-creation: Growing up with his grandmothe­r in a modest home, Talley — now approachin­g 70 — received an early education in fabulousne­ss simply by attending church, where African-American laborers and domestics shed their weekly uniforms and arrived decked out in fine dresses, hats, gloves and shoes. This is where Talley learned the core tenets of what has become known as “respectabi­lity politics” (wherein, as he says at one point, “it’s a moral code to dress well.”)

His pursuit of a master’s degree at Brown University, where he studied French literature, spun Talley into the orbit of a group of young avant-gardists at the Rhode Island School of Design across the street. Moving to New York in 1974, the smart, effortless­ly sophistica­ted Talley began answering phones at Warhol’s Interview magazine and volunteere­d for Vreeland at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art’s Costume Institute.

Those gigs led to editorial positions at Women’s Wear Daily and Vogue, where he and editor Wintour developed the kind of mind-meld that results in truly groundbrea­king creativity, in Talley’s case championin­g black designers and models and conceiving bold, provocativ­e spreads that engaged the wider culture as much as couture.

At its best, “The Gospel According to Andre” gives viewers the rare chance to get to know someone who, until now, has mostly been known as that impeccably turned-out gentleman who seems to know everybody at the annual Costume Institute gala. Talley, it turns out, merits admiration not only for his intellect, work ethic and ability to contextual­ize fashion within history, literature, visual art and music, but for the exacting eye and determinat­ion with which he has created his own character.

The obstacles, clearly, were present from the start. Talley, notes one observer, “was so many things he wasn’t supposed to be.” In “The Gospel According to André,” a star isn’t born. He gives birth to himself, through sheer force of will.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MAGNOLIA PICTURES ?? Fashion editor André Leon Talley in “The Gospel According to André.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MAGNOLIA PICTURES Fashion editor André Leon Talley in “The Gospel According to André.”

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