RIP André Leon Talley - 1948-2022 | Page 2 | the Fashion Spot

RIP André Leon Talley - 1948-2022

RIP. All I know is that when he was still there I read vogue. Now I don't even bother to pick it up. A terrible loss...
Yeah.. he certainly represented a time of unapologetic exuberance and grandiosity.. and genuine eccentricity.. none of the staged ‘fashun moments’ and gimmicks fishing for likes that you see now. It seems so long ago that you’d see people like André, Anna Piaggi, Isabella Blow, the kind who seemed fun and full of excess and extremely educated and demanding about fashion.. I never really cared much for them cause they seemed like they’d.. always be there, but now I feel lucky I got to grow up with their presence in fashion..
 
Anna wrote a little piece about him for Vogue (I believe it will appear in the March issue)

André Leon Talley and I first met in 1983. Grace Mirabella, the then editor of Vogue, had just hired me as the magazine’s creative director, while André was its fashion news director. He’d arrived at Vogue having been at the Costume Institute, Interview, and the Paris bureau of WWD, where he was the toast of the town.

We quickly became friends, in part because neither of us quite fit in with the no-nonsense and totally beige corporate atmosphere of the office: André had enough volubility to be onstage at the Metropolitan Opera, while I was just the weird Brit. Looking back, I really didn’t help my cause by having the eccentric Isabella Blow as my assistant, who took to cleaning her desk with generous spritzes of Chanel No. 5 at the end of each working day. André applauded—adored—the aristocratic insouciance of it all.

Yet that was only part of the story for André and me. Friendship with him meant being part of his erudite, gilded, and fiercely self-created existence; of being in the orbit of someone who had the incredible gift, one amplified by his immense charm, of always being able to joyfully turn the volume of life up—way, way up. I’d never met anyone who had so many friends known only by their first names: Paloma, Karl, Andy, Yves, Diane. And before long, André had joined their ranks.

André was also an intrinsic part of both my family life and my personal life. He’d stay weekends with us in Long Island; that’s where this portrait of him was taken. He was forever generous with his time, and he was always the most entertaining house guest, critic, and cheerleader. He could lift everyone up. His cameos in our family summer movies were classic. And André consulted on fittings for whatever my daughter, Bee, and I would wear to the Met any given year.

The night before the May 2016 gala, André emailed Bee and me with some thoughts on her hair for the night: “A soft loosely knotted back, and off the neck, clean off the neck. It can’t be messy. But it has to look like you just caught it in a one twist, like a soft figure 8 caught with [the] same color band as your hair. And you can still wear the little tiny band of diamonds. But never too tight, yet never messy, like you came off the tennis court.”

The day after André died, I started going through many, many years of his emails to me. While before this he used to communicate via violently colored faxes, email was a revelation to him, and his—always rendered in different colors and fonts—were brilliant, explosive, funny, opinionated, and exhilarating. People always say that tone is lost over text and email—not with André.

Those emails say so much about him. Here he is writing from Kanye West’s wedding to Kim Kardashian in Florence in 2014: “I have never seen such organization, such imagination, and a sense of perfection. And such a diverse mix of people. Jaden Smith, 15 years old, went as an albino bat to the ceremony, it was beyond genius. An albino bat, go figure. And apparently he has his own clothing line. Kanye looked so handsome in Lanvin. And Alber Elbaz now really wears shoes, worn, beaten and coming apart, like Charlie Chaplin.”

Unsurprisingly, clothes—his, mine, and those seen in runway shows—made for some of André’s most incisive and hilarious commentary. One collection invoked his ire: “What was all that stuff, Amish uniforms on steroids. Pretentiously artistic! FASHION NUNS Meets The Handmaid’s Tale.” Another, from Marc Jacobs, a designer who André believed in so much, brought an opportunity to rave: “What I really want to say is that Marc Jacobs as usual is the only great, great show in New York City. Why do we have to sit through a tsunami of crap just to get to him? We have to. It’s life. It was a master class of style, true style. A master class. I was knocked out by the beauty, the sheer brilliance and polish. People must be embraced, loved, and supported. No matter what it takes. I just send missives to Marc. I don’t even go backstage anymore. He prefers the words.”

André clearly had a way with words, but his actions also spoke volumes. Years ago, when my mother died unexpectedly, I had just made it to London, despite a ferocious snowstorm which had gripped New York, and my husband and children couldn’t join me for the funeral. I was so low, which André immediately realized. Being the force of nature that he was, absolutely nothing was going to stop him crossing the Atlantic to be there for me and for my family. Amidst a lifetime of memories of André, I will never forget his kindness, his chivalry, and his friendship.

Forever André: Anna Wintour on Her Extraordinary Friend and Colleague
 
They are shamelessly writing about everyone: Mirabella, ALT and Mugler is next. "Oh we are such "bible of fashion", we are documenting everything!" And when he still worked she ignored his couture completely, not sure about rtw. Was he too vulgar for her and she hoped no one would remember him after retirement?
 
^ Would ignoring their deaths be a preferable alternative? There is limited spotlight available at the top, and new talent and faces constantly vying for it, many of whom legitimately deserve inclusion. No one can remain the toast of the fashion world forever, and staying on top takes dedication and likely a certain amount of willingness to be cutthroat. Be it as a designer, model, editor, etc. It ebbs and flows. I don't really know how included Mugler was decades ago, before retiring, but he was certainly written about on occasion by Vogue. They wrote about his recent exhibit in Paris, he was included in recent Met Galas (he did Kim K's look in 2019 which coincided with a cover), they did a special video about Cardi B wearing his archival design to the Grammys, etc. Grace was unceremoniously fired several decades ago, yes, but the man who did that is dead and it's fitting and respectful that they celebrate and acknowledge her contributions and leadership after she passed. ALT spent decades at Vogue, Anna promoted him and welcomed him back after he left, gave him prime Met Gala duties even after retirement, and it's clear they had a complicated but close personal relationship. He was slagging her off in the press and airing personal dirty laundry of hers in 2020 to promote his book (when she was already under fire), calling her a "colonial broad" and all that, yet she never publicly returned the insults or criticism and ultimately we don't really know what happened between them in the nearly 2 years since - they may have ended up on great terms for all we know. She wrote a decently long, personal tribute along with publishing several other tributes to him, and people are *still* crying foul because they dared to publish the morning after, not the night of his passing. The same people that are suddenly furious at Anna for not asking Andre back for his position at the Met Gala a couple of years ago are the same ones who only started paying attention to it a couple of years ago in part *because* he was replaced with a (young, woman, POC) influencer/internet celebrity. Most of these critiques from the twitter set are totally in bad faith. If they write something it's hypocritical, or too slow. But if they don't acknowledge the passing, it's hateful, etc.. People are demanding ALT be given a cover, posthumously, but if that happened, then it would be all "too late, he should've gotten this when he was alive!"
 
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Some nice memories here.

The View from Here
Remembering fashion’s caped crusader
January 22, 2022

By Graydon Carter

It’s not often you have the good fortune to meet a six-foot, six-inch fashion scholar and man-about-town, with the regal bearing of a 19th-century prince—and who could pull off wearing a cape. André Leon Talley, who died this week at White Plains Hospital north of New York, was all that and so much more. He was also a wit, a style icon, a deft critic, and a man of extreme passions and loyalties. André was always cooking something up, and indeed he was planning projects right up to the very last minute.

I got the news of his death late Tuesday evening from Jonathan Becker, the photographer. He and André met at Interview magazine but first really worked together on a portrait sitting they did for W of former Vogue editor Diana Vreeland, who was by then organizing exhibitions for the Met’s Costume Institute, where André had interned for her a few years earlier. André worshipped Mrs. Vreeland, as she was called by those around her—and she saw the unique brilliance in her young protégé. André and Jonathan struck up a friendship on that shoot—and maintained it for the next 45 years. Indeed, he was godfather to Jonathan’s daughter—as am I godfather to his son.

I knew André from Condé Nast, and from just being here and there. Sometime in the mid-90s, he had a spat with Anna Wintour and asked if he could take a leave from Vogue and pitch his tent at Vanity Fair for a spell. I was just beginning to get the hang of the magazine, and I thought I could use all the creative help I could get. I said yes immediately. André swooped in with a theatrical flair all his own. Once he had an idea, he brooked little in the way of dissent. There were many days when I felt I was working for him rather than the other way around. Aimée Bell, my longtime colleague at Vanity Fair who worked with him on a number of projects, says he was “a human opera.”

André paid absolutely no attention to the fact that Vanity Fair wasn’t a fashion magazine. And his ideas, like he himself, bordered on the epic—both in terms of vision and cost. In 1996, André and Karl Lagerfeld produced a baroque, 10-page extravaganza called “Scarlett ’n the Hood.” It was a reimagining of Gone with the Wind, with many of the genders and races switched around. Scarlett was played by Naomi Campbell. Manolo Blahnik played her father, Gerald. The designer Gianfranco Ferré played the Hattie McDaniel part. John Galliano was a house servant. The clothes were all couture. And Laura Jacobs (now the Arts Intel Report editor for Air Mail) wrote the copy. The bills were crushing. But the spectacle was not only a huge hit with our readers; it also gave me a glimmer of credibility in the fashion world.

The fact is, André had forgotten more about fashion than most of his contemporaries ever knew. And as a result, designers flocked to him, for advice, encouragement, or just validation. I knew he and Tom Ford were close, so I wrote to Tom the day the news of André’s death was in the papers.

“I last heard from him on New Year’s Eve,” Tom wrote back. “I have a book of all of the emails and notes that he sent to me over the years. Some were on hotel stationery that he would slip under my door. His notes were truly works of art. His handwriting as bold as he was. His giant persona sometimes overshadowed the fact that he was a brilliant journalist and an incredible writer.”

If you’re reading this, chances are you already know the outlines of André’s life. He was the grandson of a sharecropper. He grew up in North Carolina in the 60s, and somehow made his way to Brown University, where he earned a master’s in French literature. There were stints at Interview and The New York Times. His long run at Vogue was on and off—and he was a factor there even during the off stretches. There were two memoirs, including, most recently, The Chiffon Trenches—which became a New York Times best-seller. André styled First Ladies of both political parties. He was on television. He was in documentaries. I remember just how quietly pleased he was when he was given a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from the French minister of culture. The book reviews he did for Air Mail were models of insight and precision.

There are few people I’ve met who were as authentically adored as André was. He wasn’t a saint, God knows. And he had his issues, with food as well as money. But I don’t recall a single nasty word said about him. Even when he lost elements of his station after he left Vogue—or perhaps because he had left it—his place in the culture only grew. He was more popular with young people in the last few years than he had been at any time in his life. And he loved that.

André had survived to the point where being a great, fabulous original was cherished, both by people who knew him and those who didn’t. As Jonathan Becker said, “It was impossible not to love him.” The politics of his memorial will be a spectator sport in the coming weeks. I’m not sure André wanted one, but if there must be a celebration, it’s an educated guess that he would have wanted it held at the Abyssinian Baptist Church under the auspices of the Reverend Calvin O. Butts, up in Harlem—where he worshipped as a regularly practicing Christian.

The thing is, André was a wonder to all stripes. I remember sitting with former Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee at the end of a dinner that Robert De Niro and I used to host each year to kick off the Tribeca Film Festival. The plates had been cleared, and André hovered into view. With his height, and wearing the largest fur cape you’ve ever seen, he almost blocked out the ceiling lights. I introduced the two of them. They chatted for a bit, and then André turned and began to talk to someone else. On his back in gold lettering were the words The Great Black Hope. Ben turned to me and said, “Who the hell was that?” I told him. Ben was quiet for a moment, and then he just said, “Magnificent!”
source| airmail.news
 
His funeral was held today. Among attendance was Anna Wintour, Marc Jacobs, Grace Coddington, Naomi Campbell, Kate Moss, Diane Von Furstenberg, Zac Posen, Carolina Herrera, and many more.
 
Looked like a beautiful ceremony. My eyes nearly rolled out of my head seeing some of the "tributes" people are putting out today.

Screenshots of every meaningless little email ALT ever sent you is not meaningful and comes across as a little desperate and a little inappropriate, if you ask me.
 
Jesus Christ those designers must've really loved him because that snippet of a collection is a FORTUNE. I was hoping to see the Dior pajamas from the FW 2001 couture collection that he supposedly ordered. I wonder where the rest of it went
 
^ honestly it's all really low value and not worth a live sale (should've been an online sale..) but let's go, PR!
 
^ honestly it's all really low value and not worth a live sale (should've been an online sale..) but let's go, PR!
I meant in the moment retail, all those crocodile coats, couture Lagerfeld, Ralph rucci, tom ford, Galliano, that cost is astronomical. Maybe in his position there were probably gifts or at least paid at cost. In a normal situation I would think things like exotic leathers and couture really only depreciate in value (unless they're historically significant to someone). But do you really think so for ALT? Those kaftans, I'm sure people like Alexander Fury are getting all their credit cards ready to max tf out.
 
That’s an impressive collection of gifts.
In a way it’s sad knowing his financial situation in his last days…So much fabulosity that was exceptional in itself but with no other value than historical.

I’m actually obsessed by the Prada trunk!

I can see brands buying this for their own archives or big fans of Andre or friends…
I’m surprised by the absence of Warhol or contemporary Art from artists that were around his circle when he worked at Interview.
‘Karl really showered him with gifts!
 
I’m surprised by the absence of Warhol or contemporary Art from artists that were around his circle when he worked at Interview.


There are three Warhols included, though two of them are prints. The Vreeland/Napoleon one is kind of fabulous. Could be he had more and they were either sold over the years or he bequeathed them to someone specifically. I like his taste in art, if these lots are any indication.
 

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