AFTER MONTHS OF SPECULATION, CONDÉ NAST ANNOUNCES A NEW ERA AT 'VOGUE' PARIS
Longtime EIC Emmanuelle Alt has officially been replaced at the top spot.
Source: 
Fashionista
Truly the end of an era at 
Condé Nast: 
Emmanuelle Alt, the editor of 
Vogue Paris, has officially left the company. 
Over the weekend, the global publishing company announced that Eugenie Trochu — most recently fashion editor for 
vogue.fr and market editor for its print magazine — had been promoted to head of editorial content at 
Vogue Paris, replacing Alt at the helm. Meanwhile, over at
 Vogue Italia, Francesca Ragazzi will take over from Emanuele Farneti, who left 
earlier this summer. Both will report to Anna Wintour and European editorial director 
Edward Enninful.
Alt had worked at 
Vogue Paris for over two decades before taking over as editor-in-chief in 2011. Rumors of her departure were first reported by 
WWD in May. 
This is the latest in a series of high-profile EIC exits from international 
Vogue editions, following
 an announcement late last year that Condé Nast would be restructuring its global editorial leadership structure and putting key editors in charge of multiple titles across a region. Wintour became Condé Nast's chief content officer and 
Vogue's global editorial director, while Enninful was handed the reins over 
Vogue in Europe, acting as an editorial director for the magazine in the U.K., France, Italy, Germany and Spain — meaning that the editors-in-chief of those titles would report to him. 
Christiane Arp and Eugenia de la Torriente, who had been editors-in-chief of 
Vogue Germany and 
Vogue Spain, respectively, exited the company at the end of 2020. In May, Mitsuko Watanabe 
announced she'd be departing 
Vogue Japan after serving as its editor-in-chief for over a decade, at the end of the year; Priya Tanna also revealed she was leaving 
Vogue India, where she'd worked since it launched in 2007. (She was replaced by 
Megha Kapoor, who, like Trochu and Ragazzi, was given the title "head of editorial content," versus the traditional editor-in-chief.) Farneti departed in July. 
According to 
Business of Fashion, 
Vogue Taiwan's Leslie Sun stepped in to oversee the magazine in the Asia-Pacific region, excluding the China and Russia editions. The latter two represent an exception, where Condé Nast has named a successor following a top editor exit: Earlier this year, Margaret Zhang took over 
Vogue China following founding editor Angelica Cheung's departure, while Ksenia Solovieva replaced Masha Fedorova at 
Vogue Russia.