She Was The Most Powerful Editor In Fashion, Was Fired, Then Got Revenge: Diana Vreeland
In this documentary, we explore the life of Diana Vreeland — the woman her own mother called "my ugly little monster" who became the global arbiter of twentieth-century beauty, invented the profession of fashion editor at Harper's Bazaar, ran Vogue across its golden decade by putting Twiggy, Mick Jagger, and the Beatles on its pages and coining "youthquake," and was unceremoniously fired in 1971 at the age of 70 because the readers wanted practical and wearable rather than fantasy and exuberance. We trace what she did with the rest of her life: walking into the Metropolitan Museum of Art at 72, taking over the Costume Institute, transforming the Met Gala from a $50-a-ticket midnight supper into the most-watched fashion event on Earth, curating fourteen exhibitions over seventeen years, and giving fashion permanence by extracting it from the seasonal trend cycle and placing it under museum glass in the company of Rembrandt and Rodin — and dying in 1989 having built her greatest monument in her eighties. ——————————————————— Gain FREE access to secret full-length documentaries on wealthy families "too scandalous for YouTube" by joining our newsletter: https://www.substack.com/@oldmoneyallure ——————————————————— Diana Dalziel was born on September 29, 1903, in Paris, to Emily Key Hoffman — an American socialite descended from a brother of George Washington and a cousin of Francis Scott Key — and Frederick Young Dalziel, a British stockbroker. Her mother openly called her "my ugly little monster" and made no secret across her childhood that she preferred Diana's prettier younger sister Alexandra — a wound that the future arbiter of beauty later said taught her everything she would ever need to know about creating an image from raw material. She married banker Reed Vreeland in 1924 and spent her twenties and thirties as a London society wife — running a lingerie boutique near Berkeley Square that quietly counted Wallis Simpson among its customers — before being recruited to Harper's Bazaar in 1936 after Carmel Snow spotted her on a hotel roof in Mont-Saint-Michel wearing a white lace Chanel dress. At Harper's Bazaar she invented the profession of fashion editor — running the now-legendary "Why Don't You..." column, working with photographer Richard Avedon to produce some of the most iconic editorials of the twentieth century, and serving as the magazine's fashion editor for 26 years. When the editor-in-chief role opened in 1957, Bazaar passed her over for the publisher's niece — and Vreeland eventually moved to Vogue in 1962, becoming editor-in-chief in 1963 at age 59. Across her nine-year tenure she remade Vogue into the defining cultural document of the 1960s — putting Twiggy, Mick Jagger, the Beatles, Edie Sedgwick, and Veruschka on its pages; sending Avedon and Penn to Morocco, Thailand, and Japan; championing blue jeans, the bikini, and thong sandals before the fashion world was ready for any of them; and coining "youthquake," "pizzazz," and "the beautiful people." In 1971 Vogue fired her at age 70 — replacing her with her own assistant of nine years, Grace Mirabella, under whom the magazine's circulation tripled because the readers wanted practical and wearable rather than fantasy and exuberance. Her husband Reed had died five years earlier; she escaped to Paris for four months, and the decade she had defined was over — the woman who had been the most powerful fashion editor of the twentieth century was alone with no job, no salary, and no institutional home. In 1972 she walked into the Metropolitan Museum of Art and took over the Costume Institute as a consultant — and over the next seventeen years curated fourteen blockbuster exhibitions including "The World of Balenciaga," "The Glory of Russian Costume," "Vanity Fair," "The Eighteenth-Century Woman," "Yves Saint Laurent: 25 Years of Design," and "Man and the Horse." She transformed the Met Gala from a $50-a-ticket midnight supper into the most-watched fashion event on Earth — laying the foundation for what Anna Wintour would later inherit and amplify into the global cultural spectacle it is today. She gave fashion permanence — extracting it from the seasonal trend cycle and placing it under museum glass in the company of Rembrandt and Rodin, and forcing the art establishment to accept couture as a legitimate object of curatorial study. Her famously red Park Avenue apartment, decorated by Billy Baldwin and described by Vreeland as looking like "a garden in hell," became a pilgrimage site for the fashion world — and her published autobiography "D.V." in 1984 turned her into a literary figure as well as an institutional one. She died on August 22, 1989, at age 85, having smoked approximately 120 cigarettes a day for most of her adult life, and having built her greatest monument — the Costume Institute and the modern Met Gala — entirely in her eighties.

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