Elle USA - November 2012

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ELLE CALENDAR
THE
MUST-
DO
CHECK
LIST
Thursday,
November 1,
8:15 P.M. EST
IN CONVERSATION
Performance-art
high priestess Marina
Abramovic´ discusses
her controversial
body of work with
British curator Sir
Norman Rosenthal
tonight at New York’s
92nd Street Y.
Monday,
November 5
LITTLE GOAT Top
Chef winner and
co-owner of Chicago’s
cool-crowd hangout
Girl & the Goat
Stephanie Izard opens
her second Windy
City restaurant today,
serving updated
American classics
such as beef-cheek
stroganoff in a retro-
diner setting.
Tuesday,
November 6
THE ART OF MEN
(I PREFER MINE
AL DENTE) Emmy
and Golden Globe
winner Kirstie Alley
releases her first
memoir—a hilarious,
self-deprecating
tell-all revealing the
truth behind her star-
studded sex life.
Friday,
November 16
LINCOLN Daniel
Day-Lewis stars as
the nation’s sixteenth
president in Steven
Spielberg’s election-
season-appropriate
Civil War epic.
NOVEMBER
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1 11 21 6 16 26 3 13 23 8 18 28 2 12 22 7 17 27 4 14 24 9 19 29 5 15 25 10 20 30
See you next month!
Friday, November 2
LOVE BITES An indie coming-of-age romance
horror flick featuring pop icon Kylie Minogue
might seem like a genre clash, but somehow
Jack & Diane, which opens today, makes a story
about two teenage lesbians—played by breakout
stars Juno Temple and Elvis’ granddaughter Riley
Keough—whose love transforms one of them into
a ferocious monster, obsessively watchable.
Saturday, November 17
TRASH TALK Since 1973, Brooklyn-based artist Martha
Rosler has been turning junk, including discarded
Barbie dolls and cast-off sweatshirts, into treasures
with her ongoing traveling art installation, The Meta-
Monumental Garage Sale. Today she brings it to NYC’s
MoMA, where visitors can comb through donated items,
haggle prices with Rosler, and go home with the goods.
moma.org/garagesale
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Tuesday, November 6
HAPPY 24TH
BIRTHDAY,
EMMA STONE
Tuesday, November 20
POSE OFF In her coffee-table-ready retrospective,
Kate: The Kate Moss Book (Rizzoli), the iconic model
pulls from her personal archives (and photographers’
collections, too) and offers 400 images by Juergen Teller,
Corinne Day, Terry Richardson, and more to chart her rise
from fresh-faced ’90s waif to full-on industry legend.
32 www. e l l e. c o m
©

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ELLE CALENDAR
Friday, November 2
PUFFER PIECE
Giambattista Valli’s latest
Moncler Gamme Rouge
collection pays homage to
director Luchino Visconti,
whose 106th birthday
would be today. Silvana
Mangano’s après-ski
looks in Visconti’s 1967
film Le Streghe inspired
the dramatic outerwear,
certain to turn heads both
on and off the slopes.
moncler.com
Monday, November 5
LEISURE CLASS The fourth volume
in Abrams’ Slim Aarons series captures
the photographer’s decades-long love
affair with Italy. Featuring everyone from
aristocrats to film stars, this gorgeous
book is a must for any stylish coffee table.
abramsbooks.com
Monday, Novembe mbe 5 r 5 r 5
EISURE CLASS The fourth volume
Wednesday,
November 7
MOD SQUAD Narciso
Rodriguez is bringing
his signature brand
of minimalism to
Kohl’s this fall. The
affordable (all items
$150 or under), of-the-
moment color-block
dresses, separates,
and outerwear will kick
off Design Nation, the
mass retailer’s new
designer-collaboration
program. kohls.com
Thursday, November 1
HUNTER-GATHERER The thought of
impending winter snowstorms just got
a lot more bearable, thanks to Hunter’s
ultrachic collaboration with J. Mendel. The
classic wellies, available in either black or
white, are all dressed up with fur trim.
hunter-boot.com
F i Fri Fridday day NNNove ove b mbe mbe
NOVEMBER FASHION EDITION
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1 11 21 6 16 26 3 13 23 8 18 28 2 12 22 7 17 27 4 14 24 9 19 29 5 15 25 10 20 30
See
you
next
month!
Wednesday, November 14
IN CHARACTER Following last year’s
collab with Lady Gaga, Barneys New York
has partnered with Disney for an “Electric
Holiday” with animated shorts featuring
Disney characters decked out in the
season’s hottest looks, and customized
goodies, like DVF’s take on Mickey Mouse.
barneys.com
Friday, November 23
BLING RING 90210 residents can
breathe a sigh of relief: Rodeo Drive’s Dior
boutique is reopening after a renovation.
To mark the occasion, the house has
issued a limited-edition accessories
collection, including jewels, sunglasses,
and scarves. Why not stop in on Black
Friday? dior.com
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Thursday,
November 29
LADIES IN RED
Don’t miss “Valentino:
Master of Couture” at
London’s Somerset
House, an exhibition
featuring more than
130 gowns spanning
Valentino Garavani’s
50-plus-year career.
Among the collection
will be Julia Roberts’
black-and-white
Oscars gown (styled
by our own Joe Zee)
and Jackie
Kennedy’s (second)
wedding dress.
somersethouse.org.uk
Thursdday
THE
MUST-
DO
CHECK
LIST
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38 www. e l l e. c o m
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page 334
page 372
page 354
page 155
CONTINUED ON PAGE 64
ELLE (ISSN 0888-0808) (Volume XXVIII, Number 3) (November
2012) is published monthly by Hearst Communications, Inc., 300
West 57th Street, New York, NY 10019 U.S.A. Frank A. Bennack,
Jr., Chief Executive Officer and Executive Vice Chairman of the
Board; George R. Hearst, Jr., Chairman; Catherine A. Bostron,
Secretary; Steven R. Swartz, Executive Vice President and Chief
Operating Officer; Ronald J. Doerfler, Senior Vice President,
Finance and Administration. Hearst Magazines Division: David
Carey, President; John P. Loughlin, Executive Vice President
and General Manager; John A. Rohan, Jr., Senior Vice President,
Finance. © 2012 by Hearst Communications, Inc. All rights reserved.
ELLE is a registered trademark of Hearst Communications, Inc.
Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY, and additional mailing
offices. Canada Post International Publications mail product
(Canadian distribution) sales agreement No. 40012499. Editorial
and Advertising Offices: 300 West 57th Street, New York, NY
10019. Subscription prices: United States and possessions: $15 for
one year. Canada: $48 for one year. Other international locations:
$87 for one year. Subscription Services: ELLE will, upon receipt of
a complete subscription order, undertake fulfillment of that order
so as to provide the first copy for delivery by the Postal Service or
alternate carrier within 4–6 weeks. From time to time, we make
our subscriber list available to companies who sell goods and
services by mail that we believe would interest our readers. If you
would rather not receive such mailings, please send your current
mailing label or an exact copy to Mail Preference Service, P.O. Box
6000, Harlan, IA 51593. For customer service, changes of address,
and subscription orders, log on to service.elle.com or write to
Customer Service Dept., ELLE, P.O. Box 37870, Boone, IA 50037.
ELLE is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts or art. None
will be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped
envelope. Canadian registration number 126018209RT0001.
POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to ELLE, P.O. Box
37870, Boone, IA 50037-0870. Printed in the U.S.A.
CONTENTS
56 www. e l l e. c o m
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NOVEMBER 2012 VOLUME XXVIII NUMBER 3 NO.327
ON THE COVER
155
,
213
,
333
ELLE FASHION: THE LOOK, TRENDS,
AND ACCESSORIES
The weather is frightful, but the season’s
florals, embroidered add-ons, designer
separates, and funky furs are delightful
280
,
290
,
300
ACCESS HOLLYWOOD
From the new body ideal to the most
sought-after surgeon, ELLE’s annual cheat
sheet to attaining big-screen beauty
334
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD
Sarah Jessica Parker, Cate Blanchett,
Octavia Spencer, Uma Thurman, Emma
Watson, Susan Sarandon, Kristen Wiig,
Elle Fanning, and Shirley MacLaine
FASHION
110
A TO ZEE: WORTH THE WAIT
ELLE Creative Director Joe Zee and Joel
McHale swap notes on superfan fashion
114
TALK DIRTY TO ME
Online retailer Nasty Gal sells risqué
clothes girls can’t get enough of.
By MAGGIE BULLOCK
120
OH TO BE YOUNG…
New literature suggests people in their
twenties are more confused than ever.
AMANDA FITZSIMONS agrees?
124
THE GIFT
The product of an unconventional
upbringing, KATHA POLLITT explores the
symbolic power of a single purchase
128
L.A. WOMAN
Viet-Nu Nguyen is the antiminimalist art
insider. By VÉRONIQUE HYLAND
134
EAST SIDE STORY
Elkin designers (and sisters) Brit and Kara
Smith tap into the new L.A. bohemia.
By VÉRONIQUE HYLAND
138
CITY OF ANGELS
Is there something in the water? AMANDA
FITZSIMONS on the Cali-girl style evolution
196
WORKBOOK: OFF SCRIPT
Writer-producer Mara Brock Akil
discovers a business-casual look that’s
anything but textbook. By ALLISON P. DAVIS
201
ELLE FASHION NEWS
Simone’s Katie Nehra makes varsity…
Pierre Cardin’s new shelter tome…Isabella
Rossellini for Bulgari…and more!
202
PLAYTIME
Matthew Edelstein puts the fun back in
fashion. By VÉRONIQUE HYLAND
204
RAW POWER
With eco-friendly line 321, Loomstate is
becoming a new kind of fashion hybrid.
By VÉRONIQUE HYLAND
354
PRISM BREAK
The season’s best furs are bright, bold,
and brazen. Photographed by THOMAS
WHITESIDE. Styled by JOE ZEE
8
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advertisement
It’s
back
Bigger
& bolder
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AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD ON iPAD

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©
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SANTA MARGHERITA
FOR A VERY BUBBLY HOLIDAY
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Try Santa Margherita Prosecco, a fruit-
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treatments. Treat yourself with the Serenity Spa Package: an ocean-view room,
a $50 resort credit, a 50% discount on your second treatment, and an exclusive
ELLE Spa gift. During your stay, stop by the ELLE Spa Boutique for the latest
beauty products, jewelry, and accessories handpicked by ELLE editors.
This limited-time promotion is available through the end of the year with
room rates starting at $299. Visit ELLEspamiami.com (promo code SPA)
to reserve today.
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CALVIN KLEIN JEANS
SEXY, CITY STYLE
Introducing women’s skinny fit denim
with precious metal-inspired hues like
pewter and copper.
Available at Macy’s, Lord & Taylor,
and calvinklein.com.
Sarah Jessica Parker wears a viscose crepe halterdress from
Calvin Klein Collection and a collar necklace from House of
Lavande. For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed by
Alexi Lubomirski. Styled by Stacey Battat. Hair by Serge
Normant at SergeNormant.com. Makeup by Leslie Lopez at
The Wall Group. Manicure by Gina Eppolito at Ginails.com.
Set design by Mark Chandler at Art Department. Fashion
assistant: Sarah Schussheim. To get her makeup look, try
Studio Secrets Professional Eye Shadow Quads in Canyon
Stone, Lineur Intense Felt Tip Liquid Eyeliner in Carbon
Black, Voluminous Power Volume 24H Mascara in Blackest
Black, and Colour Riche Lipcolour in Fairest Nude, all by
L’Oréal Paris. Cate Blanchett wears a cupro top and pants
from Céline. For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed
by Alexi Lubomirski. Styled by Kate Lanphear. Hair by
Robert Vetica at The Magnet Agency. Makeup by Jeanine
Lobell at The Magnet Agency. Manicure by Tracylee at Tim
Howard Management. Set design by Mark Chandler at Art
Department. Fashion assistant: Kristen Shirley. To get her
makeup look, try Smooth Eye Colour Duo in Stromboli, Secret
Eyes Lengthening Mascara in Black, The Blush Luminous
Cheek Colour in Delight, and Passion Duo Gloss and Colour
Fusion Lipstick in Tropical, all by Dolce & Gabbana Make Up.
Octavia Spencer wears a jersey dress from Tadashi Shoji.
For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed by Thomas
Whiteside. Styled by Sarah Schussheim. Hair and makeup
by Valerie Noble. Manicure by Ashlie Johnson at The Wall
Group. Prop styling by Juliet Jernigan at CLM. Fashion
assistant: Brittny Chapman. To get her makeup look, try
Lineur Intense Felt Tip Liquid Eyeliner in Black Mica and Colour
Riche Lipcolour in Fairest Nude, both by L’Oréal Paris. Uma
Thurman wears a wool dress from Calvin Klein Collection and
her own ring. For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed
by Thomas Whiteside. Styled by Sarah Schussheim. Hair
by Renato Campora at The Wall Group. Makeup by Kabuki
at KabukiMagic.com. Manicure by Jackie Padilha for
Kenbarboza.com. Fashion assistant: Seymour Glass. To
get her makeup look, try Studio Secrets Professional Eye
Shadow Singles in Satin TuTu, Voluminous False Fiber Lashes
Waterproof Mascara in Black, and Colour Riche Lipcolour in
Fairest Nude, all by L’Oréal Paris. Susan Sarandon wears a
leather trench coat from Valentino and leather pumps from
Tom Ford, with her own jewelry. For details, see Shopping
Guide. Photographed by Alexi Lubomirski. Styled by Kate
Lanphear. Hair by Keith Carpenter at The Wall Group.
Makeup by Genevieve for Sally Harlor. Manicure by Tracylee
at Tim Howard Management. Set design by Mark Chandler
at Art Department. Fashion assistant: Kristen Shirley.
To get her makeup look, try Double Extend Eye Illuminator
Mascara in Black Crystal for All Eyes, Telescopic Original
Mascara in Black, and Colour Riche Lipcolour in Fairest Nude,
all by L’Oréal Paris. Kristen Wiig wears a tunicdress from T
by Alexander Wang, gold bangles from Roberto Coin, a pavé
diamond ring from David Yurman, and her own ring and Cartier
bracelet. For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed
by Alexi Lubomirski. Styled by Sarah Schussheim. Hair
by Ben Skervin at The Magnet Agency. Makeup by Maud
Laceppe at Streeters. Manicure by Maki Sakamoto at Kate
Ryan Inc. Fashion assistant: Tatum Pia. To get her makeup
look, try Double Extend Eye Illuminator Mascara in Black
Emerald for Green/Hazel Eyes and Voluminous False Fiber
Lashes Waterproof Mascara in Black, both by L’Oréal Paris.
Elle Fanning wears a silk dress from Calvin Klein Collection.
For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed by Thomas
Whiteside. Styled by Phoebe Arnold. Hair by Karin Bigler at
D+V Management. Makeup by Anita Keeling for Jed Root
Inc. Manicure by Amanda Bragoli for Spoilt at Home. Fashion
assistant: Ian Luka. To get her makeup look, try Telescopic
Explosion Mascara in Blackest Black, Double Extend Eye
Illuminator in Black Crystal for All Eyes, and Colour Riche Balm
in Rose Elixir, all by L’Oréal Paris. Shirley MacLaine wears her
own shirt. For details, see Shopping Guide. Photographed by
Thomas Whiteside. Styled by Meg Gallagher. Hair by Rob
Talty at The Magnet Agency. Makeup by Lottie at The Wall
Group. Manicure by Kimmie Kyees at The Celestine Agency.
Prop styling by Juliet Jernigan at CLM. To get her makeup
look, try Studio Secrets Professional Eye Shadow Singles
in Shroom Shimmer, Extra-Intense Liquid Pencil Eyeliner in
Carbon Black, and Voluminous Full-Definition Mascara in
Blackest Black, all by L’Oréal Paris.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 70
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 56
page 311
page 128
page 280
page 274
CONTENTS NOVEMBER 2012 VOLUME XXVIII NUMBER 3 NO.327
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BIG SIR
Menswear gets a super ’70s reboot for fall.
Photographed by KT AULETA. Styled by
KATE LANPHEAR
372
THE PLAYERS
Rashida Jones, Zoe Kazan, and Brit Marling
are rewriting Hollywood standards.
By RACHEL ABRAMOWITZ. Photographed by
BRUNO STAUB. Styled by KATE LANPHEAR
378
FRENCH OPEN
Guillaume Henry modernizes Carven by
revising its mission statement. By AMANDA
FITZSIMONS. Photographed by ERIC
GUILLEMAIN. Styled by PHOEBE ARNOLD
FEATURES
106
SPIRITUAL HOME: MOROCCO
Jewelry designer Pamela Love mixes
business with pleasure on her African
honeymoon. By SETH PLATTNER
233
ELLE INTELLIGENCE
Denzel Washington takes on Flight…the
history of women in comedy…ELLE’s
annual Hollywood Power List…and more!
302
WALKING ON SUNSHINE
An illegal drug promises mental clarity (at
a price). ARIANNE COHEN trips on ayahuasca
311
SHOP GIRLS
Satine’s proprietresses invite JULIE VADNAL
to an A-list alfresco L.A. soiree
316
CHARMED, I’M SURE
As curtains close on The Office, John
Krasinski is still very much in business.
By CARINA CHOCANO
320
THE GIRL FROM THE SOUTHERN
WILD
Beasts of the Southern Wild scribe Lucy
Alibar goes for broke. By STEVE FRIEDMAN
324
A PRIVATE MATTER
A self-professed “ordinary” man on the
extraordinary impact of cheating culture
326
THE DRUG WAR
How depressed should a woman be to
take medication during pregnancy? DYAN
NEARY investigates the latest debate
330
ASK E. JEAN
Relationship hell? E. JEAN CARROLL to the
rescue!
385
SAM’S TOWN
Samuel L. Jackson on cheerleading,
amnesiac love, and Bill Clinton.
By MICKEY RAPKIN
BEAUTY, HEALTH
& FITNESS
264
A BEAUTIFUL MIND
From “baby Botox” to supermarket secrets,
EMILY DOUGHERTY learns the tricks of the
trade from derm Amy Wechsler, MD
266
THE GOODSMELLAS
APRIL LONG investigates the burgeoning
world of the eaux-obsessed homme
272
FACE OFF
AMY WALLACE tries a cancer-repelling salve
that wreaks havoc on her skin
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flawless has many faces
“Your lips are the
ultimate sensual asset.

— Laura Mercier
Introducing
Crème Smooth Lip Colour
Luxurious. Comforting. Rich.
Nourish lips with luscious, vibrant colour.
18 lustrous shades, from neutral to bold.
lauramercier.com
bebe. com
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CONTINUED FROM PAGE 64
page 320
ALL THAT JAZZ DOUBLE VISION
Heed the call of the wild in
urban-safari sandals, cold-
weather crochet, and free-
spirit extras
In her ninth novel, a literary
titan wraps an activist’s
agenda in a dazzling page-
turner. By Allison P. Davis
155 ELLE TRENDS 233 ELLE INTEL
Channel the glamour of late-nineteenth-century Russian
aristocracy with Banana Republic’s Anna Karenina–
inspired collection (just in time for the Keira Knightley
film). The range of ready-to-wear and accessories
features crystal embellishments, rich velvet, and (faux)
fur trims fit for high society. bananarepublic.com
HEROINE CHIC
201 ELLE FASHION NEWS
OTTE
1. Faux-snakeskin sandal, STELLA MCCARTNEY, $640, at Stella McCartney, Las
Vegas, West Hollywood, call 310-273-7051 | 2. Resin and sterling silver earrings,
MIRIAM SALAT, $375, call 212-459-8920 or visit miriamsalat.com | 3. Macramé tank,
BIRD BY JUICY COUTURE, $298, at Juicy Couture, NYC
At the start of Flight Behavior (Harper),
29-year-old Dellarobia Turnbow seems to
be nothing more than a small-town stereo-
type—a once ambitious girl, bound to a
thwarted life after teen motherhood, who
is seeking escape via an extramarital affair—until her discovery
of a new natural phenomenon in the nearby woods propels her
to international notoriety. Barbara Kingsolver, inspired by her
new home in rural Appalachia, deftly situates us in the novel’s
Feather town, the Bible Belt ground zero for an environmental
debate in which science and religion, reason and blind faith face
off. The controversy, about whether she has witnessed a religious
miracle or a dire consequence of global warming, leads Turn-
bow to question her place in the world, just as Kingsolver quietly
questions the future of our fragile planet—and our duty to it.
n
213 ELLE SHOPS
a
ELLE’s Top Shop: Otte, 1232 Third Avenue, New York, NY; 212-744-4002
What’s there: The fourth outpost for the NYC mini chain, which started with
a single Williamsburg, Brooklyn, boutique, Otte’s Third Avenue flagship is
the arbiter of its brands’ best offerings. (Buyers deliberately avoid carrying
silhouettes and colorways favored by department stores.) Mainstays include
separates from 3.1 Phillip Lim, Acne, and Vanessa Bruno.
Projected wait-list items: Isabel Marant sneakers, Rag & Bone floral-print
Newbury boots for resort, newly introduced Theyskens’ Theory for spring
Vibe: An industrial, gallery-like space neatly showcases urban staples and
accessories for the discerning but practical shopper.
Playlist: An accessible mélange of hip-hop, classic rock, and oldies
ochet, and fre
CONTENTS
70 www. e l l e. c o m
NOVEMBER 2012 VOLUME XXVIII NUMBER 3 NO.327
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IT LIST
308
BODIES OF WORK
Hollywood’s trendiest workouts: the lingo,
the uniform, the look
IN EVERY ISSUE
32 CALENDAR
38 FASHION CALENDAR
90 EDITOR’S LETTER
94 REPLY ALL
100 BEHIND THE COVER
102 CONTRIBUTORS
213 ELLE SHOPS
381 SHOPPING GUIDE
382 HOROSCOPE
HOT
CONTENTS
ELLE WEBWATCH KNOW NOW
When it comes to our annual
Women in Hollywood Issue,
ELLE can’t resist stars who com-
mand a shoot with beauty, hu-
mor, and a certain realness: “It’s
about the little moments,” says
filmmaker Marcel Wepper, who
sat down with Cate Blanchett,
Sarah Jessica Parker, Octavia
Spencer, Emma Watson, and
more, for an exclusive behind-
the-scenes film for ELLE.com.
“Think Shirley MacLaine talk-
ing about Liz Taylor, or Kris-
ten Wiig confessing her dream
of being in an ’80s film with
Ricky Schroder,” says Wepper.
The resulting doc, which he
calls “introspective sometimes,
emotional often, and very hu-
morous,” offers front-row access
to the most engaging personali-
ties in Hollywood.
Visit ELLE.com now!
It’s no surprise that fashion’s
biggest names take dressing up
seriously. Click over to ELLE
.com to check out exclusive
throwback Halloween snap-
shots from the likes of Band
of Outsiders’ Scott Sternberg
(as a five-year-old Gene Sim-
mons, above left) and Rebecca
Minkoff (Aloha, hula cutie!).
As if prepping for a job inter-
view weren’t stressful enough,
have you mastered the hard-
to-find balance that declares
“I’m competent and chic”—all
at once? Quell your jitters once
and for all by heading over to
ELLE.com to shop the season’s
most versatile work looks—
tailored blazers, timeless totes,
hire-me heels—and get insider
tips from the professionals who
know how to make an unfor-
gettable first impression.
OFF THE
PAGE
YOU’RE HIRED
FEAR AND CLOTHING
72 www. e l l e. c o m
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ANNOUNCI NG
THE 19
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2012
LOS ANGELES
SPECIAL THANKS TO
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EVOLUTION
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ELLE WEBWATCH KNOW NOW
Phan applies LANCÔME’s
Effacernes undereye
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Phan ap
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WHAT’S IN
HER
BAG?
W
ith 2.1 million YouTube followers, L.A.-based Michelle Phan
is without a doubt the Internet’s number-one makeup guru.
In just a few years, Phan went from webcasting tutorial vid-
eos from her art-school dorm room to working backstage at
Chris Benz and Michael Kors, thanks to a prime—and ground-
breaking—gig as Lancôme’s first official video makeup artist, a
role that involves teaching viewers how to achieve a wide range of
looks (think videos titled “Romantic Makeup,” “Perfect Red Lip,”
and “Natural Beauty”) with the brand’s products. Today, the self-
taught 25-year-old has amassed the greatest number of fans of
any female user on YouTube (and a net worth reportedly over $1.2
million) through FAWN (For All Women Network), her premium
YouTube channel of beauty-themed travel, talk, and DIY-makeup
shows. We spent the day with her at the Sally Hershberger salon in
Hollywood as she shot FAWN’s Simply Bella—a series of surprise
beauty transformations. Visit ELLE.com/video for our behind-
the-scenes footage and to watch the day-to-night makeup tutorial
Phan filmed exclusively for us.—Catherine Straut
G
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MICHELLE PHAN
BEHIND THE SCENES
he says. sh
A nail-art addict, Phan loves the
“affordable luxury” of CIATÉ polish;
its thin formula dries quickly
and makes for a foolproof home
manicure.
For glowing skin, Phan
swears by a nightly
DIY mask of cotton
compresses soaked
in hydrating HADALABO
Gokujyun Lotion,
picked up at Asian
convenience stores
when she travels.
LUCAS’ Papaw Ointment is
her staple all-in-one salve;
Phan uses it to soften
lips, heal cuts, and tame
unruly brows.
The video makeup artist constantly
experiments with LANCÔME’s Color Design
5-Pan Palette (shown here in Sapphire
Fling)—on ELLE.com she shows how to
blend the dark liner and shimmer-shadow
sections for the perfect smoky eye.
LUC
he
P
lip
e bran
The varied
pigments
of LORD &
BERRY Magic
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perfectly
match any
brow color.
DOUBLE DUTY Between takes filming hair and
makeup transformations for Simply Bella
(above), Phan made time to shoot a tutorial on
crafting a foolproof look for a night out.
80 www. e l l e. c o m
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2 0 1 2 C A P S U L E C OL L E C T I ON I N S P I R E D B Y T H E F I L M
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MAGIC MIKE
OWN THIS SEASON’S MUST-SEE
Channing Tatum stars as Magic
Mike, a daytime entrepreneur with
loads of charm. At night he’s the hot
headliner in an all-male revue, who
has rocked the stage for years with
his over-the-top dance moves. Just
as another summer heats up, an
intriguing new woman enters his life,
causing Mike to think twice about
his future. #MagicMike
Own it 10/23 on Blu-ray™ Combo
Pack with UltraViolet™* or Digital
Download. Visit magicmikemovie.com.
Magic Mike © 2012 The Estate of Redmond Barry
LLC. All Rights Reserved.
* Limited Time Offer. Restrictions and limitations
apply. Go to ultraviolet.flixster.com/info for details.
ELIE TAHARI
FALL IN LOVE WITH ELIE TAHARI
Enter now for your chance to win
a $1,000 gift card. Elie Tahari is the
essence of modern sophistication.
Our Fall/Winter 2012 collection is no
different – an inspired collection of
understated grace and elegance.
Visit ELLEextra.com/ElieTahari
for your chance to win a $1,000
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Don’t spare the glitz and always
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AVAILABLE AT MACY’S AND MACYS.COM
FASHION
Credits Director TRI CI A SCHREI BER Senior Market Editor JADE FRAMPTON
Senior Accessories Editor STEFANI A ALLEN Senior Associate Accessories Editor J ODI BELDEN
Associate Accessories Editor J ENNI FER GACH Assistant Editors SARAH SCHUSSHEI M, KRI STEN SHI RLEY, ALLI SON WATTERS
Assistants YASHUA SI MMONS, AMANDA FRANKEL, ANGEL A KOH, CAI TLI N MULLEN
FEATURES
Senior Features Editor BEN W. DI CKI NSON Entertainment Director J ENNI FER WEI SEL
Senior Editors CLAI RE GUTI ERREZ, RACHEL BAKER Fashion News Editors AMANDA FI TZSI MONS, VÉRONI QUE HYL AND
Associate Editors J ULI E VADNAL, NOJAN AMI NOSHAREI
Assistant Editors SETH PL ATTNER, J USTI NE HARMAN, NAOMI ROUGEAU, ALLI SON P. DAVI S Editorial Assistant CATHERI NE STRAUT
BEAUTY AND FITNESS
Executive Beauty Editor APRI L LONG
Senior Beauty Editor JANNA J OHNSON O’ TOOLE Assistant Beauty Editor J ULI E SCHOTT
ART AND DESIGN
Associate Art Directors DANI EL FI SHER, ELVI S CRUZ, J I LL SERRA
International Coordinator MONI QUE BONI OL
Assistant Managing Editor MELI SSA J EWSBURY
PHOTOGRAPHY
Photo Director BARBARA GROGAN
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BLOOMINGDALE’S
R
ecently, my son conducted a social experiment: He held the
door for eight different patrons at the Golden Pear Cafe, a
gourmet coffee sort of place, in East Hampton. Not one said
thank you. We ambled down the street to Starbucks and tried
again—only two of five bothered to acknowledge the 10-year-old
boy (it’s not like he’s so little they couldn’t see him) holding the
door so they could even more quickly speed along, coffee fueled,
to their next destination. When I tried to suggest to Michael that
maybe they were all just having a bad day, he pointed out that if
any group of people should be enjoying themselves, it’s the deni-
zens of East Hampton on a Saturday in the summer. Honestly,
the level of rudeness and entitlement often on display—I won’t
say “these days,” sounds so cranky—everywhere from the cam-
paign trail to the daily interactions of the body politic can be so
disheartening.
This month, our first lady, Michelle Obama, appeals to the
electorate—very politely, I might add—and makes a solid case
for her husband in an open letter to you, ELLE’s readers. She also
just hopes you’ll get engaged in the political process, as do we,
whatever your party or affiliation. Our call goes out especially
loudly to twentysomethings, who are notorious underperformers
when it comes to voting. Perhaps the problem is the “quarter-age”
malaise clocked by ELLE’s own Amanda FitzSimons in her piece
“Oh to Be Young…,” in which she describes how paralyzed her
brothers and sisters are at the prospect of making decisions that
will actually have a huge impact on their lives.
My experience is that as a generation, younger women
are grateful for, if at times overwhelmed by, the “too many
choices” their feminist forebears worked hard to give them.
Better too many, after all, than too few. One group of women
who are certainly thankful for the vastly greater menu of options
available to the “second sex” circa 2012 are those we feature in
our nineteenth annual Women in Hollywood portfolio. In it,
we talk with the nine women—Shirley MacLaine, Sarah Jessica
Parker, Octavia Spencer, Elle Fanning, Susan Sarandon, Kristen
Wiig, Uma Thurman, Cate Blanchett, and Emma Watson—we’ll
celebrate at our supersexy event in L.A. It’s such an amazing
night (past honorees have included Jennifer Aniston, Barbra
Streisand, Viola Davis, Michelle Pfeiffer; past presenters, Kath-
ryn Bigelow, Reese Witherspoon, and Jon Hamm) because it’s
about the work. We honor them for what they’ve brought into our
lives and what they’ve put on the public agenda, through roles
as diverse as Spencer’s Oscar-winning performance in The Help
and Sarandon’s mesmerizing turn as a nun in Dead Man Walk-
ing, which garnered her Oscar gold too. I really do believe that
movies, as much as anything, tell us where we are culturally, and
where, perhaps, we should be going. And all of our Women in
Hollywood acknowledge in this issue the amazing opportunities
that have been afforded them to do the kind of work that has per-
sonal meaning and gives something to the wider world.
As for gratitude, someone once asked me how I define suc-
cess. I said, “If my children are polite.” So let me take a moment
to thank the smart, challenging readers of ELLE for taking the
magazine to heart, as well as our partners for supporting our mis-
sion. You’ve all opened so many doors, and for that we are truly
grateful.
IVILITY
LESSON
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ELLE LETTERS
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REPLY ALL
PROUD PERRY KEEP
ON BURNING
“The article on Katy opened my eyes in many
ways, but what I loved most was how real she
seems. Having grown up amid such heavy
religion and a less-than-wealthy family, she
still stayed focused on her passion and drove
herself to success. She’s grown up a lot, and
hopefully she’ll continue to do so as she opens
her arms to new opinions while still never
letting go of her values. She’s a true role model
and a great inspiration. I can’t wait for her next
album!”—Jessica, via e-mail
“You fierce firework! Love your
transformations! The many faces of beauty,
talent, and amazing grace.”—Cindy, ELLE.com

“I love this new look and am so looking
forward to the new music. She is such
a heartbreaker for me, so beautiful it is
painful.”—Andrea, via ELLE’s Facebook page
“All I can say is Russell, eat your heart out.
Damn, Katy!”—Kate, via e-mail
Alas, we didn’t win everyone over entirely:
“I just wanted to say that my husband was
even more excited than I was when he saw
[September’s] cover with Katy Perry. We saw
her concert last year and he’s still raving about
it, but we were both sad to see the quote ‘I
can’t be the candy queen forever.’ While we
understand that she needs to grow and move
on, she’ll always hold a spot in our candy
hearts.”—Milinda Mueller, Milwaukee
And one reader, well, we may have entranced
a bit too much:
“Katy Perry is a goddess. I am going to build
an altar and sacrifice my wife on it in her
honor.”—reflexshun, Huffingtonpost.com
I
n our September cover story, “Girl on Fire,” Katy Perry confessed, “I can’t be the candy queen
forever.” Rather than lament that foreshadowing, many ELLE readers and Perry fans came out
in support of the singer as she seemingly enters a new, mature phase of life—professionally and
personally:
IN THE
KNOWLES
Yes, yes, Beyoncé is her
sister, but ELLE readers love
Solange Knowles entirely
in her own right: She’s
cool, she’s beautiful, she’s
down-to-earth, and, as our
September ELLE Living
story, “Brooklyn’s Finest,”
showcased, she’s got killer
style from head to home.
“Now, that’s how a home
should look. It fits her
personality with all the flair
and colors. I’m sure her guests
are comfortable enough to take
off their shoes and let their hair
down when they are over.”
—DaiShanell, Necolebitchie.com
“Solange is really living the
hipster life. It looks stylish and
amazing, yet so hackneyed at
the same time.”—Gigi Young,
Fashionbombdaily.com
“Solange is the queen of color-
blocking :)”
—Breeangel3, Necolebitchie.com
“If I were a single gal in
NY, I would decorate along
these lines, throw on some
jazz music, put out the wine,
and invite friends over to
entertain.”
—Dinasty, Missjia.com
Send your letters to ELLE, Letters to the Editors, 300 West 57th Street, NY, NY 10019, or e-mail
us at [email protected]. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.
Visit service.elle.com to order a print subscription, pay your bill, renew your subscription, update your mailing and e-mail addresses, and
more. Or write to: Customer Service Department, ELLE, P.O. Box 37870, Boone, IA 50037-0870. To order a back issue dated within the past
two years, please go to backissues.elle.com.
94 www. e l l e. c o m
ELLE LETTERS ELLE LETTERS
PITCHED
,
IMPERFECT
I
n her September advice column, E. Jean Carroll was enlisted by reader
“The Great Gatsby” for help in finding the perfect girl—with a few caveats.
Beyond “out-of-this world intelligent” and “ambitious and extremely inde-
pendent,” he also required a woman who is “sexually adventurous, multi-
orgasmic through vaginal sex,” has “small breasts,” and plays “tennis very
well, helicopter skis, and is dying to learn how to kiteboard.” E., God bless
her, met him (turns out he’s one of the richest men in New York), grilled
him, and then outlined how to get this dream woman via a team of hired
consultants who would find her the same way they would find the perfect
employee. And yet, was it all for naught? Below, an excerpt from an e-mail
sent to E. from Yangyang Cheng, a 22-year-old PhD student working on
the Large Hadron Collider. (Out-of-this world intelligence? Check.)
DEAR E. JEAN:
I’m still not fully convinced that the list is not
a parody. If so, it’s a brilliant one! If not, I
too applaud the gentleman’s brutal honesty
and feel he should run for public office, given
his lofty ideals. (And wealth. We all know
how much that matters.) Origin aside, I see
in this list the potential rival to the Proust
Questionnaire and would love if it were filled
out by women worldwide. To keep it honest,
I compared my own “credentials” to the items
listed and got a good laugh out of it with my
pals. I’d like to share it with you below:
Ambitious and extremely independent
with eclectic and diverse interests
When I was eight, I stared at a map of the
world and told my mom I would found a
new League of Nations to replace the United
Nations. When I was nine, I wanted to run
for president of the United States but was
devastated when my dad told me I couldn’t,
since I was born in China.
Not needy, high-maintenance, jealous, or
requiring constant attention
My mom used to shave me bald every summer
when I was a kid. Now she blames me for not
being girly enough, even though I have shoulder-
length hair. Sorry, Mom. You raised a tomboy.
On the Pill
I do not pop pills.
5'7"–6'1"
6' and I always wear heels.
Very thin (but not because she’s starving
herself or has food issues—I want
someone who will be thin her entire life)
I wear size 25 jeans.
Small breasts
32B. And I wear sports bras on a daily basis.
Gorgeous (symmetrical face and features)
The only person who told me I was gorgeous
as a kid was my dad, who usually phrased
it as “my baby girl is gorgeous because she
looks just like me.” My face and features
are symmetrical within a margin of error.
(I may have a healing pimple on my right
cheek at the moment that does not have its
counterpart on the left.) I have been asked to
model by industry professionals multiple times.
Strangers regularly stop me on the street to tell
me I’m beautiful; the first time it happened, I
asked that individual what he’d just smoked.
Atheist, agnostic, or not religious
I identify with the principal ideas of the New
Atheism movement. I am, to a certain extent,
disappointed by its poor polemics.
Happy!
I have a joyful personality and find amusement
and pleasure constantly. My laughter has
been such a signature that my colleague once
suggested making a recording of it and playing
it at the entrance of our research building.
Healthy!
I think so.
Plays tennis very well, helicopter skis,
and is dying to learn how to kiteboard
I took one semester of tennis, as a college
requirement. During one class the instructor
observed me playing and commented, “You
are the worst tennis player I’ve seen in my
entire teaching career.” I responded, “Of course
you have seen worse. You saw me last week.”
I will need to google helicopter skiing and
kiteboarding.
Speaks French perfectly
I speak three lines of French perfectly: bonjour,
bon appétit, and bon voyage.
Plays video games
That comes with being a physics nerd.
Well, that’s it for the list. Though I may fail
miserably by the gentleman’s criteria, thanks
very much for your patience through my silly
answers. Also, thank you for the great writing
and advice. I look forward to so many more to
come.—Yang² G
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ONL Y I N C I NE MA S

ELLE LETTERS
Dear ELLE Readers,
When I fell in love with Barack more than
20 years ago, I knew he’d be a loving husband
and a devoted father. I knew he shared my
determination to make a difference in other
people’s lives. But I never dreamed that he’d one
day be president, and I know that he didn’t either.
But four years ago—against all odds—I joined
millions of Americans from all backgrounds
and walks of life to vote for Barack. I didn’t do
it just because we were married. I voted for him
because I knew he was going to stand up for
women like me—and our daughters, sisters, and
mothers. When I look at all he’s done since that
freezing day he was inaugurated on the Capitol
steps—from health-care reform, to saving jobs,
to fighting for women’s rights—I’m proud of
how far we have come. And I’m determined to
help him keep moving forward.
(Visit Gottavote.org to find out how to
register and where to cast your ballot.)
Here are five reasons to vote for Barack
when you go to the polls on November 6:
1. He’s fighting for equal pay for women. Barack
was raised by a single mom who struggled to
pay the bills, and by a grandmother
who worked hard at her job but hit
a glass ceiling and watched men she
actually trained climb the career
ladder ahead of her. As the father of
two girls, he wants to make sure that
all our daughters grow up with the
same opportunities as our sons and
are treated fairly in the workplace.
That’s why the first bill he signed
as president was the Lilly Ledbetter
Fair Pay Restoration Act to help
women get equal pay for equal work.
2. He’ll fight for our right to make our
own health-care decisions. Thanks to
the historic health-care reform he
signed, insurance companies will
have to provide access to preventive
services like contraception and
cancer screenings without a co-
pay. And they’ll no longer be able
to make us pay more for health
insurance just because we’re women.
3. He’s putting affordable education
within reach. When Barack and I
were first married, our combined
monthly student loan payments
were higher than our mortgage.
So he understands what it’s like
to be saddled with student debt,
and he believes that education
should not be a luxury reserved for
the privileged few. That’s why he
doubled funding for Pell grants, fought hard
to stop student loan interest rates from rising,
and worked to raise the standards in our K–12
schools so our students are prepared for college.
4. He understands why women’s economic success is
important. Barack understands that women’s
success in this economy is more than just a
women’s issue—it’s a crucial economic issue for
our nation. More and more women are now
breadwinners for their families—so it is all the
more important that we have a president who
ensures that we have the good jobs we deserve
and get the fair pay we’ve earned.
5. He believes everyone deserves a fair shot. Barack
has never lost sight of the fundamental
American promise that no matter who you
are or how you started out, you can make a
better life for yourself and your family if you’re
willing to work for it. Barack wants to preserve
that American dream for the next generation.
And whether it’s investing in education or
ensuring that regular folks don’t pay a higher
tax rate than millionaires and billionaires,
Barack is fighting to make sure that everyone
in this country has a shot at success.
So before you cast your ballot, I want you to
ask yourself, Who’s looking out for me? Who’s
thinking about my family? And I want you
to know that the man I have loved for more
than two decades—the man who has worked
so hard for so long to move this country
forward—is looking out for you every day.
While the 2008 presidential
election saw the highest
percentage of voter turnout
since 1968—and the most voters
under age 30 since 1972—
around one in four Americans
eligible to vote still aren’t
registered, let alone voting.
Here’s how to have your voice
heard (and counted!) on Election
Day.—Emily Ferber
GET READY
Nonpartisan websites such as
the League of Women Voters
Education Fund’s Vote411.org
provide everything from
candidate data to registration
forms to polling-place locators.
Many states allow early voting,
or you can vote absentee.
Determine your eligibility and
apply via your state’s Election
Commission.
GET MOTIVATED
Contact your local election
office and sign up to work at a
polling place on Election Day.
Volunteer with a campaign or
with groups such as Rock the
Vote, the League of Women
Voters, or Running Start,
which enables young women to
recognize, learn about, and take
action on the political issues that
affect them.
Speak up and share your own
stories through media outlets
like the 2012 Election Center
at Takepart.com, Participant
Media’s interactive publisher,
where you can also register,
access important voting dates
state by state, read proposed
legislation, and sign petitions.
Tweet your opinions and check
the Twindex (Twitter’s Political
Index), Election.twitter.com,
which sifts each day’s 400
million or so tweets to gauge the
political leanings of its users for
a snapshot of how candidates
are doing in the run-up to the
election.
GET THERE
Many campaigns, political
groups, and schools provide
transportation to and from poll
centers. Bring along a current
and valid photo ID if you have
one, in case your right to vote is
questioned.
GET JUSTICE
Contact the U.S. Election
Assistance Commission at
Eac.gov if you witness voter
fraud, if you or others are denied
the right to vote, or if you feel
threatened or intimidated while
exercising that right.
LETTER FROM
THEFIRST LADY
By Michelle Obama
JUST DO IT
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ELLE BEHIND THE COVER
W
e went behind the scenes at each of our Women in Holly-
wood cover shoots this month to find out what our leading
ladies couldn’t get enough of. The clothes took center stage
for some: Elle Fanning rocked dresses from Calvin Klein’s
resort collection, Kristen Wiig had eyes for plaid Oscar de la Renta
skirts and jackets, and Octavia Spencer obsessed over the leopard
Jimmy Choo pumps she sported on set. Susan Sarandon loved
the silk Equipment pajamas she lounged in so much that she took
a pair home with her, while Sarah Jessica Parker showcased her
philanthropic side by donning the diamond-and-pearl gold brace-
lets she designed for Redline as part of the brand’s charity collec-
tion, whose proceeds support AIDS research. Touting tried-and-
true beauty tricks, Uma Thurman layered classic nude lipstick for
a seductively bare pout, and Cate Blanchett primed her skin
by applying an SK-II face mask before posing for pictures. Ever
the entertainer, Shirley MacLaine regaled us with stories about
the diamond studs she’s kept in her ears for the past 40 years. It’s
all about good karma: One of the Star diamonds from which
MacLaine’s earrings were made resides in the Dalai Lama’s per-
sonal collection!—Catherine Straut
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ELLE CONTRIBUTORS NOVEMBER
NAME: Janice Min
PROVENANCE: Littleton, CO, and Atlanta
NOW: Los Angeles
PROFESSION: Editorial Director, The
Hollywood Reporter
THIS MONTH: “The Hollywood Power List”
(page 252). “It’s interesting to think about what
defines power. Money, title, and position in the
C suite are usually what men look to. Women
don’t necessarily equate power and influence
in the same ways—our tastes and opinions can
be shaped in ways we don’t know but would
agree matter.”
BONA FIDES: BA, history, and MA,
journalism, Columbia University; has written
for The New York Times, Slate, and The Daily
Beast
READING: “My iPhone, sadly.”
MOMENT OF ZEN: Playing tennis. “It’s an
hour where you can’t be distracted by anything
or anyone.”
OFF DUTY: “I have a new baby and two young
sons at home. Usually my free time is spent
putting Parmesan cheese on pasta.”
WORDS TO LIVE BY: “Good things don’t
come to you if you just wish for them—you
have to actually try to make them happen.”
TRADE SECRET: “My key to a celebrity
interview is to ask mundane questions about
their life and routine. Details about what
they read or even watch on TV are usually
illuminating.”
NAME: Thomas Whiteside
PROVENANCE: St. Louis
NOW: New York City
PROFESSION: Photographer
THIS MONTH: Shot Octavia Spencer, Uma
Thurman, Elle Fanning, and Shirley MacLaine
for ELLE’s 2012 Women in Hollywood
portfolio (page 334), as well as “Prism Break”
(page 354). “My most memorable moment was
sitting on Shirley’s lap for a personal portrait
with her. She told me it was the only way I
could get a picture with her.”
TRAVEL BUG: “Novelty makes me happiest.
I feel most content when I’m in a foreign
country, unable to communicate easily, seeing
landscapes that I’ve never seen before.”
MESSAGE TO YOUNGER SELF: “Looks
aren’t really that important.”
TECHY OBSESSION: Instagram. “Follow me!
I’m competing with my friend to see who can
get more followers. I’m lagging. Help!”
DVR READY: Downton Abbey, season three
FAN FAVORITE: “I just saw Vicky Cristina
Barcelona for the tenth time. Penélope Cruz’s
character is hysterical. I watch that movie just
to see her.”
MY DREAM DAY WITH…: A young Marlon
Brando. “I’d like to find out if he was really
bisexual.”
NAME: Arianne Cohen
PROVENANCE: Delmar, NY
NOW: New York City and Portland, OR
PROFESSION: Writer
THIS MONTH: “Walking on Sunshine” (page
302). On ayahuasca, “I realized how much of
my childhood is stored away in my memory—
details I hadn’t thought about in decades, like
the way my third-grade classroom smelled, or
how my arms felt during three hours of swim
practice. It’s all just sitting there in my brain,
waiting to be lit up.”
BONA FIDES: BA, women’s studies, Harvard
University; has written for The Guardian and
The New York Times; author of The Tall Book:
A Celebration of Life From on High and The Sex
Diaries Project: What We’re Saying About What
We’re Doing
READING: Swimming Studies, by Leanne
Shapton. “I was a competitive swimmer for 15
years; this is a must read.”
OFF DUTY: “I work with a tall-clothing
company, Long Tall Sally. It’s a fun way to
get away from my laptop—it involves photo
shoots, piles of gorgeous clothes, and talking to
tall women around the world.”
MESSAGE TO YOUNGER SELF: “You’re
never going to like beer. And that’s okay.”
MOMENT OF ZEN: “I run every 48 hours. It
keeps me healthy and sane.”
FANFAVORITE: The Princess Bride. “It’s like a
memory of a fantasy that never happened.”
NAME: Dyan Neary
PROVENANCE: Brooklyn
NOW: Tallahassee, FL
PROFESSION: Writer and journalist
THIS MONTH: “The Drug War” (page 326)
BONA FIDES: BA, journalism, New York
University; pursuing an MFA in creative
writing at Florida State University; has written
for The New York Times
CHILDHOOD LANDMARK: “I used to go
to this old amusement park called Nellie Bly
with my parents. When I got older, I looked
into who she was, and it turns out she was a
pioneering female investigative journalist. Now
she’s kind of my hero.”
FILM BUFF: “When I was a documentary
filmmaker, I snuck my video camera into
a woman’s prison in Quito, Ecuador, and
produced a film called El cárcel de mujeres, about
children under five living in prison with their
mothers.”
FIRST BRUSH WITH FAME: Kurt
Vonnegut. “At 21, I saw him outside the United
Nations, and I started to tell him that I’d been
reading his books since high school. He turned
it around and asked me all about myself. I told
him I had a radio show, so he handed me this
satirical sermon that he’d read the night before
at St. Mark’s Church and said, ‘Here, you can
have this. Go broadcast it somewhere.’ So
I did.”
WORDS TO LIVE BY: “There’s never
anything to fear as long as my aim is to be
helpful.”
102 www. e l l e. c o m
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Magical Snowflake
Necklace, platinum and diamonds.
Haute Joaillerie, place Vendôme since 1906
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ELLE CONTRIBUTORS NOVEMBER
NAME: Stacey Battat
PROVENANCE: Trumbull, CT
NOW: New York City
PROFESSION: Costume designer and stylist
THIS MONTH: Styled Sarah Jessica Parker for
ELLE’s 2012 Women in Hollywood portfolio
(page 334). “There are very few women who
have worked continuously in Hollywood for
as long as Sarah Jessica Parker. She is an icon.
I was hoping the clothes would portray that
regalness.”
BONA FIDES: BA, sociology, Hunter College;
work has appeared in i-D, GQ, and Vanity Fair,
and in the films Somewhere, Broken English, and
the upcoming The Bling Ring
DREAM COLLABORATION: Tomas
Alfredson, the director of the original Let the
Right One In. “I heard he waited a year until he
found the actress to play Eli. It’s that kind of
dedication that produces perfect movies.”
READING: Everything Beautiful Began After, by
Simon Van Booy
MOMENT OF ZEN: “A bath with lots of
bubbles.”
FAN FAVORITE: The Bad and the Beautiful.
“The costumes are so glamorous, and even
though all of the characters are badly behaved,
it’s hard not to like them.”
MY DREAMDAY WITH…: Ernest
Hemingway. “I’d like to take him fishing. He’d
have to bait the hook—but I’m sure he wouldn’t
mind.”
NAME: Eric Guillemain
PROVENANCE: Rabat, Morocco; and
Picardie, France
NOW: New York City
PROFESSION: Photographer
THIS MONTH: “French Open” (page 378).
“We started looking at a picture of Serge
Gainsbourg with Jane Birkin to get cool vibes.
Seeing Carven designer Guillaume Henry
meeting actress Kaya Scodelario was like
watching characters from some French new-
wave movie.”
BONA FIDES: Work has appeared in Interview,
Numéro, and Vanity Fair
READY TO ROCK: “I dropped out of the
Sorbonne to go on the road with my band,
Venice. I remember playing a packed venue in
Morocco. The day after, I met girls in the street
who proposed! I felt like a Beatle.”
DREAM SUBJECT: Bruce Springsteen. “He
was like the father I didn’t have at home. He
gave me confidence and balance and shaped
my idea of heroism in everyday life.”
RECENT INSPIRATION: Regina Spektor’s
music. “She’s the ideal strong, clever, intelligent
woman. Listening to her, full of emotion, you
feel she is right by your side in the room.”
PERSONAL MANTRA: “Don’t muddy the
water to make it seem deep.”
MY DREAM DAY WITH…: “I have simple
dreams, just me on a beach with Marilyn
Monroe.”
NAME: Rachel Abramowitz
PROVENANCE: “My parents were in the
Foreign Service, and I’ve lived all over the
world. Thailand was my favorite.”
NOW: Los Angeles
PROFESSION: Television writer and journalist
THIS MONTH: “The Players” (page 372).
“It’s a generational change, but young women
screenwriters feel more optimistic than maybe
the generation before. They know their stories
are valuable. There is a determination and a
perseverance and a confidence that is their
birthright, which I find inspiring.”
BONA FIDES: BA, history, Yale University;
has written for The New York Times Magazine,
Self, and The Los Angeles Times; author of Is That
a Gun in Your Pocket?: Women’s Experience of
Power in Hollywood
CELEB ENCOUNTER: Nora Ephron. “She
was one of my first interviews. She told me that
when you are a female screenwriter, you have
to show your work to people who share your
truth. If you’re Nora Ephron, you don’t show
your stuff to Michael Bay. You realize there is a
place for your work in the world—you just have
to find like-minded individuals.”
READING: State of Wonder, by Ann Patchett
CAN’T WAIT TO SEE…: Life of Pi
TRADE SECRET: “Give undivided and
nonjudgmental attention. I spent a whole day
with Mel Gibson at the height of his fame. I was
so intimidated, I didn’t speak the whole time.
Afterward, he told the publicist that he loved
me. I don’t know why; I didn’t say anything.
But I think it was that undivided attention. It
works every time.”
NAME: Barbara Grogan
PROVENANCE: Allendale, NJ
NOW: Bergenfield, NJ, with husband and two
toddlers, Billy and Lily
PROFESSION: ELLE Photo Director. “I
commission photographers and stylists,
conceptualize shoots, problem-solve, and wear
many hats.”
FIRST-DAY JITTERS: “My first day on the
job was the Kristen Wiig shoot. She is very
cool. She’s wearing shorts under her sweater, in
case you were wondering!”
BONA FIDES: BFA, photography, Parsons
School of Design; has worked for Harper’s
Bazaar and Vitals Man
CELEB ENCOUNTER: Bill Murray. “My
bangs were in my eyes (as usual), and he
offered me his on-set groomer to give me a
haircut! Instant love!”
READING: Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson
MOMENT OF ZEN: Cooking
FAN FAVORITE: Winona Ryder. “She’s
always been my style role model.”
OFF DUTY: “I play duck-duck-goose with my
kids, go to parks, look at art, make lists.”
MY DREAM DAY WITH…: Prince. “We’d
karaoke.”—Allison P. Davis
104 www. e l l e. c o m
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KERRY WASHINGTON, ACCLAIMED ACTOR.
CERENA

MODERN CERAMIC DESIGN
WITH STAINLESS STEEL AND DIAMONDS.
MOVADO.COM AND
SELECT RETAILERS NATIONWIDE
ELLE JET-SETTER
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:
MOROCCO
On her honeymoon, jewelry designer Pamela
Love found newlywed bliss (and design
inspiration) in North Africa’s desert cities
W
hen jewelry designer Pamela Love—
famous among downtown-style
doyennes since 2007 for her gold
bird-claw cuffs and macabre skull
pendants—begins to conceptualize a col-
lection, she often culls ideas from her
worldly travels. But during her Moroc-
can honeymoon (she married illustrator
Matthew Nelson this past May in Mon-
tauk, Long Island), Love put her creative
process in reverse. “Usually when I’m in-
spired by travel, I’ve already been [to
the place] several times,” she says of her
spring 2012 collection, which drew heav-
ily on Morocco’s geometric shapes and tile
work—all designed before she’d actually
visited. “After finishing those pieces, I just
felt this need to see everything firsthand,”
she says. “There’s such a rich tradition of
technique and decorative adornment in
Moroccan jewelry, especially the Berber
pieces, so I was excited to experience it all
in person.”
Love and her husband embarked on
a nine-day tour of Morocco that took
them from the desert-door city of Ouar-
zazate (on the periphery of the Sahara)
to bustling markets and on “breathtaking
drives” through the Atlas Mountains.
Between countless cups of mint tea (“It’s
out of control there. I go to Cafe Mogador
in Brooklyn to satiate my newly developed
craving”) and the occasional cat wrangling
(“There are kittens everywhere! And I’m
a cat lover, so I was freaking out”), Love
scoured sand and souk for inspiration.
“I couldn’t turn my brain off,” she says. “I
definitely came back with some ideas for
the pieces we’re currently working on.”
But while perusing some of the biggest
markets in the world, she couldn’t ignore
retail rushes: “Those markets, especially
the Djemaa el Fna in Marrakech, for me,
were so exciting. The food, the jewelry, the
rugs! To be in the thick of it and watch it all
being made and then go directly to sale—
it was wonderful. Among all the stuff we
bought was an extra duffel bag to carry
everything in. There was just so much!”
—Seth Plattner
MOROCCO A-GO-GO (1) Love in the Atlas Mountains (2) The Ben Youssef Madrasa courtyard in Marrakech
(3) “I’ve always collected rugs, so watching the Berber women make them was fascinating,” she
says (4) A pre-check-in nap at Kasbah Tamadot (5) A room at the Dar Ahlam near Ouarzazate
(6) Love practicing her rug weaving (7) One of her Bouriad Karim dresses (8) Exiting her suite at
Kasbah Tamadot (9) Tile work at the Ben Youssef Madrasa (10) Love’s jewelry finds in Tiznit
(11) Love at a Marrakech scarf shop (12) Love and Nelson in Kasbah Tamadot’s infinity pool
(13) Her extra bag, made of leather and a traditional Moroccan rug
MOROCCO A-GO-G
(3) “I’ve a
says (4) A
(6) Love p
Kasbah
(11) Lov
4 3
1
2
5
8 9 10
6
7
12
13
11
106 www. e l l e. c o m
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the new i voi re by balmai n
AVAILABLE AT NEIMAN MARCUS & BERGDORF GOODMAN
ELLE JET-SETTER
Now that the post-Olympics hush has set-
tled over London, buzz for Knightsbridge’s
Wellesley hotel has taken over: The six-floor,
36-room townhouse, originally a legend-
hosting jazz venue, has been restored as an
art-deco retreat with My Fair Lady embassy
ball glamour, thanks to Fox Linton (the de-
sign firm behind the city’s award-winning
Dorchester Spa). That, and a top-floor suite
with unobstructed views of Hyde Park, might
make those “London’s first six-star hotel”
rumblings a reality after all. From $625 per
night, thewellesley.co.uk.—JULIE VADNAL
STAY: In the Atlas Mountains, where Love
and Nelson roomed at Kasbah Tamadot
(kasbahtamadot.virgin.com), one of Sir Rich-
ard Branson’s Virgin retreats. “I’m a junkie
for beauty rituals, and the hammam,
which is a traditional bathhouse, at the
hotel was incredible,” she says; the couple
also lodged at desert oasis Dar Ahlam
(relaischateaux.com), a nineteenth-century
casbah whose name, appropriately, trans-
lates to “House of Dreams.”
SHOP: At Bouriad Karim (2, Blvd Fatima
Zahra), a stylish boutique in Marrakech
that makes and sells candles, leather
goods, eveningwear, and made-to-order
djellaba robes. “I’ve actually seen some
of their stuff in Calypso St. Barth at home
in New York,” Love says. “Their dresses
are gorgeous. I loved them so much that
I bought one in white and one in peach.”
DO: Ride horses along the Dades River
outside Ouarzazate before grabbing lunch
at one of the eateries lining the banks; get
your architecture on at Marrakech’s Ben
Youssef Madrasa—a former Islamic col-
lege reopened in 1982 as a historic site,
complete with a courtyard ornately con-
structed of cedar, marble, and stucco—
and the Saadian Tombs. Take a day trip
to Tiznit, about an hour south of Agadir.
“Their souk was more manageable, and
they had incredible jewelry,” says Love.
“Kind of like a smaller, more relaxed Mar-
rakech. Think of being in Williamsburg
instead of Manhattan!”
EAT: For dining options outside their ho-
tels, Love and Nelson tried food stands for
quick bites on the go. “I’m vegetarian, and
Matthew is vegan, so we ate a lot of ex-
traordinary vegetable couscous. I couldn’t
get enough of it. Also the fruit, especially
the figs, and the pastries. The pastries!
There were mounds and mounds of them
in every market. I can’t begin to tell you
what they all were—other than absolutely
delicious.”
LOVE’S MOROCCAN MUSTS
INTO AFRICA (14) The Kasbah Tamadot (15) Love on horseback by the Dades River (16) One of her many
rug purchases (17) A room at Kasbah Tamadot (18) A slipper shop in the souk in Marrakech: “I
bought so many pairs,” she says, “and every one of my friends has had a baby, so I got some for
them, too!” (19) One of the pastry shops Love frequented (20) “Every hotel has a couple of house
cats, and I’d always befriend them,” she says (21–24) A necklace, two Berber rings, and a scarf
Love bought at the markets in Tiznit
20
21
18
19
23
24
17
15 14
16
22
LONDON CALLING
108 www. e l l e. c o m
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ruth be told, I’m a total line snob.
I don’t do lines; I don’t believe in
them. Fashion folks just aren’t about
lines—not the kind you wait in, at
least. On a recent trip to Disneyland,
I even paid extra for a front-of-line
pass. Yes, I’m that guy. Though this wasn’t
always the case. Back in high school, I ac-
tually loved waiting for something I was
excited about. The anticipation was a part
of the overall event, not a nuisance.
In the early ’80s, on a mission to score
tickets to a Culture Club concert in To-
ronto, I did the official campout, waiting
all night inside a mall for my local Ticket-
master to open. There I was, at 3 A.M., with
my equally fanatical friend and a sleeping
bag, dressed in my best “Karma Chame-
leon” getup: fedora, black overcoat, skinny
black pants, fingerless gloves, and—yes—
eyeliner. I was in my teens, and Boy
George was my Bieber. It was the perfect
prequel to the concert: I was sixth in line,
and my seat ended up being great. Today,
Boy—and his look—may no longer be in
the spotlight, but those die-hard lines have
yet to die down.
Take, for instance, the hot and heavy
anticipation of the upcoming movie ad-
aptation of Fifty Shades of Grey. Hollywood
is buzzing about who will be cast in the
film—Ian Somerhalder as Christian? or
Chris Hemsworth?!—and the superfans
will surely be ready to pounce when it fi-
nally opens. Let’s face it: Fan favorites like
Twilight and even Star Wars before it have
induced more fevered frenzies than the
rare Manolo Blahnik sample sale. So in
celebration of our annual Women in Hol-
lywood Issue, we’re breaking down the
superfan look for movies, concerts, reality-
TV competitions, and all the other hotly
awaited events that women are willing to
line up for.
To outfit the fandom kingdom, I invited
Joel McHale, host of ELLE’s star-studded
Women in Hollywood event for the sec-
ond year in a row, to a funny-guy-versus-
fashion-guy line dance. The comic, who
plays Jeff Winger on NBC’s Community
and is the dapper host of E!’s The Soup,
follows Hollywood with his own obses-
sive eye—and he always tells it like it is.
So how do you play the fangirl part to the
hilt? While Joel’s tastes skew more Comic-
Con, mine, of course, lean more toward
couture. Check out both takes and decide
which might land you the more fun wait.
WORTH
THE WAIT
What should you wear in line for your favorite movie
franchise, TV-show tryout, or iPhone stakeout?
Creative Director Joe Zee and funnyman Joel
McHale devise ensembles for superfans of all stripes
JOE’S
TAK TT E
LINE1
FIFTY SHADES
OF GREY
JOE’S TAKE: Go for S&M glam: leather
everything and seductive stockings. But
if you wear the blindfold, bring a friend
along, lest someone cut in front of you.
JOEL’S TAKE: The boots and raincoat not only
say Seattle, where the books take place, but
also arouse some specific water fetishes.
LINE2
THE HUNGER
GAMES:
CATCHING FIRE
JOE’S TAKE: Heat up the line like a citizen of
the Capitol in this glitzy Stella McCartney
dress and OMO Norma Kamali headdress.
JOEL’S TAKE: Her hair doubles as antennae
so she can know where the people
are who want to kill her. And inside
her purse? A tiny bow and arrow.
JOEL’S
TAK TT E
FAN FICTION Zee and McHale, caught indulging their passions for The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
and Fifty Shades of Grey, respectively
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
110 www. e l l e. c o m
112 www. e l l e. c o m
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE TT
S
A TO ZEE ELLE STYLE
JOEL’S
TAKE TT
JOEL’S
TAKE TT
112 www. wwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwwwwwww. www wwwwwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwwwwwww wwwwwwwwwwwww. wwwwwww. e l l e. c o mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
JOE’S
TAKE TT
JOE’S
TAKE TT
LINE5
THE VOICE
AUDITIONS
JOE’S TAKE: Even though the show is supposed
to be about sound, once Xtina pushes
the red button, looks matter too. Think
Jennifer Hudson, Diana Ross, Celine Dion.
JOEL’S TAKE: The colors here match the
makeup on Christina Aguilera’s face,
which will make Christina pick her.
LINE8
SO YOU THINK
YOU CAN DANCE
AUDITIONS
JOE’S TAKE: I’m obsessed with this show,
but every year the girls audition in their
clichéd dance leotards. What I want to see
is a girl doing her best Gene Kelly look.
JOEL’S TAKE: If she’s a bad dancer, they’ll be
too distracted by the lipstick and the lamé
to notice. Plus, everybody loves disco.
LINE4
THE TWILIGHT
SAGA: BREAKING
DAWN: PART 2
JOE’S TAKE: I love a couture werewolf
with a fur, cropped leather pants,
and Proenza Schouler platforms.
JOEL’S TAKE: This cape doubles
as a blanket. And she’s clearly
prepared to run for the theater.
LINE3
APPLE STORE
JOE’S TAKE: An early-morning line may
require you to head straight there from
the clubs, but, hey, what better place
to potentially meet your future genius
husband than in line for the iPhone 5?
JOEL’S TAKE: She thinks she’ll blend in perfectly
with the nerds in line. But really she’s so
wildly attractive that she would send them
screaming back to their parents’ basements.
LINE6
BARNEYS
WAREHOUSE SALE
JOE’S TAKE: Shopping sample sales is
about strategy: comfortable shoes you
can race in, sleek clothes you can try
stuff on over, and a hands-free bag.
JOEL’S TAKE: The purses are weapons for
fighting off other clotheshorses. They’re
also good for perfume storage, which
makes her smell great but can also blind
the competition. Spray and swing!
LINE7
LADY GAGA
TICKETS
JOE’S TAKE: Since there’s no way to outdo
Gaga, go for cool comfort. This is part
Azealia Banks, part Bieber fan, with
comfy sneakers and no-fuss pigtails.
JOEL’S TAKE: Gaga always likes to stage “a
moment.” So this woman is waiting until
she’s inside the concert to reveal her
outfit. My guess? A Seahawks jersey.
JOE
TAK TT
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOE’S
TAKE
JOEL’S
TAKE
JOE’S
TAKE
8
S
JOE’S
TAKE TT
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arlier this year, Nasty Gal—the L.A.-based online empor-
ium that is not quite as sordid as its name suggests—held an
In stagram contest. It asked fans to declare their devotion by
creatively interpreting the company’s slogan, “Nasty Gals do
it better.” From all over the country, N-A-S-T-Ys poured in, spelled
out in nail art, Scrabble letters, sidewalk chalk, and studs on the
back of a jacket. Kitchens were raided for edible art supplies:
Skittles and candy hearts and alphabet soup. The words were
baked into the tops of pies and arranged in strands of spaghetti
on a plate of Bolognese. There was even, somewhat alarmingly,
a photo of a Nasty Gal tattoo (“frighteningly real,” one staffer
recalled, though its authenticity was never entirely determined).
Perhaps most surprising, a number of devotees eschewed In-
stagram in favor of the U.S. Postal Service. Scrawled in marker,
sprinkled with stickers, this old-school fan mail—collected in a
bin in the company’s computer-crowded downtown L.A. head-
quarters—seemed steeped in a sort of ’70s nostalgia, as if The
Virgin Suicides’ Lisbon sisters had decided to express their love
for a digital-age phenom using construction paper and Elmer’s.
Nasty Gal sells streetwear that falls on the more risqué end of
the H&M and Topshop spectrum—cutaway bodysuits, cropped
moto jackets, ’90s-style bustiers, and the best-selling Slasher
shredded jean short (in the tradition of Rihanna or, depending on
your frame of reference, Tawny Kitaen), all mostly priced under
$100. But the site also promulgates an ethos: a blithe, sexy spirit
that feels 100 percent Californian in its riffs on surf, skate, and
music-festival cultures and its emphasis on the fearless and enthu-
siastic display of one’s body. First-time visitors to the site may
click on a pair of, say, high-waisted black leggings with gaping
holes skipping down each thigh (engineered to showcase a region
that most of womankind has been conditioned to conceal at all
costs) and wonder, Who on earth would wear this? But the reason
Nasty Gal gets the kind of fan mail usually reserved for Twihards
is that the brand fundamentally gets why a girl would want to not
just toe the border of good taste but kick her way through it. This
emotional connection—perpetuated minute to minute on Insta-
gram, Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook—flows upstream as well as
down. Nasty loves its girls, and girls—at last count, 400,000 visi-
tors per month—love their Nasty.
Increasingly, though, it’s not just “gals” who are idolizing the
company’s face and founder, 28-year-old Sophia Amoruso. With
minimal advertising and, until last year, no outside investment,
Amoruso turned a vintage stall that she founded on eBay with a
couple hundred bucks in 2006 into a 150-employee empire sell-
ing a vast mix of vintage and contemporary clothes. As of this
fall, Nasty also boasts an in-house label, Nasty Gal Collection; a
range of denim (including its inaugural high-waisted style, known
as the Kink); and—in the ultimate example of media aging back-
ward—a print magazine, Super Nasty. When Inc.com published
its 2012 ranking of the fastest-growing online brands, Nasty Gal
came in number 11 of 5,000 and was the number-one retailer
in the pack. In 2008, the company’s revenue was $222,000; by
2011, it was $22.9 million. “That’s 10,315 percent growth,” says
Nicole Guarascio, the West
Coast trend director of fashion
forecasting company Stylesite,
with something approaching
awe in her voice. “It’s exponen-
tial.” And it’s ongoing: Nasty
Gal’s earnings are projected to
multiply by more than 500 per-
cent in 2012, up to $128 million.
In the world of fast fashion,
of course, that’s still small po-
tatoes. Urban Outfitters and
H&M are projecting 2012
earnings of $2.77 billion and
$2.75 billion, respectively. But
Nasty Gal is succeeding in the
very niche where many brick-
and-mortar monoliths falter. In
the age of social media, if a brand’s communiqués don’t seem
authentic, “it’s almost worse than not doing it at all,” says Guar-
ascio. For the Gen-Y consumer born between roughly 1980 and
2000—also known as Millennials, Generation We, Generation
Next, the Net Generation, and, according to Wikipedia, some-
thing called Echo Boomers—“the whole culture is about trans-
parency and honesty, and identifying with real individuals that
you relate to.” Amoruso doesn’t have to hire some consultant to
help her find the right aspirational-yet-down-to-earth voice that
would resonate with her customers. She just is one. So if you were
sitting in the blond-wood boardroom of H&M—nope, still not
sold online—you’d be watching Amoruso closely.
Still, on the kind of scorching New York summer morning
that seems to liquefy all ambition, not to mention eye makeup,
Amoruso picks at a croissant with her fingers and declares, in
the opening salvo of this interview, that she’s “not really a career
person.” It echoes the statement made by her outfit: the two-inch
sliver of midriff visible between her cropped black tank and a
cognac-color, knee-length, ’70s suede skirt; the choppy bob; the
teal glitter nail polish, which coincidentally matches the rough
tattoo of a cross on her finger.
Amoruso radiates the kind of cool that should be intimidating,
REPORT ELLE STYLE
TALK DIRTY TO ME
Don’t let the name fool you. Online girls’ club
(and, oh yeah, retailer) Nasty Gal is growing
lightning fast, selling sexed-up, Coachella-ready
clothes to a cultlike fan base for whom nasty is
the ultimate compliment. By Maggie Bullock
P
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114 www. e l l e. c o m
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REPORT ELLE STYLE
P
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except for the fact that she insists on be-
ing anything but. This persona extends to
the grinning, bedheaded models on her
site, who display her wares with a kind
of carefree, loose-limbed sex appeal, as if
they just tumbled in from Coachella and
decided to take some pictures for the fun
of it. The mood on Nasty Gal is surpris-
ingly un-nasty. In this all-girls club, ev-
eryone is welcome to join. Bitchy is not
on-brand.
The original motivation for Nasty Gal
was merely to get Amoruso out of having
to work for anyone else—which is not to
say she didn’t want to work. Having sold
shoes, worked in photo labs, checked
student IDs at an art school, and, for a
week at least, scrubbed ring-around-the-
collar off of men’s shirts at a dry cleaner,
she was living in San Francisco and in
between jobs, she says, when “I thought,
Whoa, I’m going to try to sell stuff on eBay,
like every other girl who tries to do that
around that age.”
Nasty Gal Vintage started as a one-
woman operation: Amoruso scoured
Goodwill, then styled and photographed her finds on a cadre
of friends and girls scouted on MySpace. Throughout the first
year, her models posed in front of her aunt’s blue garage door.
Amoruso then wrote up the items on eBay and sold, packed, and
shipped them, one by one. The secret was in the styling: Instead
of presenting the pieces nostalgically, she remixed vintage from
disparate eras in a modern way, quickly learning the rules of
perceived value. “You cannot put a plain blouse, no matter
how beautiful, on eBay and have people duke it out,” she says.
“Everything had to be really crazy or avant-garde or designer
or beautiful.” Bidding wars ensued. For one “crazy neon kid’s
sweater” with a hole in the armpit and a starting bid of $9.99, “I
did not tell anybody this thing was worth $500”—but some girl
had to have it, and that’s what it sold for.
The company name she borrowed from the hypersexual 1975
album by Betty Davis—not to be confused with Bette—the snarl-
ing ’70s punk-funk paragon and wife of Miles. Davis was beyond
merely sexy or strong; she was defiant, uncompromising, an
original badass. Clearly, a logical patron saint for a retail venture.
Initially, “it was like, if I can survive with a name like this—that’s
funny,” Amoruso says. “I wasn’t trying to be a CEO.” Now that
she is one, she seems to appreciate the moniker even more. It
provides a sort of psychological moat around the brand.
“If you can accept the name, it’s like you’ve passed the first
step,” says Amoruso. In the era of “peer-ents,” in which teenag-
ers and their mothers often shop at the same stores, Nasty Gal
feels like it’s for actual youths—not just the young at heart. And
these days, a dress that can make Mom shudder has a certain
kind of cachet. “Plus I think it’s pretty obvious to our customers
that some big corporation isn’t behind something that was named
as, like, flippantly as this business.”
By 2008, NastyGal.com had left eBay, becoming its own on-
line destination and beginning a breathtaking expansion; 2011
was a big year: Amoruso and a core team of a dozen “OG” Nas-
ties relocated from San Francisco to downtown L.A., and the
company got its first boost of outside financing—unique in an
industry in which most ventures are financed to the hilt from the
word go, and in which many are founded for the sole purpose of
one day being sold off to the highest bidder. London-based Index
Ventures (which also funds part of Net-a-Porter and the British
fast-fashion phenom Asos) invested $9 million for less than 10
percent of the business, with Amoruso retaining control. “[Six
years ago] if you’d said, ‘Do you want to have 150 employees and
spend your days in conference rooms,’ I’d have said, ‘Oh, that
sucks,’ ” says Amoruso. “But when I was editing every photo, I
was like, How can I find someone to help me not do this day-to-
day stuff so I can keep growing the business?” Today, “the busi-
ness kind of has a mind of its own,” she says. “I feel like its humble
servant in a lot of weird ways. I put myself where it needs me.”
T
he it in “Nasty Gals do it better” presumably refers to dress-
ing, taste, coolness—but also, unavoidably, sex. Whether you
are currently a college-age intern or you work with them, you
will recognize Nasty Gal wares as the uniform of a pantsless
generation, for whom the acronym NSFW does not extend to the
question “What should I wear today?”
That doesn’t mean that all 3,000-odd items for sale on Nasty
Gal at any given moment are revealing. But even with the site’s
most buttoned-up blouse, a certain sultriness pervades. Ask
Amoruso about the complexities of selling very sexy clothes to
very young women—the company’s sweet spot is ages 18 to 24,
but surely little sisters armed with Mom’s credit card are on board
too—and she fiddles uncomfortably with the heavy bronze collar
that circles her neck. She trusts her clientele to have the kind of
Kate Moss–esque knack for contrast and context that can render
any look more hipster than Hustler. “You can wear dresses that we
sell and look like a Kardashian,” she says. “Or you can look really
awesome and cool.” And it’s true: On the site, stretchy micro-
minis have a certain youthful, non-Snooki verve when paired with
combat boots and friendship bracelets; a red lip does look alterna-
girl sexy, a tad defiant, as long as it’s worn with scrubbed cheeks.
For the women who’ve mastered this artful balance, a certain
be-who-I-wanna-be feminism could be said to underlie this kind
of dressing. In these clothes, a girl effectively opts out of compro-
mising, of being “correct” or “polite”—from the neck down, at
least —and lays claim to her own sexuality. Are bum-skimming
shredded jean shorts today’s Helen Gurley Brown fishnets?
Amoruso knows she has benefited from her feminist fore-
bears, but she finds the existing terminology too preachy for her
liking. “I hate the word empowerment. It’s so tampon-y, or what-
ever,” she says. However, when her company finally did reach
a focus-group level of critical mass, she learned that her young
clientele, thankfully, does not. “These girls were using this word,
you know? They were like, ‘Nasty Gal makes me feel really con-
fident, like I can do anything.’ Like we’re dressing them to live
out their dreams. Even though we’re selling revealing things that
someone may interpret the wrong way or may not be able to pull
off, the overarching feeling is, ‘I don’t have to be a wallflower,’ or
‘I’m expressing something inside me.’ ”
When Amoruso was 17, she wasn’t very Nasty: She wore all-
black, didn’t shave her legs, refused to let a guy open the door
for her. “As a kid, I used to read teen magazines, all these horror
stories about, say, getting your first period. They’d make you
think it’s the worst thing in the world to be a girl, it’s so terrify-
ing. ‘This boy dumped me—oh God, what do I do?’ ” she says.
Nasty-ness is the opposite of that kind of fear. “It’s a full-circle
kind of thing: It’s fun to be a girl, to wear makeup, to show a little
skin,” she says. “I think it’s just about owning yourself.” Within
her company, the oft-repeated mantra is that Nasty Gals “aren’t
sexy for someone else—they’re sexy for themselves.” And if the
bandage dress fits, why would you not wear it? If that’s the way
you feel (and dress), it’s a safe bet that plenty of people aren’t
going to get it—whether those people are your date, your dad,
or your boss. But Nasty Gal will.
MS. NASTY This “isn’t a
bunch of guys in suits
hiring someone to
tell them what girls
want,” says founder
Amoruso.
118 www. e l l e. c o m
FENDI BOUTI QUES BLOOMI NGDALES NORDSTROM 1 8 0 0 9 5 3 3 6 3 4 FENDI . COM
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ELLE STYLE ESSAY
S
everal years ago, graduate students in Stanford’s psychology
department hit upon a prime spot to observe humans in the
throes of high-pressure decision making: the grocery store.
Posing as reps for a gourmet jam, they offered a range of fla-
vors for shoppers to choose among: six in the first experiment
(among them, black cherry, kiwi, and lemon curd), 24 in the sec-
ond. And then they tallied sales. On the day with six flavors, 30
percent of shoppers walked away with a new jar of jam; on the
day with four times that, a mere 3 percent did. The results dem-
onstrated what the researchers dubbed “choice overload”: When
faced with too many options, the brain becomes overwhelmed
and, like a computer with too many windows open, freezes.
It’s perhaps no big coincidence that the jam experiment, as
it’s become known in the psych world, has made
its way into both The Defining Decade and Twenty-
something: Why Do Young Adults Seem Stuck?—two
in a wavelet of books released this year about
life’s third decade. The twenties are a period
in which big choices are traditionally made—
career, partner, lifestyle—and, despite the sput-
tering economy, this generation (its economically
privileged members, at least) has more jams to
pick from than its predecessors.
The pool of potential mates is no longer limited
to the local bar—we can select among the 1.8 mil-
lion eligibles on Match.com. If we can’t find a ca-
reer that suits us, we can plot a start-up. And just
like the shoppers in the experiment, millennials
like me (I’m 27) aren’t dashing toward the check-
out line either. The five milestones sociologists
use to classify someone as an adult—finishing
education, declaring financial independence, get-
ting married, having a child, leaving home—had
been reached by 77 percent of women in 1960.
Today, less than half of twentysomething women
are adults, by the academic definition. The pun-
dits are calling us “Peter and Priscilla Pans” and
“Kidults”—should we be worried?
The trope of the twenties as a decade for soul-
searching is actually a recent development. A cen-
tury ago, the choices of what to do and who to
marry (and one did marry) were much narrower.
It wasn’t until the rise of the Pill, free love, and
feminism, among other social upheavals, that the
modern young adult—free to search for a true
calling and a soul mate—emerged. And almost
immediately it became apparent that all this free-
dom could be too much of a good thing: In 1968,
a year after Dustin Hoffman’s Benjamin Brad-
dock floated aimlessly in his parents’ backyard
swimming pool in The Graduate, developmen-
tal psychologist Erik H. Erikson used the term
“quarter-life crisis” to describe one of the eight
existential dilemmas he believed marked the hu-
man life span. According to Erikson, after leaving
the structured world of academia, be it high school or college,
with their neatly packaged semester-long intervals and clear-cut
objectives (get good grades, graduate), the individual becomes
overwhelmed, feels lost, and enters a state of “free-fall.”
But by today’s standards, Ben had it easy. Thanks to the later
and later age of marriage (this generation will spend more time
single than any before it), as well as globalization and changes
in corporate culture (one in three twentysomethings will change
residences this year; millennials will hold, on average, seven jobs
by the time they turn 30), young people live a far more transient,
uncertain existence than their parents did. And weighing all the
newly expanded options is only half the battle: The economy,
crippling student loan debt, and skyrocketing rents in major cit-
ies are gaping potholes on the road to adulthood.
This may explain why Erikson’s quarter-life
crisis has gone from obscure (especially com-
pared with its attention-grabbing counterpart,
“midlife crisis”) to buzzworthy, spawning proj-
ects like QuarterLife, an NBC Web series focused
on a group of friends in their twenties (à la the
late-’80s TV phenomenon Thirtysomething). Jour-
nalist Alexandra Robbins was one of the first to
bring what she calls “QLC” into the mainstream,
with her 2001 best-seller Quarterlife Crisis and its
follow-up, Conquering Your Quarterlife Crisis. “Oh
sure, people were skeptical at first,” she tells me.
“Bryant Gumbel called us whiny.”
I, for one, definitely wish for some better way
to understand, not to mention negotiate, this time
in my life. When I was growing up, my boomer
mom drilled into me that I should spend my
twenties trying a variety of professional and per-
sonal paths—she did, she said, and was happy for
it. While I never took her advice to an extreme—
I’ve had jobs in the same industry and have lived
in the same city since graduation—in the back
of my mind I’ve always assumed I had plenty of
time to change my mind. Then it hit me earlier
this year: By the time my mother was my age,
she’d already been married for four years, fin-
ished graduate school, settled into her second
(and lifelong) career, and—what really blows my
mind—had a mortgage on a house. Meanwhile,
I’m still on my parents’ cell phone plan, and my
dad does my income taxes. How did I miss the
part about growing up overnight?
Among my friends, the variation in adultitude
is as wide as it’s been since middle school: Some
seem prematurely middle-aged (spending Satur-
day night painting their walls sage green, before
turning in at ten o’clock); others seem hope-
less cases of arrested development (one woman
I know has had a string of part-time jobs since
graduation and no plans to stop living with her
parents). “There’s not this lock-step road to ma-
OH TO BE YOUNG...
…And filled with angst about whether you should start acting like an adult or use your twenties
for grand adventure. Twenty-seven-year-old Amanda FitzSimons checks out a spate of new
books that offer guidance about navigating so-called emerging adulthood
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ELLE STYLE ESSAY
turity there was 60 years ago,” says Stephanie Coontz, a professor
of family studies at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Wash-
ington. “All stages in life, not just one’s twenties, are becoming
more and more ambiguous.” To wit, I’ve found myself wrapping
a Jonathan Adler peacock-shape lollipop holder for a friend’s
bridal shower in my parents’ living room, where I’m temporarily
living with barely a lollipop to my name, let alone a holder for it.
Enter the work of developmental psychologist Jeffrey Arnett,
who, in what is arguably the most radical concept to rock the
developmental psychology world in decades, essentially argues
that my peers and I shouldn’t sweat our slow march to adulthood.
Arnett posits that the period between ages 18 and 29 should be
recognized as a distinct developmental stage called “emerging
adulthood” (sandwiched between adolescence and full-blown
adulthood), during which the fits and starts of self-exploration
should not only be expected but often encouraged. Arnett’s
theory is bolstered by recent findings that our prefrontal cortex,
the part of our brain responsible for planning, prioritizing, and
controlling impulses, isn’t fully formed until our late twenties. (If
the idea that a stage of our lives could be so distinct yet somehow
have gone unnoticed sounds suspect, consider the fact that ado-
lescence wasn’t formally recognized until 1904.)
Twentysomething: Why Do Young Adults Seem Stuck?, written by
Robin Marantz Henig and her 28-year-old daughter, Samantha,
leans heavily on Arnett’s research. The authors approach the
concept of “emerging adulthood” from the perspective of jour-
nalists (they’re both writers for The New York Times), with count-
less sociological stats and psychological studies, as well as from
the vantage point of mother and daughter. (One of the book’s
most memorable moments is when Robin tells Samantha, who’s
had a disappointing first date, that she’s too old to be waiting for
a man to make her feel “glowy.” “Oh shit…what did I just say?”
Robin quickly chides herself.)
Without question, the book makes some solid arguments for
delaying adulthood: A woman who has her first child at 26 will
earn 72 percent less than a woman who does so at 34. Those who
marry before 25 are more likely to divorce. Twentysomethings
who move back in with their parents are seven times less likely
to fall under the poverty line while under their parents’ roof. “I
wanted it to be reassuring to readers,” Robin says. “A lot of my
friends said they found it comforting to know other people were
having the same struggles,” seconds Samantha. As I read it, I
knew what the two were talking about. Phew, I don’t have to be
an adult, I thought. I’m an emerging adult.
It’s the same sense of relief I got from Emma Koenig’s book,
F*CK! I’m In My Twenties. Koenig, a 24-year-old actress (and, inci-
dentally, the sister of Vampire Weekend front man Ezra Koenig),
began a Tumblr of the same name last year, which, in addition
to leading to a book deal, has inspired a potential TV show. Her
book echoes the themes of Arnett’s work—the foolishness of ex-
pecting twentysomethings to be fully formed adults—though her
portrait is more cartoon than analysis. “I just put it on my Face-
book one day, and it got 40 ‘likes’ in an hour,” recalls Koenig.
“Fuck is an interjection that can mean many things, and that’s
how I feel about being in my twenties. I’m not sure if I’m sup-
posed to be happy about it or frustrated by it.”
Meg Jay, a psychologist in private practice and an instructor at
the University of Virginia, gives a cold shower to all the happy
talk about gliiiiding into adulthood. The very title of her book, The
Defining Decade, is chilling. With the exception of Mark Zucker-
berg and the Instagram guys, I can’t think of a single contempo-
rary who wants to believe that their twenties will set the tone for
the rest of their lives. That aversion doesn’t surprise Jay. “I know
people in their twenties will see that title and think, That’s the last
thing I want to hear right now.”
Jay doesn’t so much disagree with Arnett’s conception of
how people develop—she relies on much of the same informa-
tion he does, such as the science showing that the brain keeps
maturing until around 30. She just thinks that his message can
easily be taken the wrong way. “I know what young adults are
doing. They’re hearing this and thinking [the twenties] is time
to waste.” Jay’s book is filled with examples of clients who’ve
put off adulthood: One almost-30-year-old delayed taking the
LSAT during her twenties, though she claimed she wanted to
be a lawyer someday, as opposed to a professional bartender.
Another went from one-night stand to one-night stand without
looking for a serious partner, though she insisted she wanted to
get married. “And then they get to 35 and feel like they’ve been
cheated or conned,” Jay says.
The more I talked to her, the more her sort of tough-love ap-
proach grew on me. It may be scary, but it’s also bracing to hear
that what you do now will make a lasting impact on your future.
Jay rattles off reasons why one’s twenties are so crucial: Two
thirds of lifetime wage growth occurs within the first 10 years
of a career; a woman’s fertility peaks in her late twenties. (The
Henigs also talk frankly about biology; on the Times Mother-
lode blog, they had a debate about whether Samantha should
freeze her eggs.)
It’s not that Jay eschews exploration. She’s quick to point out
that she didn’t get married until her thirties, and her first job after
college was driving vans for Outward Bound, which she admits
may not have been on her how-to-become-a-psychologist check-
list but gave her the chance to learn how people react in challeng-
ing situations. “It’s one thing to have a life come together at 30,”
she says. “It’s quite another to start building a life at 30.”
Ultimately, what Jay and the Henigs all advocate is what I’ll
call “strategic searching,” or searching with an end goal in mind.
On the one hand, it sounds sensible; on the other, almost oxy-
moronic. How can you sincerely throw yourself into testing al-
ternative ways of living if you’re always shooting for a certain
outcome? I’m reminded of Steve Jobs’ studying calligraphy at
Reed College, which ultimately—but wholly unexpectedly—in-
formed the brilliant fonts for Apple. “You can’t connect the dots
looking forward; you can only connect them looking backward,”
Jobs told graduates in his famous 2005 Stanford commencement
speech. That perhaps sums up what’s so difficult about navigat-
ing your twenties: No matter how informed your decisions, you’ll
only be able to connect the dots in hindsight. And whatever you
choose will inevitably require tweaking. Coontz thinks back to
the end of The Graduate, when Ben, having just coaxed the girl of
his dreams from the altar and run ecstatically into the future with
her, looks off into the distance, stunned, as if to say, What the hell
do I do next? “I can well imagine him saying to himself, ‘Maybe
plastics aren’t such a bad idea after all.’ ”
Jay argues that the twenties are crucial: Two thirds of
lifetime wage growth occurs in the first 10 years of a career,
and the brain is still malleable in the third decade.
122 www. e l l e. c o m
THE NEW EAU DE PARFUM WORN BY KRI STEN STEWART
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A
therapist once told me, “You never really had your mother,”
but she was wrong. My mother may have been an alco holic—
well, no maybe about it; she died of cirrhosis at only 54, when
I was 29. She didn’t teach me the things mothers back then
were supposed to, like how to cook (how could she when she
could hardly bake a potato herself?) or clean or behave on a date.
I don’t remember her helping me with my homework or read-
ing to me at bedtime. But she loved me, she was proud of me, she
wanted me to be happy, and she wanted me to be myself. Since she
died, from decade to decade, apartment to apartment, drawer to
drawer, I’ve saved one gift she gave me to remind myself of that.
My mother was a beautiful woman who loved beautiful clothes.
She had a whole bureau dedicated to her collection of cashmere
sweaters in rich, soft colors—butter yellow, forest green, peri-
winkle—and her two closets were full of treasures: Viyella dress-
ing gowns (what other mother had more than one bathrobe?);
Lilly Pulitzer shiftdresses; straight skirts made of good wool, fully
lined and bearing labels from elegant department stores that no
longer exist—Martin’s, Peck & Peck, Bonwit Teller. My father
loved to see my mother dressed up, but the money she spent on
clothes drove him wild with rage. I used to hear him shouting in
their bedroom when my mother’s college friend Hope, who was a
buyer at Altman’s, would send over outfits “on approval.”
I wasn’t sure which side of their money quarrel to be on. I idol-
ized my father, the Communist lawyer with his parade of impe-
cunious clients—the Fair Play for Cuba committee, the dissidents
from the painters’ union, the mentally ill woman trying to get
back her son from the social workers. But my mother worked
too, even in the 1950s. What’s more, by the time I was 9 or 10,
she was outearning my father. She sold brownstones in Brooklyn
Heights, where we lived, which was just beginning its gentrifica-
tion. She didn’t like the job much—she’d wanted to be in journal-
ism, a field virtually closed to women back then. But she was
proud of her success. “I’m a real estate salesman,” she’d say—not
a saleswoman, a salesman. Still, nobody told her that she was
noble or heroic, which was the family myth about my father—or
maybe just the myth my mother and I believed in.
In a way, my parents had a secular version of an old-style Jewish
marriage. Instead of the wife peddling goods from a pushcart to
support the husband, the Talmudic scholar, my mother, the capi-
talist, supported my father, the Communist, though the rewards
of being the breadwinner didn’t apply to her. She still had to run
the house, do the shopping, cook the food. Obviously, my father
was the important one, in her eyes and also in mine. He was the
person who thought about the big things, like civil liberties and
Stalin, and who looked so elegant in his seersucker suit. Still, as
I got older, I wondered, Shouldn’t my mother be allowed to have
some fun with the money that she worked so hard to earn?
Because of these conflicts, I had trouble with the idea of spend-
ing money on myself when I became a teenager. I knew that if I
asked for something, my mother would give it to me. But what if
my parents couldn’t afford it, like the clothes sent over by Hope?
THE GIFT
From her Communist father, Katha Pollitt learned that materialism was an opiate of the masses.
Yet her mother appreciated beautiful clothes—indeed, beautiful things. Decades later, Pollitt finds
thwarted ambition, desire, and a mother’s love stitched into a lace blouse
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And, anyway, shouldn’t I be less materialistic, like my father? Af-
ter all, did Communists get their bedrooms redecorated with a
canopy bed, an antique secretary desk, and unicorn-print wallpa-
per, which was something my mother had arranged for me with
a decorator friend of hers, despite the inevitable fights with my
father? “I want. Her. To have. That desk,” I can still hear her in-
sisting, emphasizing every word. And I have it to this day, in my
study, catty-corner to my real desk. Poor fragile, lovely thing—
how could I ever give it away?
When my bedroom was finished, it was all too much. It felt
obscurely shameful, a mark of privilege, of being spoiled and
overprotected, befitting the princess in whose lap the unicorn
rested its head. The truth was, I loved girly things—my Villager
shirtwaist printed with tiny flowers, my cousin Wendy’s lavender
bedroom (more tiny flowers), even the unicorn wallpaper—but I
could see that they led in the wrong direction. Rosa Luxemburg
was just a name to me, but whatever she had done to become
a world-historical personage, I knew she hadn’t done it wearing
dresses printed with little flowers.
By the time I was in high school, my mother had retreated into
drinking, my father was keeping her company, and I was a rag-
ing adolescent. My idea of fashion was to wear the same turtle-
neck for a week. So I don’t know how my mother and I came to
be shopping together, and in Manhattan, too, at a clothing store
filled with high-end bohemia. She saw me hesitating over a very
expensive lace Mexican blouse, picking it up, putting it down,
walking away, coming back. It cost what seemed like the earth to
me—maybe $50.
“Do you like it, Darling?” my mother asked. “It’s gorgeous,”
I said. It was a costume for the unicorn wallpaper princess, with
alternating panels of cloth and lace, a scoop neck with lace stand-
ing up all around it, puffy elbow-length sleeves, and tiny mother-
of-pearl buttons down the back. “But it’s so expensive.”
“You should always get the things you really want,” she said,
and she picked it up, marched to the cash register, and bought it.
The odd thing is that I wore the blouse only once or twice.
It was too fancy for high school and much too virginal for col-
lege, and anyway, like so many things we fall in love with at the
store, it didn’t fit right. In the mysterious way of clothes, even
without my wearing it, even as it sat in one drawer after an-
other, it somehow acquired holes and stains. To me it represents
my mother’s unrealized potential in life. Selling real estate had
never been the plan: She was too unworldly and gentle for all
that undercutting and competition and stress. She told me once
that she had started drinking in order to deal with the anxiety
of meeting with clients. Sometimes I think she would have been
happy just sitting in the big yellow chair in the living room and
listening to Bach, drinking coffee and clipping articles from The
New York Times, going to the occasional peace demonstration,
meeting her friends or my father for lunch on Montague Street.
In a way, she, not I, was the real unicorn princess, only instead
of being sheltered from the world by a canopy bed, she had to
do battle with it every day.
But the blouse represents something happier, too, and that is
my mother’s love. She wanted to do wonderful things for me, and
sometimes she did—not just over-the-top projects like the uni-
corn bedroom but real things that helped me become myself. She
never told me that I had to get married or have children, or gave
me little life lessons about how to play dumb and lose gracefully
to please boys. Instead, she read my poems, and when I fell in
love with Latin in eighth grade and decided I wanted to learn an-
cient Greek, too, she found a classics major at Brooklyn College
to tutor me. She wanted to be close to me, but her drinking got in
the way, and most of the time I wouldn’t let her be close, because
I didn’t want to end up like her. Not always, though. When I was
13, we went to Manhattan to see The Lovers of Teruel, a surrealist
French dance film, at the Paris Theatre, and ended up staying for
three showings, we loved it so much—or was it I alone who loved
it so much, and she stayed for me? Sometimes on school holidays,
I would meet her for hot turkey sandwiches at Sakele’s, and some-
thing about our just being out of the house together, like a regu-
lar mother and daughter, would almost make my heart stop with
happiness at the freedom and intimacy and fun of it. Sometimes
I would come home after a sleepover at a friend’s house where
there had been some family tsuris and I would feel such a sense
of peace just to sit with her and my father in the garden, having
a cookout like normal people, talking about normal things like
school or what a bastard President Johnson was. I’m trying to say:
There were moments that shone through.
If I hadn’t kept that blouse, how would I remember them?
Adapted from What My Mother Gave Me, edited by Elizabeth
Benedict (Algonquin Books, Spring 2013)
My mother saw me hesitating over the blouse. “Do you like it, Darling?” she
asked. “It’s gorgeous,” I said. “You should always get the things you really
want,” she replied—and she marched to the cash register and bought it.
TIES THAT BIND The author
with her parents
126 www. e l l e. c o m
jasmine collection
Bloomingdale’s
ELLE INSIDER L.A. STYLE
V
iet-Nu Nguyen is a born collector. If
her array of figurines depicting ev-
erything from sushi to giraffes to
a Hawaiian-lei’d President Obama
didn’t tip you off, then the art pieces strewn
around her 1961 Richard Neutra home—
and her closet, bursting with vintage trea-
sures—should make it abundantly clear.
Having spent the past five and a half years
as the curator of the 1,500-plus-piece Ovitz
Family Collection, Nguyen, 33, is well-
suited to the business of acquisition. For
Creative Artists Agency cofounder Michael
Ovitz, she’s netted pieces from Sterling
Ruby and Isa Genzken; currently she’s at
work on a project for the collection by con-
ceptual pioneer Carol Bove.
When the up-and-coming player
on L.A.’s art scene isn’t making high-
profile deals, she’s disproving the idea that
women in the art
world—to say noth-
ing of intellectuals of
all stripes—are rel-
egated to shapeless,
all-black silhouettes.
“I’ve always had an
eclectic wardrobe,” she says. “And I like
having that sort of confusion on a certain
level; I don’t like being able to pin down
my style. I’m just sort of all over the place.”
The same goes for her art collection, which
tends toward the outré: a pie-pan sculpture
by Sara Greenberger Rafferty adorns one
wall, and an iridescent Mark Flood paint-
ing hangs in her office.
A decade ago, Nguyen, who’d received
an undergraduate degree in urban stud-
ies from Brown University, was pursuing
a master’s in design studies at Harvard’s
Graduate School of Design when she no-
ticed that “the female architects would
always dress like men. It was sad to me
that these progressive thinkers, who were
obviously aesthetically minded, felt the
need to just blend in fashionwise. I think
I really started to have fun with clothes
around that time.” She spent her study
breaks wandering the aisles of Riccardi,
acquiring Comme des Garçons at slashed
prices. Postgraduation, she headed for the
West Coast and worked as an assistant di-
rector at the now-shuttered Sandroni Rey
gallery. Though her surroundings might
CLOSET CASE (Top right)
Nguyen shows off a
favorite vintage
romper; (left)
rummaging through
treasures, including
an Emanuel Ungaro
dress and Hermès
blouse P
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Curator and fashion buff Viet-Nu Nguyen invites ELLE into
her museum-worthy Beverly Hills home—and closet.
By Véronique Hyland
L.A. WOMAN
128 www. e l l e. c o m
ROBERTLEEMORRIS.COM
L.A. STYLE ELLE INSIDER
have changed, her style didn’t. “L.A. is
certainly more casual,” she says. “I can
get away with wearing ratty T-shirts and
jeans, but I probably would dress the same
wherever I lived.”
Combing through her overstuffed
closet, she pulls out plenty by the afore-
mentioned names, but also vintage Guy
Laroche, Hanae Mori, Emanuel Ungaro,
and Ossie Clark, mixed with newer
pieces from Marni and Proenza Schouler.
Of a rainbow-hued ’80s Emanuel Ungaro
dress, she notes: “It’s bright and slightly
garish, and I feel like a sassy secretary ev-
ery time I wear it.” A pinup-style Louis
Féraud ’50s romper was her first purchase
from C. Madeleine’s, the North Miami
Beach emporium. “I make a trip there
every Art Basel Miami Beach.” (When
doing her L.A.
rounds, she always
checks out Decades
and Resurrection.)
Another treasured
find? A vintage
Hermès shirt with a
Kreayshawn-worthy
pattern that she nabbed for $40 at a thrift
store in Basalt, Colorado. At the same
spot, she scored aquarium-print Versace
jeans. “They were about six sizes too
big. Luckily, I have an amazing tailor.”
(Murat’s in Beverly Hills.) Offsetting all
the feminine looks on display is a pair of
Nike Dunks emblazoned with fluorescent
basketballs and a thought bubble that
reads, “Slow down, I’m tired!”
Despite this evidence, she insists, “I
wouldn’t consider myself a collector of any-
thing other than napkins and eye glasses. I
don’t have that sort of obsessive mind-set.
That said, I’ve always really loved one-of-
a-kind pieces, so vintage [clothing] makes
a lot of sense for me.”
Even Nguyen’s style icons exist outside
the norm. Rather than cite Kate Moss, she
points to art-world examples: Mr and Mrs
Clark and Percy, David Hockney’s 1970–71
painting of Celia Birtwell; bespectacled
gallerist Marian Goodman; and Julian
Schnabel: “The man wears his pajamas to
formal events! I’m a total homebody, so
the thought of donning sleepwear out and
about sounds pretty heavenly.”
ART STAR (Clockwise
from top left) The
home’s entrance;
lounging in her
living room/library;
her shoe and jewelry
stashes; posing in the
backyard and the
dining room; her
figurine collection;
an objet d’art
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ELLE INSIDER L.A. STYLE
D
o you know where the peach chiffon dress is? The one with
the ruffles?” Elkin designer Kara Smith asks the clerk at
Flounce, a vintage emporium in L.A.’s Echo Park bursting
with Esther Williams–esque swimsuits and Ladies of the
Canyon dresses. Informed it’s been sold, she deflates. Luckily,
she comes across a white nightie that equally strikes her fancy.
Across the room, her sister and codesigner, Brit, is trying on a
sweeping maxidress. “Brit gets away with wearing the really
beautiful gowns here. She can wear them on the street with beat-
up boots to go get coffee, and she just gets away with it. Me? I
would look like a train wreck,” Kara says, laughing.
Flounce is one of the local stops the sisters frequent to cull ideas
for their line, a favorite of L.A.’s musician set. “We
don’t really ever feel comfortable on the West Side or
in a polished place,” Brit says. Instead, they thumb
through paperbacks at used-book mecca Stories and
sketch over brunch at Little Dom’s. “One night we
could be sipping champagne at an art gallery, and
the next night we could be [wearing] Converse in the
alley of a punk show,” says Brit, somehow manag-
ing to sound sincere rather than hipsterish. That
dichotomy fuels their designs, which range from
tough (a wraparound leather dress) to prim (a profes-
sorial tweed blazer).
Elkin is tapping into a specific vein of L.A. cul-
ture: Like Laurel Canyon in the ’70s, L.A.’s East
Side is “this weird little artists’ community where
you always run into each other,” Brit says. The Elkin
“cave”—Kara’s garage turned studio—has become a
clubhouse of sorts for that community, with musician
pals like Jenny Lewis and Z Berg always dropping by.
For holiday, Elkin is debuting a capsule collection inspired by
another friend, Girls actress Zosia Mamet (with an assist from
Mamet’s half-sister, Clara, star of ABC sitcom The Neighbors).
The five pieces (four dresses and a jacket) are an homage to the
’70s New York of Patti Smith’s memoir Just Kids—the Mamets are
New York–bred theater scions, daughters of playwright David—
but the collection also has its heart firmly in Los Angeles.
Settling into the cave, where their grandmother’s wasp-waisted
prom dress hangs on the wall, I learn that the Pasadena-bred sis-
ters couldn’t be more different. Brit, 29, reads Hemingway and
favors the mournful country-folk of Kitty Wells, while Kara, 31,
devours true-crime books and hip-hop. BlackBerry snaps of their
dogs reveal that Kara has a black chihuahua; Brit, a 100-pound
albino bulldog. But they’re on the same page
when it comes to design; they are already
at work on spring 2013. Past seasons have
drawn from frontier-era brothels and Gothic
romance; this time, per Kara, “We’re do-
ing kind of a [ John] Fante, ’30s L.A., under
the sea, mermaid, bondagey, weird thing.”
Sounds like all that digging has paid off.
EAST SIDE
STORY
Fresh off a capsule collection with Girls star Zosia Mamet,
Elkin designers Brit and Kara Smith take ELLE on an inspiring
tour of L.A.’s bohemian scene. By Véronique Hyland
SISTER, SISTER (Above left)
Kara and Brit Smith
in the backyard next
to the Elkin “cave”;
(below left) scenes
from the cave and
from stops on their
East L.A. tour;
(right) Lewis and the
sisters play dress-up
at Little Dom’s P
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ANGELES
Stories Books
and Café
1716 West Sunset
Boulevard,
213-413-3733
“The vibe is great—
artsy and sort of
beatnik-feeling.”
Flounce Vintage
1555 Echo Park
Avenue,
213-481-1975
“[Spring 2013] is
very ’30s poolside-
chic, and the store is
filled with the most
insane inspiration.”
Little Dom’s
2128 Hillhurst
Avenue,
323-661-0055
The sisters love
hitting the New
York–style deli wing
of the Los Feliz
hot spot.
Figaro Bistrot
1802 North Vermont
Avenue,
323-662-1587
“Paris meets NYC,
but right in the heart
of Los Feliz.”
134 www. e l l e. c o m
THE MAKING OF A LEGEND
Consideration to detail:
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the case, dial and crown.
The mother-of-pearl dial under
sapphire crystal adds further
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Eco-Drive movement.
citizen-signature.com
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ELLE INSIDER L.A. STYLE
I
n the early ’70s, execs at Mattel wanted
to give their marquee product, at that
point more than a decade old, a make-
over—one that would capture the new
way girls across America were dying to
look. Enter Malibu Barbie, with her waist-
length sheets of platinum hair, sun-kissed
glow, pearly white smile, pink oversize
shades, and kicky teal one-piece. “Bar-
bie’s got a golden tan now,” crooned its
Beach Boys rip-off jingle. “Sunny surfer
long hair.” With that, the Barbie of yore,
with her pursed lips and shellacked updo,
sud denly seemed sickly, stuck-up, and
miserable.
Forty years later, we’re still captivated
by that paradigm of the consummate care-
free California girl. Last year when Katy
Perry was looking for a chart-topping
summer anthem, she turned her artistic
gaze toward—what else?—California girls
(or, rather, gurls). Of course, today’s incar-
nations look slightly less, well, Barbie-ish:
Lauren Conrad, Jennifer Aniston, Kate
Hudson, Cameron Diaz. But while the
2.0 version may have left her Day-Glo
leisurewear (and Day-Glo tan) behind
in favor of a more understated uniform
of J Brand cutoffs, white American Ap-
parel tees, and laid-back aviators, she still
has that unmistakable I’m-having-more-
Deep down, do we wish we all could be California girls? In honor
of our nineteenth Women in Hollywood Issue, we take a look
at the evolution of the city’s style. By Amanda FitzSimons
1 A 1984 ad for iconic L.A. brand North Beach Leather
2 Bette Midler (1988) 3 Gwyneth Paltrow (2012)
4 Lara Flynn Boyle (2003) 5 Julie Christie and Goldie
Hawn in Shampoo (1975) 6 Farrah Fawcett (1976) 7 Jodie
Foster (1992) 8 Lauren Conrad (2011) 9 Cher and Bob
Mackie (1974) 10 Kim Basinger (1990) 11 Scarlett
Johansson (2006) 12 Barbra Streisand (1969)
13 Lindsay Lohan (2007) 14 Demi Moore (1989)
15 Malibu Barbie (2002) 16 Shannen Doherty (1993)
CITY OF
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138 www. e l l e. c o m
bloomi ngdale’ s
CALI
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ELLE INSIDER L.A. STYLE
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BOHO
fun-than-you-are mien that residents of
no other city have managed to pull off
quite as skillfully. As Perry declared,
“You could travel the world/ But nothing
comes close.”
Cynical New Yorkers never tire of mak-
ing fun of L.A.—Dorothy Parker once
called it 72 suburbs in search of a city;
Woody Allen said the burg’s only cultural
advantage was the ability to turn right on
a red light. Even when Andy Warhol set
out to pay the city a compliment, the re-
sult was more of a jab: “Everyone here is
plastic,” the pop artist offered, “but I love
plastic.” Yes, L.A. has Daisy Dukes and
bikinis on lock (and what’s wrong with
that, anyway?), but that’s hardly the only
look its residents have mastered. The city
of 3.8 million is home to a vast range of
distinct style tribes—many of which de-
veloped there before reaching critical
mass across the country. (E.g., Fergie
arguably put the cornrows and gold door-
knocker earrings, inspired by L.A.’s chola
street culture, onto a global platform.) “In
L.A., there’s this wonderful dichotomy
of style,” says Cameron Silver, owner
of Melrose vintage shop Decades, an
Oscars-night treasure trove, whose book
Decades: A Century of Fashion was released
this fall. “We’re a city that’s perfected
dressing up and dressing down.”
In L.A., fashion, like everything else,
is dictated by Hollywood. Although offi-
cially founded in 1835, the city didn’t get
booming until the rise of the talkies in
the 1920s. As a result, its denizens “don’t
have that old-money thing like they do in
the East Coast—or even in San Francisco,
with its newspaper families and railroad
families,” says Bay Area native Katy Ro-
driguez, who moved to L.A. from New
York 12 years ago to open a West Coast
outpost of her vintage boutique, Resurrec-
tion. Cher Horowitz perhaps said it best
when she bragged in the opening montage
of Clueless: “Isn’t my house classic? The
1 Goldie Hawn in Foul Play (1978) 2 Charlie’s Angels (1976) 3 Rachel Bilson (2009) 4 Jennifer Aniston (2009)
5 Joan Didion (circa 1977)
1 Meg Ryan and Val Kilmer in The Doors (1991) 2 Ali MacGraw and Robert Evans (1970) 3 Nicole Richie (2009) 4 Nina van
Pallandt in The Long Goodbye (1973) 5 Drew Barrymore (2010) 6 Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen (2010) 7 Joni Mitchell (1968)
1 Elizabeth Taylor in Suddenly, Last Summer (1959) 2 Sharon Tate in Valley of the Dolls (1967) 3 Heidi Montag (2011)
4 Lisa Kudrow and Mira Sorvino in Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion (1997) 5 Blake Lively (2012)
6 Three’s Company (early ’80s) 7 Jayne Mansfield in The Girl Can’t Help It (1956)
1
1
7
1 7
5 4
3 6
2
6 2 4
3
5 4
2 3
BOMBSHELL
5
“There’s this
‘I’m so fabulous
I can wear a
Juicy sweatsuit
to the Ivy and
still get a table’
thing.”
142 www. e l l e. c o m
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SALON COLOR & CARE
STREET
ELLE INSIDER L.A. STYLE
columns date back all the way to 1972!”
(A line, incidentally, written by New York
City native Amy Heckerling.)
Thanks to erratic shooting schedules
with ample downtime between projects,
L.A. has never been a jacket-and-tie kind
of town. “It’s the only place where you go to
a yoga class at noon on a weekday and it’s
full,” says costume designer and stylist Sta-
cey Battat, who dreamed up costumes for
Sophia Coppola’s L.A.–based Bling Ring,
out next year. The act of not dressing up can
be its own marker of status. “There’s this
‘I’m so fabulous I can wear a Juicy sweatsuit
to the Ivy and still get a table’ thing,” says
Silver.
As for the red carpet, for a few glori-
ous decades, cult of personality was its
driving force; think of Barbra in her see-
through Arnold Scaasi pajamas at the
1969 Oscars; Kim Basinger in her Vic-
tor/Victoria-esque white satin dress (she
designed it herself) in 1990; or just about
every Bob Mackie concoction Cher ever
put on. That all changed in 1990, when
Jodie Foster announced an alliance with
Armani, putting her future fashion mo-
ments in the house’s ever-correct hands.
(Yes, stars had had relationships with
design houses in the past—Audrey Hep-
burn with Givenchy, for example—but
this was the first of the pared-down,
modern variety.) Others began to follow
Foster’s suit, and by the late ’90s, the celeb-
rity stylist was a Hollywood institution.
While the missteps became fewer and
fewer, “fashion became a lot safer,” says
Silver. Today, dressing in Los Angeles “is
calculated even when you’re going to the
supermarket.”
No one does an ode to L.A. style bet-
ter than Hollywood itself; picture Goldie
Hawn in a disco-ready backless black
sequined gown in Shampoo (1975) or the
chicly under stated Nina van Pallandt in
The Long Goodbye (“She definitely had that
Malibu thing going on,” says Rodriguez).
Next year we’ll have Battat’s Bling Ring
to add to the canon: Based on the real-
life story of a pack of criminal teens who
stole clothes from celebrities like Paris
and Lindsay, it depicts a specific (rabidly
overaccessorized) moment in fashion his-
tory when celebrity journalism reached
fever pitch. “Not our proudest,” says Silver.
The city’s easy-target lampoonability
aside, maybe the Woody Allens and Dor-
othy Parkers among us are just jealous. Af-
ter all, Malibu Barbie, with her elevator-
equipped dream house, pink Corvette,
and backyard pool, represented youth,
good looks, and unburdened optimism.
As Rodriguez puts it, “There’s nowhere
else in the world like it. L.A. is everyone’s
fantasy.” S
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BEACH
BUNNY
BEVERLY
BABE
1 Mi Vida Loca (1993) 2 Fergie (2005) 3 Sandra Bullock on The George Lopez Show (2009)
4 Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale (2005) 5 Kat Von D (2008)
1 Richard Gere and Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman (1990) 2 Candy and Tori Spelling (1986)
3 Alicia Silverstone in Clueless (1995) 4 Paris Hilton (2003) 5 Cast of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (2012)
1 Annette Funicello (1963) 2 Cheryl Tiegs (late ’70s) 3 Beach Blanket Bingo (1965) 4 Bo Derek in 10 (1979)
5 Sandra Dee in Gidget (1959) 6 Pamela Anderson in Baywatch (1992)
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146 www. e l l e. c o m
ALLEGRA COLLECTI ON
PINK GOLD SET WITH WHITE DIAMONDS
BOUTI QUE de GRI SOGONO
CRYSTALS AT CI TYCENTER
3720 LAS VEGAS BLVD SOUTH, LAS VEGAS, NV
( 702) 834- 6600
BOUTI QUE de GRI SOGONO
824 MADI SON AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY
( 212) 439- 4220
ABU DHABI
DUBAI
GENEVA
GSTAAD
KUWAI T
LAS VEGAS
LONDON
MOSCOW
NEW YORK
PARI S
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EDITED BY KATE LANPHEAR
more? elle.com/fashionfile
Alexander Wang
Let’s face it: Looking effortless can be lots
of work. For resort, fashion finds new ways
to strike that balance between carefree
and careless. Take these slouchy Alexander
Wang trousers with matching vest—perfect
for the on-the-go city slicker
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE
Stamped-leather apron vest, $925, wool pants, $490, printed leather boots, $895, all,
ALEXANDER WANG, at Alexander Wang, NYC. Ayers snakeskin bag, VALENTINO GARAVANI,
$4,395, visit valentino.com. Mother-of-pearl charm bracelet, HOUSE OF LAVANDE, $395, call
561-802-3737
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AND MORE… FLIRTY FLORALS, PUNCHY PAISLEYS, EDITED BY KATE LANPHEAR
moore oo ? elle.com/fashionfile ?
Alexander Wang
Let’s face it: Looking effortless can be lots
of work. For resort, fashion finds new ways
to strike that balance between carefree
and careless. Take these slouchy Alexander
Wang trousers with matching vest— tt perfect
for the on-the-go city slicker
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE
Stamped-leather apron vest, $925, wool pants, $490, printed leather boots, $895, all,
ALEXANDER WANG, at Alexander Wang, NYC. Ayers snakeskin bag, VALENTINO GARAVANI,
$4,395, visit valentino.com. Mother-of-pearl charm bracelet, HOUSE OF LAVANDE, $395, call
561-802-3737
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AAAAAAANND MMORE… FLIRTY FLORALS, PUNCHY PAISLEEYYSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS, , ,
Valentino Garavani
Alexander Wang
www. e l l e. c o m 155
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS
LANVIN
ELLE FASHIONTREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDS
LANV LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL IN
STRING
THEORY
Whether on boots, belts, or
bags, long laces give a look the
kind of outlaw vibe you’ll want
to wear to shreds
1. One-of-a-kind sterling silver and
brass necklace with silk and vintage
Japanese beads, ALYSS A NORTON,
$550, visit alyssanorton.com |
2. Leather bag, BRIAN ATWOOD,
$2,325, at Brian Atwood, NYC |
3. Zebra opal and diamond
earrings, KIMBERLY MCDONALD,
price on request, visit kimberly
mcdonald.com | 4. Python belt,
SALVATORE FERRAGAMO, $2,050, call
800- 628-8916 | 5. Leather, python,
and lizard sandal, REED KRAKOFF,
$1,195, call 877-733-3525 |
Model at right wears: Silk cargo
jacket, $2,450, crochet skirt, price
on request, python bag, $2,200,
python belt, price on request,
python boots, price on request,
all, SALVATORE FERRAGAMO, at
Salvatore Ferragamo boutiques
nationwide. Enamel needlepoint
earrings, A PEACE TREATY, $90,
visit apeacetreaty.com. Pyrite bead
bracelet, SYDNEY EVAN, $750, visit
sydneyevan.com
2. Brian Atwood
4. Salvatore Ferragamo
1. Alyssa Norton
d Atwoo
erragamo ore Fe
5. Reed Krakoff 5. Reed Krakoff
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156 www. e l l e. c o m
LONGCHAMP READY TO WEAR AND ACCESSORI ES
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ELLE FASHIONTRENDS
PETERSOM
BOHEMIAN
RHAPSODY
1. Crystal-embroidered pouch,
GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI, price
on request, collection at Bergdorf
Goodman, NYC | 2. Sapphire and
amethyst earrings, M.C.L BY MATTHEW
CAMPBELL LAURENZA, $890, visit
mcldesign.net | 3. Leather wedge,
TORY BURCH, $375, collection at
select Nordstrom stores nationwide |
4. Embellished bracelets, LANVIN,
$1,990 each, collection at Stanley
Korshak, Dallas | Model at left wears:
Caddis silk jacket, $2,590, satin
blouse, $2,185, satin trousers, $2,265,
leather open-toe boots, $1,950, all,
GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI, collection
at select Barneys New York stores
nationwide. Leather waist-tie belt,
LINEA PELLE COLLECTION, $187, visit
lineapelle.com. Jade bead bracelets
with diamonds, SYDNEY EVAN, $1,190
each, visit sydneyevan.com. Carved
horn-shape bracelet, A PEACE TREATY,
$200, visit apeacetreaty.com
Eclectic, straight-from-the-
bazaar pieces get luxed up
with sharp silhouettes and
dazzling stones
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GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO
on request, collection a
Goodman, NYC | 2. Sa
amethyst earrings, M.C.
CAMPBELL LAURENZA, $
mcldesign.net | 3. Leat
TORY BURCH, $375, coll
select Nordstrom stores
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$1,990 each, collection
Korshak, Dallas | Mod
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blouse, $2,185, satin tro
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GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO
at select Barneys New Y
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LINEA PELLE COLLECTIO
lineapelle.com. Jade be
with diamonds, SYDNEY
each, visit sydneyevan.
horn-shape bracelet, A P
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2. M.C.L by Matthew Campbell Laurenza
1. Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci
3. Tory Burch
4. Lanvin
158 www. e l l e. c o m
jbrandjeans.com
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS
CHANEL
1. Silk twill blouse, $595, scarf, $190, both, SPORTMAX, call 212-674-
1817 | 2. Yellow gold and platinum ring set with enamel and diamonds,
DAVID WEBB, price on request, visit davidwebb.com | 3. Checkered belt,
GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI, $1,335, collection at Bergdorf Goodman,
NYC | 4. Woven-leather wedge with chain-link detail, SERGIO ROSSI,
$1,340, call 305-864-3643 | 5. Lambskin bag, CHANEL, price on request,
call 800-550-0005 | Model at left wears: Embroidered silk jacket, price
on request, silk shirt, $1,578, cotton pants, $1,900, all, BALMAIN, visit
balmain.com. Woven belt, $1,180, lace oxfords, $1,595, both, GIVENCHY
BY RICCARDO TISCI, collection at Barneys New York. Brass and enamel
earrings, A PEACE TREATY, $160, visit apeacetreaty.com. Leather knot
bracelet, BALENCIAGA BY NICOLAS GHESQUIÈRE, price on request, call
212-206-0872. Padlock ring, EDDIE BORGO, $350, visit harveynichols
.com. Leather and suede bag, ROGER VIVIER, $3,100, call 212-861-5371.
Socks, HUE, $7, visit hue.com
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ELLE FASHION
1. Silk twill blouse, $
1817 | 2. Yellow gold
DAVID WEBB, price on
GIVENCHY BY RICCARD
NYC | 4. Woven-leath
$1,340, call 305-864
call 800-550-0005 | M
on request, silk shirt,
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BY RICCARDO TISCI, co
earrings, A PEACE TRE
bracelet, BALENCIAGA
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NTRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDSSS
5. Chanel
4. Sergio Rossi
3. Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci
1. Sportmax
2. David Webb
With eye-catching
checks and stripes,
black and white make
a rockin’ statement
CHECK
MATE
160 www. e l l e. c o m
REDI SCOVER YOUR HAI R’S NATURAL BEAUTY
Moroccanoil hair care sold exclusively in salons | www.moroccanoil.com
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS
6. Donna Karan New York
FRANCESCO
SCOGNAMIGLIO
GILT
GROUP
High-shine fabrics and
golden accessories add
disco elegance to sleek
separates
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ELLE FASHHIONTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
High-shinne fabrics and
golden aaccessories add
disco elegance to sleek
separatees
1. Resin and crystal earrings, GUCCI , $695, visit gucci.com | 2. Sunglasses, ANNA-KARIN KARLSSON, $998, collection at Gregory’s, Dallas |
3. Silk-blend pants, ELIZABETH AND JAMES, $365, collection at select Neiman Marcus stores nationwide | 4. Ring lizard shoulder bag,
MARCHESA, $3,995, collection at Jimmy’s, Brooklyn | 5. Jeweled belt, GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI, $4,550, collection at Bergdorf Goodman,
NYC | 6. Elastic wedge sandal, DONNA KARAN NEW YORK, $1,195, call 800-231- 0884 | Model at left wears: Jacquard coat, $3,695, panne velvet
pants, $3,495, leather belt, $295, all, MICHAEL KORS, call 866-709-KORS. Cotton-blend top, THE ROW, price on request, visit therow.com
6. Donna Karan New York
1. Gucci
2. Anna-Karin Karlsson
4. Marchesa
3. Elizabeth and James
5. Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci
164 www. e l l e. c o m
KATIE HOLMES wears H.STERN JEWELRY
Fifth Avenue, New York l Crystals at CityCenter, Las Vegas l Village of Merrick Park, Coral Gables
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS NDS
VALENTINO
WILD
CARD
1. Leopard-print jelly sandal, JIMMY CHOO , $250, visit jimmychoo.com | 2. Elaphe snakeskin
and leather pump, NICHOLAS KIRKWOOD, $825, call 646-559-5239 | 3. Silk scarf, LOUIS
VUITTON, $780, call 866-VUITTON | 4. Printed fabric bag, VALENTINO GARAVANI, price on
request, visit valentino.com | 5. Resin bracelets, SONIA RYKIEL, $365 each, collection at Kirna
Zabête, NYC | Model at right wears: Jacquard jacket, price on request, skirt, $510, cotton-
blend dress, $435, lace-up boots, price on request, all, KENZO, visit kenzo.com. Sunglasses,
MOSLEY TRIBES, $220, at Oliver Peoples, NYC. Diamond, pearl, and African bead charm
bracelets, THE WOODS FINE JEWELRY, $4,400 each, at Vermillion, Raleigh, NC. Leather bag,
ALEXANDER WANG, $925, at Alexander Wang, NYC
The season’s animal
print: leopard spots in
a brighter-than-bright
rainbow of punchy hues
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2. Nicholas Kirkwood
3. Louis Vuitton
5. Sonia Rykiel
1. Jimmy Choo
, $250, visit jimm mychoo.com | 2. Elaphe sna
, $825, call 646-559--5239 | 3. Silk scarf, LOUIS
4. Printed fabric bag, VALENTINO GARAVANI, pri
racelets, SONIA RYKIEL L, $365 each, collection at
acquard jacket, price oon request, skirt, $510, co
n request, all, KENZO, vvisit kenzo.com. Sunglas
s, NYC. Diamond, peaarl, and African bead ch
400 each, at Vermillionn, Raleigh, NC. Leathe
Wang, NYC
d rkwoood
4. Valentino Garavani
166 www. e l l e. c o m
ZAC POSEN
AVAILABLE IN THE MAXIMILIAN FUR SALON
AT BLOOMINGDALE’S, SELECT STORES.
Maximilian.com
AVAILABLE IN THE FUR SALON AT SAKS FIFTH
AVENUE, SELECT STORES. Thefursalon.com
AVAILABLE IN CANADA EXCLUSIVELY AT
HOLT RENFREW FUR SALONS. 514.842.4459
advertisement
No matter your personal style, fur is the
one essential element that defines and
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KAUFMANFRANCO
AVAILABLE IN THE MAXIMILIAN FUR SALON
AT BLOOMINGDALE’S, SELECT STORES.
Maximilian.com
AVAILABLE IN THE FUR SALON AT SAKS FIFTH
AVENUE, SELECT STORES. Thefursalon.com
AVAILABLE IN CANADA EXCLUSIVELY AT
HOLT RENFREW FUR SALONS. 514.842.4459
advertisement
CARMEN MARC VALVO COUTURE
AVAILABLE IN THE MAXIMILIAN FUR SALON AT
BLOOMINGDALE’S, SELECT STORES.
Maximilian.com
AVAILABLE IN THE FUR SALON AT SAKS FIFTH
AVENUE, SELECT STORES. Thefursalon.com
AVAILABLE IN CANADA EXCLUSIVELY AT HOLT
RENFREW FUR SALONS. 514.842.4459
advertisement
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS EL E LE LEEEEEEE LEEEEEEEEEEEEE LEEEEEEEEE LLEEEE FA FA FA FA FA FFA FFA FFFA FA FA FAAAAAA FA FA FA FA FA FA FAA FA FAAAA FFA FA FAAAAA FA FAAAA FA FA FA FA FA FAAA FAAA FA FA FAA FA FA FA FA FAAAAAAAA FFFFFFAA FA FAAAAA FFA FA FAAAAAA FFA FA FAAAAAA FFA FA FAAAA FFFFFAAAAASH SH SH SH SSSSSHHHHHHHHHH SSSSHHHHHHHHHHHH SSH SSSSSSSSSHH SHHHH SHHH SSSSSSSSSSSSHHHHHHH SSSSSSSSSSSHHHHHHHHHH SH SSSSSSHHHHHHH SSSSSSSSHHHHHHHHHH SSS IO IO IO IO IO OOOOOOOOO IO OO IO OOOOOOOO IO OOOO IO OOO IO OOOOOO IO IO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IO OOOO IO OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO IO IO OO IIIOO IO OOO IOOOOO IIOOOOO IO IOOOOOO IIO OO IIIIO OOOOOOOO IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEENNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
GUCCI
Femme up retro ’70s
silhouettes and busybody
textures with bursts of
pretty pink
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1. Metal flower necklace, LANVIN , $2,280, collection at
Bergdorf Goodman, NYC | 2. Stone cuff, NINA RICCI, price
on request, visit ninaricci.com | 3. Sunglasses, FINEST
SEVEN, $936, visit finestseven.com | 4. Calfskin bag, THE
ROW, $1,950, visit net-a-porter.com | 5. Leather wedge,
BURBERRY, $995, visit burberry.com | Model at left wears:
Gabardine vest, $1,620, pants, $1,155, embroidered tunic,
$3,080, coated-raffia visor, $1,800, all, LOUIS VUITTON,
call 866-VUITTON. Printed pony-hair bag, VALENTINO
GARAVANI, $3,295, at Valentino boutiques nationwide
1. Lanvin
2. Nina Ricci
4. The Row
FIRST
BLUSH
3.FinestSeven
5.Burberry
170 www. e l l e. c o m
Visit Facebook.com/Chandon
for ways to sparkle
ELLE FASHIONTRENDS
2. Dior 2. Dior
ELLE FA FA FFA FA FA FAA FA FA FA FA FFA FA FA FA FFFAA FA FFA FA FFFA FA FA FA FFA FFA FFA FA FFFA FFA FA FA FA FA FFFFFFFA FA FA FFFA FA FA FFFA FA FFFA FFFA FFA FA FA FFFA FA FA FA FFFFA FFFFA FA FA FFFA FA FA FFFA FA FFFA FA FA FFFA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FFA FA FFA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FA FFA FA FA FA FA FFFA FA FAA FA FAAA FFA FFA FAAASHIONNTRENDS
3.1 PHILLIP LIM
THE NEW
GIRL
1.Pendantnecklace,NI NA RICCI, price on
request, visit ninaricci.com | 2. Sunglasses,
DIOR, $540, call 800-929-DIOR | 3. Crepe
pump, NICHOLAS KIRKWOOD, $1,495, at
Nicholas Kirkwood, NYC | 4. Printed
python bag, DIOR, price on request, call 800-
929-DIOR | Model at right wears: Printed
silk georgette dress, $3,500, wide-brim hat,
$435, link necklace, $995, leather belt, $245,
all, GUCCI, visit gucci.com. Water-snake
sandals, NINA RICCI, $1,250, collection at
Tender, Birmingham, MI
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Isn’t she lovely? Have
a prespring fling with
delicate florals and
floaty butterflies
1. Nina Ricci
3. Nicholas Kirkwood
4. Dior
|
172 www. e l l e. c o m
robertocoin.com Primavera Collection, 1-800-853-5958
ELLE FASHION EDITED BY KATE DAVIDSON HUDSON ACCESSORIES
HOT
SPOT
Get to the point this season
with perforated leather
and metal extras
Leather sandal, JIMMY CHOO, $995,
at Jimmy Choo boutiques nationwide
Leather bag, MARC JACOBS,
$1,795, similar styles at
Marc Jacobs, NYC
Leather iPad case, MARC JACOBS,
$895, collection at net-a-porter.com
Brass cuff, KELLY WEARSTLER,
$345, collection at shopbop.com
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174 www. e l l e. c o m
AVAILABLE AT FINE OPTICAL RETAILERS WORLDWIDE | 1-800-223-0180
ACCESSORIES ELLE FASHION
BOX
STEP
The new evening sandal?
Crystal-studded checkerboard
peep-toe booties are anything
but square
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Embellished leather ankle boot, BALMAIN,
price on request, visit balmain.com
Calfskin ankle boot, GIVENCHY BY RICCARDO TISCI,
$1,950, collection at Barneys New York
176 www. e l l e. c o m
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ROYAL
TREATMENT
Dress up the season’s military look
to the hilt with regal embroidery
and gold hardware
Gold and diamond necklace,
CARTIER, $3,820, at Cartier
boutiques nationwide
Lambskin handbag,
CHANEL, $3,500, at
select Chanel boutiques
nationwide
Embroidered lace ankle boot,
DOLCE & GABBANA, $2,275,
at select Dolce & Gabbana
boutiques nationwide
ELLE FASHION
178 www. e l l e. c o m
Y
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E TH
EM
. Y
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V
E TH
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N
O
T.
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Find an authorized retailer at ELLEJEWELRY.COM
ELLE FASHIONACCESSORIES
CORPS
VALUES
Rise above the rank and
file with revamped army/
navy classics like cartridge
bags, trench-ready boots,
and army belts
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Leather bag, PROENZA SCHOULER,
$2,250, at Proenza Schouler, NYC
Lace-up ankle boot,
GIUSEPPE ZANOTTI DESIGN,
$1,250, at Giuseppe
Zanotti Design, Bal
Harbour, FL
Leather cuff,
BALENCIAGA
BY NICOLAS
GHESQUIÈRE,
$555, collection at
Barneys New York
Striped nylon belt, ALTUZARRA, $290,
collection at Bergdorf Goodman, NYC
184 www. e l l e. c o m
©
2
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cal vinkleinf ragrances.com
dillard’s
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ACCESSORIES ELLE FASHION
SNAKE
CHARMERS
Python gets aggressive—in a good way—with
hard-edged grommets, studs, and sexy lacing
Python bag,
REED KRAKOFF, price on
request, call 877-733-3525
Leather grommet sandal,
SALVATORE FERRAGAMO, $1,390,
at Salvatore Ferragamo
boutiques nationwide
Studded python handbag,
TOD’S, price on request, at
Tod’s boutiques nationwide
186 www. e l l e. c o m
Exclusively presented by TERLATO WINES
THE MOMENT PERFECTED.
SantaMargherita.us
ELLE FASHIONACCESSORIES
Raffia sandal, LOUIS VUITTON,
price on request, at select Louis
Vuitton boutiques nationwide
Canvas shoulder bag
with leather trim,
GUCCI, $1,750, visit
gucci.com. Gold link
necklace, TOM FORD,
price on request, to
special order at Tom
Ford, NYC
Woven leather clutch,
BURBERRY, $1,395,
visit burberry.com
DREAM
WEAVE
This is no picnic: Raffia,
canvas, and woven leather
get a polished, officeworthy
spin with gold details and
equestrian motifs
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188 www. e l l e. c o m
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BACK TO
THE FUTURE
In Louis Vuitton’s new Voyage dans les Temps high-jewelry collection,
the shape of things to come is nothing short of spectacular
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L
ouis Vuitton, whose iconic luggage has
already racked up too many frequent-
flier points to count, is now setting its
sights on its longest journey yet with a
sleek range of fine jewelry titled Voyage
dans les Temps (translation: “time travel”).
Set in motion by Louis Vuitton Joaillerie
artistic director Lorenz Bäumer, the five-
suite collection will have pride of place at
the brand’s first watch and jewelry store—
and its High Jewelry Atelier—at Paris’ 23,
Place Vendôme.
On one bracelet, Bäumer offers a fresh
take on the house’s stylized four-point
flower motif with an ombré arrangement
of stones that achieves a futuristic fade.
And the collection’s crown jewel (pardon
the pun), dubbed La Galaxie Monogram,
is a white diamond and royal blue enamel
choker anchored by a 2.56-carat star-
cut diamond. At first glance it looks like
just another showstopping nineteenth-
century estate piece, but with the flick of
a clasp, it can be unhinged to form a pair
of ultramodern cuffs. For the travel-ready
LV woman, even fine jewelry has to multi-
task.—Naomi Rougeau
Pink gold necklace
with Akoya pearls,
diamond beads,
and brown and
white diamonds,
LOUIS VUITTON, price
on request, call
866-VUITTON
Above: Pink gold ring with brown and white diamonds,
LOUIS VUITTON, price on request, visit louisvuitton.com.
Below: White gold bracelet with marquise- and
brilliant-cut diamonds and ceramic powder,
LOUIS VUITTON, price on request, call 866-VUITTON
White gold and rose-cut diamond
brooch, LOUIS VUITTON, price on
request, at select Louis Vuitton
stores nationwide
Left: White gold
bracelet with
enamel, red spinels,
pink sapphires,
and diamonds,
LOUIS VUITTON,
price on request,
at select Louis
Vuitton stores
nationwide. Right:
White gold and
diamond earring
with spinel drop,
LOUIS VUITTON, price
on request, visit
louisvuitton.com
s, s
:
ce
192 www. e l l e. c o m
ELLE FASHIONACCESSORIES NEWS E FASHIONACCESSORIES NNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE NN WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
THE
CHANGEUP
From time-honored timepieces to ironic
add-ons, this season brands are reinventing
their trademarks to tempt us anew
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Diamond cluster necklace with yellow sapphire drop
set in platinum and yellow gold, HARRY WINSTON,
price on request, call 800-988-4110
SWISS MISS
It’s been more than a century since Eugène
Blum and his wife, Alice Lévy, launched
Ebel in the Alps-adjacent La Chaux-de-
Fonds. Now the brand’s new Onde collection,
inspired by the serene rippling effect of water,
updates the watchmaker’s clean aesthetic
with subtle details (a face in tigereye or lapis;
a rose gold body dotted with diamonds) and
reasserts two tenets: A beautiful watch never
goes out of style, and timing is everything.
COSTUME DRAMA
When Kate Hudson clasped the “Isadora” around her
neck in 2003’s How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, audiences—
and Matthew McConaughey—marveled at its perfection.
Nearly a decade later, as lead sponsor of the Victoria
and Albert Museum’s “Hollywood Costume” exhibition
in London, Harry Winston re-creates its scene-stealing
diamond wreath with a whopping yellow sapphire drop.
Go ahead, ladies, frost yourselves!
Rose gold watch
with lapis lazuli
dial and diamonds,
rose gold watch
with tigereye dial
and diamonds,
both, EBEL, prices
on request, visit
ebel.com
Lotus lipstick cases, both,
EDDIE BORGO, $1,450 each,
at Halls, Kansas City, MO,
call 800- 624-4034
WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
to ironic
reinventing
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Rose gold watch
with lapis lazuli
dial and diamonds,
rose gold watch
with tigereye dial
and diamonds,
both, EBEL, prices
on request, visit
ebel.com
Lotus lipstick cases, both,
EDDIE BORGO, $1,450 each,
at Halls Kansas City MO
IN LIVING
COLOR
In homage to the Garden of Eden (and
its reptilian mascot), Eddie Borgo, whose
tough-girl jewelry has been beloved by
the Bowery set since 2009, expands his
offerings to include refreshingly fun
iridescent lipstick cases and hair ties
guaranteed to lure even the most hard-
edged loyalist over to the bright side.
194 www. e l l e. c o m
WORKBOOK ELLE FASHION
OFF SCRIPT
T HE WOMAN: Mara Brock Akil, 42, Los Angeles
T HE JOB: Cofounder, with her husband, Salim, of TV and film pro-
duction company Akil Productions. She created BET’s ratings-busting
comedy The Game and, most recently, coproduced the big-screen
musical-diva-drama reboot Sparkle, which she wrote and Salim di-
rected. From their office loft in L.A.’s neo-boho Venice, the writer-
producer splits her day among Skyping with her Atlanta-based show
staff, liaising with executives, and meeting potential talent for upcom-
ing projects. These days, though, she spends most of her time in the
writers’ room, perfecting the script for her upcoming hour-long BET
drama, Being Mary Jane, starring Gabrielle Union.
T HE UNI F ORM: Akil favors simplicity with some kick, pairing low-
key basics such as Rag & Bone boots, Mother jeans, and Steven Alan
button-downs with stop-and-stare items like a Balenciaga leather vest
or an Alexander McQueen tuxedo blazer.
T HE CHAL L E NGE : Strike the perfect balance between professionalism
and relaxed cool by melding fall’s most office-friendly separates.
—Allison P. Davis
An L.A.-based writer and producer amplifies
office basics in fall’s relaxed-chic workwear
Left: Cropped leather jacket, Burberry
Prorsum, $2,595, visit burberry
.com. Double-face rayon and viscose
dress, Alexander Wang, $695, at
Alexander Wang, NYC. Woven handbag,
Stella McCartney, $1,325, visit
stellamccartney.com. Suede sandals,
Gucci, $750, at select Gucci boutiques
nationwide. Her own jewelry. Right: Silk
blouse, Gucci, $695, visit gucci.com.
Suede handbag, Burberry Prorsum,
$2,195, visit burberry.com. Her own
pantsuit, shoes, and jewelry
Cotton seersucker blazer,
Burberry Prorsum, $1,595, visit
burberry.com. Cotton T-shirt,
Kain Label, $90, collection at
net-a-porter.com. Silk shorts, 3.1
Phillip Lim, $395, at 3.1 Phillip
Lim, NYC. Suede pumps, Jimmy
Choo, $795, at select Jimmy
Choo boutiques nationwide. Her
own jewelry
For make-or-
break industry
lunches, Akil
heads to her
favorite eatery,
Gjelina in L.A.’s
Venice. “When it’s
time to sell a new
project, I up my
fashion game to show
confidence.” TIP For
work, balance the
proportion of shorts
with a textured
blazer and a closed-
toe pump.
MONDAY
Aki l’s mot t o
for industry-
cocktail-party
dressing: “My friends
and I have a phrase
for what you wear
when it’s time to
look powerful and
confident: ‘Shazam!’ ”
TIP Rein in the overt
sexiness of a body-
con sheath with a
thick-heeled sandal
and a structured
leather jacket.
TUESDAY
“My cream
Paul Smit h
bl azer i s my
go-t o. I can wear it
wit h anyt hi ng and
everything.” TIP A
light-hued suit feels
less fussy when
paired with a soft
blouse in a neutral
tone. Try mauve,
and add texture
with a striped bag.
WEDNESDAY
196 www. e l l e. c o m
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WORKBOOK ELLE FASHION
OFFICE BASICS WITH ATTITUDE
“We work
out of a loft
on Abbot
Kinney—it’s an artsy
neighborhood, and I
can dress to suit my
bohemian side.”
TIP Riff on the pants-
blazer uniform by
playing with fabrics:
Luxe velvet and
pleated jersey make a
cool statement.
THURSDAY
“I always
st art my day
as a mot her:
I get up and cook
breakf ast for my
t wo boys before I do
anyt hi ng el se.” TIP
A modernist caftan
goes from breakfast
at home to a low-key
L.A. workday.
FRIDAY
+
1
MOTO JACKET
TO ADD SOME
PUNCH
ICE BASIC SS S CC
2. Printed python clutch,
Chloé, $2,105, at Chloé
boutiques nationwide
5. Velvet and satin pants, Bebe,
$119, at Bebe stores nationwide
4. Silk top, Nicole Miller Artelier,
$220, visit nicolemiller.com
3. Alligator-embossed leather
sandal, Stuart Weitzman, $375,
at Stuart Weitzman, NYC
6. Faux-leather jacket, 2B
Bebe, $50, visit 2bstores.com
1. Hand-engraved gold ring, Zoë Chicco,
$1,276, visit zoechicco.com
Left: Velvet blazer, Jason Wu, $1,795, visit
jasonwustudio.com. Cotton T-shirt, Kain Label, $84,
collection at Sam and Lilli, Houston. Viscose jersey
pants, Emporio Armani, $595, at select Emporio
Armani boutiques nationwide. Her own jewelry,
shoes. Right: Viscose-blend dress, Acne, $570, visit
acnestudios.com. Her own jewelry
198 www. e l l e. c o m
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Tacori.com MICHAEL C. FINA New York, NY 212 557 2500 | BARIBAULT JEWELERS Glastonbury, CT 860 633 1727 | H.L. GROSS & BRO. Garden City, NY 516 747 6666
RUMANOFF’S FINE JEWELRY Hamden, CT 203 230 1199 | SISTERS JEWELRY Boston, MA 617 720 4983 | BARMAKIAN JEWELERS Framingham, MA 508 872 5454
CARTER’S DIAMONDS AND FINE JEWELRY Danvers, MA 978 646 8811 | NASER DIAMONDS New Bedford, NH 603 742 5861 | JAY ROBERTS JEWELERS Marlton, NJ 888 828 8463
ROMAN JEWELERS Flemington, Bridgewater Commons Mall, NJ romanjewelers.com | GARY MICHAELS FINE JEWELRY Manalapan, NJ 732 577 1030
BERNIE ROBBINS FINE JEWELERS New Jersey/Pennsylvania 800 BERNIE R | CORNELL’S JEWELERS Rochester, NY 800 537 8637 | REEDS JEWELERS Amherst, Dewitt NY/Erie, PA 800 733 3724
GERALD PETERS GOLD MINE Staten Island, NY 718 370 2850
NEW YORK
Designer Chris Benz is not one
to shy away from color (as his
own rainbow-hued tresses
boldly attest), so when it came
to accessorizing his resort looks,
he collaborated with Aspen-
based line The Woods on outsize
jewelry in punchy shades—just
the thing to top off his tropical
ensembles. chris-benz.com
EDITED BY ANNE SLOWEY DESIGNERS
,
SHOPS
,
HOT SPOTS
,
AND MORE…
more? elle.com/fashionfile
LOS ANGELES
California architect Barbara
Bestor, author of the influential
book Bohemian Modern, whose
thumbprint can be seen all
over L.A., has designed a line of
giftware for the collective SoLA
that ranges from iPhone cases
to glassware—all inspired by the
city she loves. solaltd.com
LOS ANGELES
Actress/artist turned fashion
designer Katie Nehra is known
for the tough biker jackets she
creates for her contemporary
label, Simone. Now Nehra
is adding monogrammable
varsity jackets (albeit shrunken,
fashion-forward versions) to the
mix. simonecollection.com
CANNES
The days of his legendary parties
may be long over, but you can
still take a peek into Pierre
Cardin’s mod south of France
residence, Le Palais Bulles,
thanks to a new tome by Jean-
Pascal Hesse. assouline.com
NEW YORK
Whether or not you catch any
waves, you’ll attract plenty of
glances in Cynthia Rowley’s
psychedelic paneled wet
suit. The designer and avid
boarder has found the perfect
way to channel the surf-chic
fashion craze of the moment.
cynthiarowley.com
WE HEAR…Style icon Isabella Rossellini lends a talented, if quirky, hand to Bulgari this fall with an elegant
range of handbags, lined with drawings of the animals featured in her award-winning Green Porno films.// eBay’s
got your holiday shopping needs covered with an affordable (all items $50–$100) range of clothing, accessories, and
housewares designed by Chris Benz, Jonathan Adler, and others. // Bottled water just got a lot chicer: Diane von
Furstenberg joins the likes of Jean Paul Gaultier and Christian Lacroix in collaborating with Evian.
SYDNEY
Having gained countless
industry accolades for his
vivid prints and streamlined
aesthetic, Aussie designer
Josh Goot has finally added
his first-ever resort collection.
joshgoot.com
LONDON
Stop by gallerist David
Zwirner’s new Annabelle
Selldorf–revamped outpost
in Mayfair (Zwirner’s first
European location) to view the
inaugural exhibition, featuring
the paintings of contemporary
artist Luc Tuymans (above,
his self-portrait Me, 2011).
davidzwirner.com
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ELLE FASHIONNEW DESIGNER
C
hevy Chase movies don’t typically
inspire fashion revelations, but when
Matthew Edelstein glimpsed Chris-
tie Brinkley’s blink-and-you’ll-miss-it
cameo as “The Girl in the Ferrari” in the
1983 favorite National Lampoon’s Vacation,
the designer had what you might call an
aha moment.
The supermodel was wearing a little
white dress, Edelstein recalls raptly.
“It’s belted, and it’s just this American
[look]. That was the starting point, actu-
ally, for this dress,” the 37-year-old says,
pointing out a smocklike white frock that’s
a dead ringer for Brinkley’s. Behind him,
mood boards papered with pictures of
late-’70s and early-’80s post-punkers the
Au Pairs and old-school hip-hop trio De
La Soul attest to the designer’s pop culture
obsession. “Being a visually inclined per-
son, you have all these influences rattling
around in your brain from your entire life,
from your career and from your child-
hood,” he says. “But I take all these refer-
ences and ideas from the past and try to
make them [reflective] of this time.”
Growing up in Bellingham, Washing-
ton, Edelstein always envisioned himself
becoming a designer: “The only thing
you know when you grow up in a small
town and you want to be in fashion is to
be a fashion designer. So I always thought
that was going to be my path.” But as it
turned out, the path was a bit more
peripatetic than that. After studying
fashion design at Parsons in New
York City, he realized that the tra-
ditional approach to design—with
its focus on patternmaking and cutting—
“was absolutely not the right fit. The way
that I approach fashion involves thinking
about things in a different way,” drawing
from entertainment and street style in the
same manner a stylist would. He ended up
switching to the school’s design marketing
program; stints as a fashion editor at W,
Harper’s Bazaar, and Details and as a stylist
at J.Crew, working under CEO and mar-
keting whiz Mickey
Drexler, followed.
After 14 years in
the industry, Edel-
stein came down
with an acute case of
fashion fatigue. He
had seen so many over-the-top creations
parading down the runway that he be-
came drawn to the idea of “making clothes
that can exist in the real world rather than
these fashion flights of fancy,” he says. “I
don’t want to make an art piece. I want to
do a cool shirt in a new way.”
When designing the uniform-inspired
Friends & Associates debut collection for
resort (“I’m always thinking, Why can’t
women have a uniform of their own?”),
Edelstein piled on the references. After
researching cheerleader skirts, military
garb, Girl Scout attire, and even judo
suits, “I threw it into a blender and tossed
it all together [and] gave it new propor-
tions and fun colors.” The result: an in-
nocently flirtatious mix of peppy rah-rah
skirts, folded trapunto-sleeve jumpsuits
with contrasting pockets, and zippy ath-
letic shorts, accessorized with flower-
bedecked baseball caps—a thoroughly
adult take on play clothes, or, perhaps,
a chicer version of Garanimals. (In fact,
when I tell him that the late-’80s vibe of
the collection reminds me of something,
he quips, “It’s our childhood—that’s prob-
ably what it reminds you of.”)
The 80-piece lineup will be sold on his
website, Friendshop.us. At $100 to $300,
each piece in the collection rings in at a
contemporary price point: “In my opin-
ion, [the pieces] are the kind of thing you
should want to buy a few of. Like yummy
candy or fruit.” That sense of playfulness
even extends to the collection’s name: “I
wanted it to be a little bit of a funny take
on a law or an accounting firm name—it’s
Friends for fun, and Associates because we
mean business!”
PLAYTIME
Optimists, take note: The brand-new line Friends & Associates is
bringing cheerful back. By Véronique Hyland
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poppy pieces from
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202 www. e l l e. c o m
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NEWS ELLE FASHION
R
ogan Gregory is sporting a tattered flannel shirt: not “fash-
ion” tattered—delicately roughed up with a cheese-grater-
like implement on some factory floor in the interest of getting
that weathered look—but destroyed. It’s basically two sleeves
held together by some thread. Still, in the context of East Hamp-
ton’s Springs Farmers Market, the turquoise-and-black hank of
fabric qualifies as formal. The 34-year-old designer of Rogan
and Loomstate is there, with chef (and former model) Caitlyn
Levin, to gather armfuls of produce for a raw-food party he and
his business partner, Scott Mackinlay-Hahn, 32, are throwing for
an eclectic group of like-minded friends. The mood is as casual as
their attire, though they’re hoping the pouring rain lets up.
Tonight they’ll be celebrating the sustainable-clothing
company’s latest ecological venture—the 321 line of reversible
basics—and its collaboration with the nonprofit Azuero Earth
Project, which promotes biodiversity in Panama. (For resort,
the label emblazoned three organic cotton and Tencel T-shirts
with the organization’s monkey logo; the proceeds will benefit
the project.) The setting: a stunning house belonging to the char-
ity’s cofounder Edwina von Gal, a landscape designer who has
worked with Frank Gehry and Maya Lin
and who counts Calvin Klein and Larry
Gagosian as personal clients. Gregory met
Von Gal not through the typical fashion
channels, but rather through his sister, Tre-
maine, a primatologist who works in Pan-
ama. The project immediately appealed to
Gregory’s philanthropic instincts. “Edwina
understands the ecological, scientific stuff
required to preserve what exists down in
the Azuero,” the designer says. “But I really
connect with her on the aesthetic things,
too.” They have something else in common:
Gregory has been coming to nearby Mon-
tauk for the past 15 years, and Von Gal jetti-
soned her Manhattan apartment nine years
ago in favor of Hamptons living. Her digs
provided the backdrop for Loomstate’s re-
sort lookbook shoot, with models sunning themselves on the deck.
“There’s a saying in the landscape industry,” Von Gal says.
RAW POWER
Loomstate’s Rogan Gregory welcomes the eco-chic
crowd for a sustainable Hamptons fete.
By Véronique Hyland
GREAT OUTDOORS (Top) The
group on Von Gal’s
deck; her East
Hampton home;
(bottom) Gregory by
the fireplace;
heading out on a
clam dig; Shelby
Meade and Murphy
chat with Mackinlay-
Hahn; Levin at the
farmers market;
(above) a Loomstate
bag for resort
P
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204 www. e l l e. c o m
W
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WATClES
NEWS ELLE FASHION
“‘Sleep, creep, leap.’ When you first plant
a job, the first year nothing seems to
happen. The second year you see some
growth. And then the third year it ex-
plodes.” It would seem the eight-year-old
brand is in the midst of such a transforma-
tion: Though it has enjoyed popularity
among the eco-cognoscenti for some time,
Loomstate is now booming. In addition to
launching the 321 line, it has added bags
for resort and partnered with Chipotle on
eco-friendly uniforms.
Nevertheless, Gregory and Mackinlay-
Hahn certainly aren’t playing the parts
of high-powered fashion insiders. In fact,
they’re headed out on Von Gal’s miniscule
motorboat to dive for clams (tonight’s hors
d’oeuvre of choice), with the help of a rake.
Gregory’s dog, Chancho, comes along for
the ride, wearing a canine-size life vest.
By 4 P.M. the mollusks have been neatly
arranged on a tray, and the guests begin
arriving. Model and longtime Loomstate
supporter Carolyn Murphy kicks off her
three-inch Lanvin wedges on the wooden
deck and wanders around barefoot, chat-
ting with Peter Glatzer, a film producer
and cofounder of SHFT, a digital-media
platform that focuses on sustainability.
(Appropriately enough, Murphy says, her
daughter, Dylan, is at home making kale
chips.) While guests snack on fresh veg-
gies and toss tennis balls for Chancho,
Mackinlay-Hahn has them go around in
a circle, first-day-of-school style, to talk
about their green activism. The group has
plenty of ecological bona fides, whether
they be building eco-friendly structures
(Rushmeyer’s interior designer Rob
McKinley) or buying sustainable goods
(Amazon fashion consultant Julie Gilhart).
As Mackinlay-Hahn puts it, “The peo-
ple who are here are relevant in some way,
in terms of style and food and design. [It’s
not] like the food conversation is over here
and the green fashion thing is over there.”
And, befitting the theme, each guest is sent
home with some very atypical fashion-
event loot: a bunch of radishes, a clutch of
asparagus, or—why not?—some kale for
the road.
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY (Top)
Scenes from the
party; (center) raw
treats on the menu;
(bottom) the living
room, a Loomstate
T-shirt for Azuero
Earth Project, Levin
on the deck, an image
from Loomstate 321’s
resort lookbook, shot
at Von Gal’s home
206 www. e l l e. c o m
About
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WHERE FASHION AND BEAUTY MEET.
SHOP THE ELLE

CONTEMPORARY AND
COSMETICS COLLECTIONS EXCLUSIVELY
IN STORE AND AT KOHLS.COM/ELLE
LEFT: FAUX LEATHER JACKET, $72
SHIRRED TANK, $30; CORDUROY PANT, $48
BLOCK HEEL BOOT, $89.99; HOOP EARRINGS, $28.
RIGHT: DOLMAN SWEATER, $50
CORDUROY PANT, $48; NECKLACE, $32
HOOP EARRINGS, $28.
Model is wearing lipstick in shade 01, $16
eye shadow in shade 07, $16
blush in shade 03, $16
nail polish in Curtain Call, $10.
Styles may vary by store. ELLE

is a trademark owned by
HACHETTE FILIPACCHI PRESSE SA, Paris, France.
EDITED BY JOANN PAILEY RESORT’S TOP DRESSES, ACCESSORIES, AND MORE…
more? elle.com/fashionfile
INSPIRED
DESIGN
moore oo ? elle.com/fashionfile ?
E
ver marvel at designers’ ability to churn out
fresh, directional ideas season after season?
This month, we take a peek into the inspira-
tions behind eight of our favorite resort collec-
tions, to trace the creative processes that started
percolating long before the first patterns were ever
cut. Whether you’re a downtown-dwelling gal-
lerina devoted to artful minimalism or a globe-
trotting bohemian with a more-is-more view on
accessorizing—and we think either one would fall
for these hand-painted Roger Vivier silk pumps,
inspired by designer Bruno Frisoni’s own vaca-
tion snap of a Tangier sunset—we’re confi-
dent that the following pages will inspire
style ideas all your own.
Limited-edition hand-painted silk pumps,
ROGER VIVIER, $2,525, to special order
only, call 212-861-5371
Frisoni’s shot of
Tangier, and the fancy
footwork it inspired
www. e l l e. c o m 213
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REED KRAKOFF
REED KRAKOFF
EDITOR’S PICKS DITOR’S PICK
Krakoff, a seasoned
collector whose home
boasts a trio of François-
Xavier and Claude
Lalanne sheep sculptures
and museum-worthy
Joris Laarman furniture,
frequently looks to
galleries for inspiration.
This season, the wide
blue expanse of abstract
expressionist Robert
Motherwell’s “Open”
series caught his eye, as
did the stripes of painter
Sean Scully. Add to
that a few streetwise
influences —traffic-cone
orange; the gleam of a
bicycle chain—and you
get wearable art: color-
block paillettes and high-
shine accessories.
COLOR THEORY
Leather shorts, REED KRAKOFF,
$1,590, call 877-733-3525
Wool blazer, REED KRAKOFF,
$1,490, call 877-733-3525
Gold cuff, REED KRAKOFF, price on
request, call 877-733-3525
Raffia skirt, REED KRAKOFF,
$1,590, call 877-733-3525
Leather sandal, REED KRAKOFF,
$795, call 877-733-3525
Leather hobo bag,
REED KRAKOFF, $1,290,
call 877-733-3525
Leather and patent leather
pump, REED KRAKOFF, $550,
call 877-733-3525
Viscose jersey
skirt, REED
KRAKOFF, $690,
call 877-733-3525
Lace top, REED
KRAKOFF, $890,
call 877-733-
3525
Pendant
necklace, REED
KRAKOFF, $990,
call 877-733-
3525
Cobra snakeskin
wristlet, REED
KRAKOFF, price
on request, call
877-733-3525
Alligator clutch, REED
KRAKOFF, price on request,
call 877-733-3525
Lace blouse, REED
KRAKOFF, $1,190,
call 877-733-3525
Chain-mail dress,
REED KRAKOFF,
price on request,
call 877-733-3525
Viscose jacket, REED
KRAKOFF, $1,490,
call 877-733-3525
ELLE SHOPS
214 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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Available at Nordstrom silverjeans.com
EDITOR’S PICKS
BALMAIN
BALMAIN
ED
BALMAIN
In his fourth collection
for Balmain, Olivier
Rousteing took the
67-year-old French
house to ’80s-era Miami,
reveling in pastel-tinted
Americana—flashy-
grilled Caddies and deco
beachfront architecture—
to turn out sorbet-hued
suiting, pieceworked
leathers, jeweled belts,
and zipper details sure
to make his customer the
hottest thing on Ocean
Drive. His white cotton-
and-silk halterdress, with
its abbreviated hemline,
will put the spotlight on
any modern-day Marilyn.
MIAMI
RHAPSODY
Cotton and silk
dress, BALMAIN,
$4,800, collection
at Maxfield, L.A.
Printed cotton jeans,
BALMAIN, $2,050,
collection at Neiman
Marcus stores nationwide
Viscose shirt, BALMAIN,
$1,400, collection at Barneys
New York stores nationwide.
Cotton denim jacket, BALMAIN,
$2,400, collection at
bergdorfgoodman.com
Leather belt, BALMAIN, $1,900,
collection at Maxfield, L.A.
Lambskin dress, BALMAIN, price on request,
collection at Bergdorf Goodman, NYC.
Metallic leather belt, BALMAIN, $850,
collection at Barneys New York
Silk pants, BALMAIN,
$2,400 each, collection
at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
Silk dress, BALMAIN, price
on request, collection at
Barneys New York
Left: Striped linen and cotton
jacket, BALMAIN, $3,800,
collection at Bergdorf
Goodman, NYC. Above:
Leather clutch, BALMAIN,
$2,050, collection at
barneys.com
Printed sweater, BALMAIN, $580,
collection at Maxfield, L.A.
Viscose skirt, BALMAIN, $830,
collection at barneys.com
ELLE SHOPS
216 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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KOHLS.COM
MARC JACOBS
MARC JACOBS
MARC JACOBS SS
EDITOR’S PICKS
NEON DREAM
Not unlike his
chameleonesque muse
and friend Cindy
Sherman, Jacobs can
always find his own wry
take on a pop-culture
moment. In addition to
Sherman’s 2003–2004
clown series—equal
parts endearing and
terrifying—the designer
delved into Sgt. Pepper–
era psychedelia in a
fun-house palette of tinted
roses. In gleefully garish
checkerboard patterns (on
cashmere) and field-of-
flowers prints (on satin),
these clothes may look
lighthearted, but they feel
totally luxe.
Lurex jacquard pants,
MARC JACOBS, $850,
visit marcjacobs.com
Satin crepe dress,
MARC JACOBS, $2,800,
at Marc Jacobs, NYC
Neoprene, rubber, and leather loafer, MARC
JACOBS, $995, visit marcjacobs.com
Cotton poplin skirt,
MARC JACOBS, $595,
at Marc Jacobs, NYC
Double-face wool coat,
MARC JACOBS, $2,800,
visit marcjacobs.com
Sequined dress, MARC
JACOBS, $3,900, at
Marc Jacobs, NYC
Cashmere polo shirts,
both, MARC JACOBS,
prices on request, call
212-343-1490
Leather handbag, MARC
JACOBS, $2,495, collection
at net-a-porter.com
Above: Satin crepe
dress, MARC JACOBS,
$995, at Marc
Jacobs, NYC. Right:
Crepe pants, MARC
JACOBS, $795, visit
marcjacobs.com
Sunglasses, MARC JACOBS, price on
request, visit marcjacobs.com
Sequined tweed jacket, MARC
JACOBS, $1,800, at Marc
Jacobs, NYC
Canvas clutch, MARC JACOBS,
price on request, similar styles
at Marc Jacobs, NYC
ELLE SHOPS
218 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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heartsonfire.com
COPLEY
collection
the
Lincroft Village Jewelers, Lincroft, NJ - Lincroftvillagejewelers.com | Verge Fine Jewelry, Hingham, MA - Vergejewelry.com | Baxter’s Fine Jewelry, Warwick, RI - Baxtersjewelry.com
Kasson Jewelers of Southport, Southport, CT - Kassonjewelers.com | Royal Jewelers, Andover, MA - Royaljewelers.com | Sterling Jewelers, Wethersfield, CT - Shopsterlingjewelers.com
Rumanoff’s Fine Jewelry, Hamden, CT - Rumanoffsfinejewelry.com | Adler’s Jewelers, Westfield, NJ - Adlersjewelers.com | Cornell’s Jewelers, Rochester, NY - Cornellsjewelers.com
Michaels Jewelers, 12 Connecticut Locations - Michaelsjewelers.com | Michael C. Fina, New York, NY - Michaelcfina.com | Jewelry Creations Inc., Dover, NH - Jewelrycreationsinc.com
Gerald Peters Goldmine, Staten Island, NY - Geraldpetersinc.com | Sachs Jewelers, Shrewsbury, MA - Sachsjewelers.com | Carter’s Fine Jewelry, Danvers, MA - Cartersdiamonds.com
EDITOR’S PICKS
AKRIS
ELLE SHOPS RESORT
AKRIS
2
Ever the minimalist,
Akris designer Albert
Kriemler takes his
design dictum to the
high seas with slinky
silks featuring close-up
shots of sparkling water
ripples and reflections.
Every season, Kriemler
chooses a favorite image
to render as a print; for
resort, it is Louis Tinayre’s
1910 painting of Prince
Albert I of Monaco
helming his yacht, as
seen on Kriemler’s tunic
and tailored shorts. The
message is clear: For a
certain kind of woman,
the resort lifestyle is alive
and kicking. All aboard!
OPEN WATER
AKRIS
Silk georgette tunic
and tank top, AKRIS,
$1,350, collection
at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
Hand-crocheted knit coat,
AKRIS, $2,450, collection
at Neiman Marcus stores
nationwide
Wool jacket, AKRIS,
$3,990, collection
at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
Printed silk
shorts, AKRIS,
$895, collection
at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
Above: Double-face
cotton skirt, AKRIS,
$1,460, at Akris
boutiques nationwide.
Left: Silk microfiber
parka, AKRIS, $2,990,
collection at Saks
Fifth Avenue stores
nationwide
Wool pants, AKRIS,
$995, collection
at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
Leather jacket,
AKRIS, $3,990,
collection
at Neiman
Marcus stores
nationwide
Horsehair bag,
AKRIS, $4,400,
visit akris.ch
Ostrich handbag, AKRIS,
$4,400, visit akris.ch
Printed silk tunic,
AKRIS, $1,460,
collection at
Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide
220 www. e l l e. c o m
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vanit yfai rl i nger ie.com Modern Coverage Advanced Support Underwire T-Shirt Bra, Illumination
®
String Bikini
The Vanity Fair
®
Modern Coverage collection, with a lower neckline for just the right amount of coverage. Featuring
4-way stretch fabric, side support, and a classic Vanity Fair fit, it’s welcome news for today’s women and their wardrobes.
Find us on Facebook
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EDITOR’S PICKS ICKS
MARNI
EE
Marni’s Consuelo
Castiglioni, at the helm of
the brand for 18 years, is
the kind of ideas magpie
whose references never
read as overtly literal.
For resort, she translated
the western-meets–Times
Square look of 1969’s
Midnight Cowboy into a
fringe-free play on ’70s
sportswear through the
Marni art-school filter:
Color-theory patchworks,
fluttery embroidery, and
mixed-print pleats will
thrill her loyal smart-girl
fans. Castiglioni swapped
Jon Voight’s cowboy hat
for abstract floral jewelry
and high-shine heeled
loafers. (Kneesocks
optional.)
RIDING HIGH
MARNI
Leather jacket, MARNI, $3,280, at
Marni boutiques nationwide
Embroidered silk shirt, MARNI,
$1,090, collection at net-a-
porter.com
Embroidered cotton coat,
MARNI, $2,500, collection
at neimanmarcus.com Embroidered leather
necklace, MARNI, $880,
visit marni.com
Cotton dress, MARNI, $1,260,
collection at Saks Fifth
Avenue stores nationwide
Wool cardigan, MARNI,
$860, collection at
Saks Fifth Avenue
stores nationwide
Patent leather pump,
MARNI, $810, at Marni
boutiques nationwide
Leather handbag,
MARNI, $1,760, collection
at Nordstrom stores
nationwide
Drop earrings, MARNI,
$530, visit marni.com
Wool cardigan, MARNI,
$1,120, collection at
neimanmarcus.com
Left: Printed cotton shirt, MARNI,
$740, collection at Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide. Below: Printed
silk skirt, MARNI, $1,900, collection at
neimanmarcus.com
Wool trousers, MARNI,
$930, at Marni boutiques
nationwide
ELLE SHOPS
222 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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EDITOR’S PICKS
MICHAEL KORS
ELLE SHOPS RESORT
MICHAEL KORS
For the latest stop on
the Kors woman’s
jet-set world tour, the
designer whisked away
his rotating cast of real
and imagined royals
on a crystal-studded,
ikat-printed yacht trip
on the shimmering blue
Bosporus. Zeroing in on
the relaxed glamour of
Italian socialite Bianca
Brandolini d’Adda’s
minidress-and-sandals
style, the designer served
up jeweled flats, cropped
leather shiftdresses, and
cashmere tees—just
what you need for his
final destination, exotic
Istanbul.
BYZANTINE
NIGHTS
Gold-tone bib
necklace, MICHAEL
KORS, $495, at
select Michael Kors
stores nationwide
Cracked-leather hobo, MICHAEL
KORS, $995, call 866-709-KORS
Python sandals,
MICHAEL KORS, $1,545,
at select Michael Kors
stores nationwide
Metallic jacquard pants,
MICHAEL KORS, $1,195, visit
michaelkors.com
Pebbled brocade jacket,
MICHAEL KORS, price on
request, at select Michael
Kors stores nationwide
Satin charmeuse
pants, MICHAEL KORS,
$795, at select
Michael Kors stores
nationwide
Crystal-beaded gold-tone
bracelets, MICHAEL KORS, $395
each, call 866-709-KORS
Satin charmeuse pullover, MICHAEL
KORS, $695, visit michaelkors.com
Leather shiftdress, $3,995, gold
chain belt, $425, both, MICHAEL
KORS, at select Michael Kors
stores nationwide
Left: Python belt, MICHAEL KORS, $850,
call 866-709-KORS. Right: Cotton utility
jacket, MICHAEL KORS, $1,495, at select
Michael Kors stores nationwide
Above: Stretch cotton shorts, MICHAEL
KORS, $695, visit michaelkors.com.
Below: Gold-studded leather clutch,
$795, sapphire-studded python clutch,
$1,495, both, MICHAEL KORS, at select
Michael Kors stores nationwide
Crystal-embellished
python clutch,
MICHAEL KORS, $1,395,
call 866-709-KORS
224 www. e l l e. c o m
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INTRODUCING PUCKER VODKA LEMONADE LUST
Mix 1.5 oz Pucker Vodka Lemonade Lust with 4.5 oz lemon-lime soda.
Pucker™ Flavored Vodka, 35% Alc./Vol. 100% Grain Neutral Spirits, ©2012 Fielding & Jones Ltd., Clermont, KY; Frankfort, KY
EDITOR’S PICKS
VERA WANG
A figure skater in her
youth, Wang has designed
custom costumes for the
likes of Nancy Kerrigan
and Michelle Kwan, and
knows her way around
body-conscious femininity
on and off the rink. For
resort, she combined her
love of lace (explored for
years in her flight-of-fancy
bridal collections) with a
palette borrowed from the
recent exhibition of John
Chamberlain sculptures at
New York’s Guggenheim
Museum and the airy,
warm-weather mood of
Barbados—turning out
enough ruching, tulle, and
high-shine detail to bring
out the performer in any
woman.
BLADE RUNNER
VERA WANG
Wool cardigan, VERA WANG COLLECTION,
price on request, at Vera Wang, NYC
Lace coat, VERA WANG
COLLECTION, $1,450,
call 212-382-2184
Wool pants with
lace paneling,
VERA WANG
COLLECTION, $595,
collection at Saks
Fifth Avenue, NYC
Ruched jersey
top, VERA WANG
COLLECTION,
$495, at Vera
Wang, NYC
Cotton poplin dress,
VERA WANG COLLECTION,
$750, at Vera Wang,
West Hollywood
Silk faille dress, VERA
WANG COLLECTION, $895,
at Vera Wang, NYC
Draped charmeuse dress,
VERA WANG COLLECTION,
price on request, call 212-
382-2184
Tulle dress, VERA WANG COLLECTION,
$1,595, call 212-382-2184
Left: Lace dress,
VERA WANG
COLLECTION, price
on request, at
Vera Wang, NYC.
Below: Chiffon
asymmetrical
top, VERA WANG
COLLECTION, $450,
collection at
Neiman Marcus,
Beverly Hills
Lace skirt, VERA WANG
COLLECTION, $950, call
212-382-2184
Ruched cotton
skirt, VERA WANG
COLLECTION,
$595,
collection
at Neiman
Marcus,
Beverly Hills
Stretch cotton
tank top, VERA
WANG COLLECTION,
$895, at select
Saks Fifth Avenue
stores nationwide
ELLE SHOPS
226 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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Your life has many facets, and now there are PANDORA
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make irresistible statements. See them in all their brilliance
at PANDORA.net.
LS lut. No. 7,007,507 - © 20l2 lundoru }eveíry, LLC - Aíí rìghts reserved
Sterling silver charms starting at $25
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See purtìcìputìng store íor detuìís. Cood vhìíe suppíìes íust.
MY STORY, MY DESIGN
STELLA McCARTNEY
STELLA McCARTNEY
EDITOR’S PICKS
This season,
McCartney’s florals
are more ironic sitting-
room brocade than
wild English garden.
The designer found
inspiration in everything
from funky 1950s sofa
upholstery and the bright
glare of neon lights to
naive vintage calico
cottons and glamorous
splashes of spots, giving
her everyday-wearable
knife-pleated dresses,
single-button blazers,
and contrasting patterns
a hint of trippy nostalgia.
VINTAGE
MODERN
Wool blazer, STELLA
McCARTNEY, $1,625, visit
stellamccartney.com
Mirrored wedge,
STELLA McCARTNEY,
$810, at Stella
McCartney, NYC
Printed wool sweater,
STELLA McCARTNEY,
$1,040, collection at
saksfifthavenue.com
Rayon-blend dress, STELLA
McCARTNEY, $1,325, visit
stellamccartney.com
Cotton dress, STELLA
McCARTNEY, $2,230, at
Stella McCartney, NYC
Above: Jacquard
trousers, STELLA
McCARTNEY, $1,230, visit
stellamccartney.com.
Right: Viscose dress,
STELLA McCARTNEY,
$2,525, at Stella
McCartney, NYC
Wool crewneck sweater,
STELLA McCARTNEY, $890,
visit stellamccartney.com
Above: Jacquard
blazer, STELLA
McCARTNEY,
$1,470, call
212-255-1556.
Left: Viscose
trousers, STELLA
McCARTNEY,
$925, visit
stellamccartney
.com
Printed silk top,
$620, silk chiffon
shirt, $795,
both, STELLA
McCARTNEY, visit
stellamccartney
.com
Faux-python bag, STELLA
McCARTNEY, $1,085, collection
at bloomingdales.com
ELLE SHOPS
228 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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ELLE SHOPS
MISELA
AQUAZZURA
DEZSO
MISELLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLA
DEZSOO
ONES TO WATCH
Canvas pouchettes,
MISELA, $95 each,
collection at
shoplatitude.com
Water-snake clutches,
MISELA, $715 each, visit
miselaistanbul.com
Diamond necklace, DEZSO
BY SARA BELTRÁN, price
on request, collection at
Barneys New York
Gold shark fin and polki
diamond cuff, DEZSO BY
SARA BELTRÁN, price on
request, collection at
Barneys New York
Suede and snakeskin ankle
boot, AQUAZZURA, $495,
collection at Fivestory
New York, NYC. Snakeskin
sandal, AQUAZZURA,
$595, collection at
saksfifthavenue.com
Leather slipper, AQUAZZURA,
$395, collection at shopbop
.com
Leather sandal, AQUAZZURA, $395,
collection at shopbop.com
One-of-a-kind ammonite and
polki diamond cuff, DEZSO BY
SARA BELTRÁN, price on request,
collection at Barneys New York
White shark tooth and garnet
earrings, DEZSO BY SARA BELTRÁN,
$940, collection at Barneys New York
Misela
boutique in
Istanbul
Marisa
Berenson
on vacation
Iggy Pop
The Amanjena,
Morocco
Morocco’s Jardin
Majorelle
Flamingos and palms photographed
by Beltrán on vacation
Inspirational quote,
Pablo Picasso
Details from the
Grand Bazaar
Istanbul-based textile designer Serra Turker’s the-bolder-the-better
sense of color and way with exotic skins make for must-have bags
Globe-trotting Mexico native Sara Beltrán’s seaside objets trouvés
meet gleaming gold and diamond accents
Street-style blogger favorite Edgardo Osorio’s sexy
stilettos are a new staple of the dolce-vita set
ELLE SHOPS
230 www. e l l e. c o m
RESORT
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DENZEL TAKES FLIGHT, ELLE’S HOLLYWOOD POWER LIST
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AND MORE…
more? elle.com/pop-culture
FULL COURT
I
n Joe Wright’s lavish big-screen take on
Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy’s hulking 1877
masterpiece, how does a Swedish former
ballerina in her first English-speaking
role stand out in a cast that includes Keira
Knightley, Jude Law, and Aaron Taylor-
Johnson? She plays it small.
As Kitty, a starry-eyed Russian debu-
tante, Alicia Vikander, 24, gives a master
class in body language: espresso-colored
eyes always on the brink of tears; lips that
tremble first with desire and then with
adolescent ire; and a dancer’s body that
conveys heartache with the arc of a wrist.
But if that weren’t enough, Vikander had
her wardrobe of frothy white dresses—a
stark contrast to the lascivious gowns and
black lace veils of conflicted adulteress
Anna (Knightley)—shortened to bounce
as she walked, adding any-era teen attitude
to the nineteenth-century princess.
Vikander’s thoughtful acting has already
earned her acclaim in the film circles of her
native Scandinavia, and next year she’ll
bring her talents stateside once again,
alongside Julianne Moore and Jeff Bridges
in fantasy epic The Seventh Son. Until then,
she’s content to coexist with Kitty. “The
way I moved and the way I spoke,” Vikan-
der says, “helped create her journey from a
girl to a woman” who confronts her Prince
Charming fantasy, or as Vikander calls it,
“a naive way for a girl to visualize love.” It’s
an emotional struggle that Vikander cops
to understanding well: “I don’t know what
real love is,” she says. “I question myself all
the time—whether I meet someone and fall
crazy in love in two seconds or feel some-
thing that builds. What Anna Karenina tells
us is that there are many different ways to
experience love.” Audiences are about to
discover one more.—Justine Harman
With her quietly magnetic
turn in Anna Karenina, Alicia
Vikander proves she’s no
lady-in-waiting
PHOTOGRAPHED BY HA NS NE UMA NN
, NZEL TAKES FFLLLLLLIIIGGGGGGHHHT, ELLE’S HO TT LLYWO LL
www. e l l e. c o m 233
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ELLE INTELLIGENCE MOVIES
E
arly in Robert Zemeckis’ new movie, Flight,
viewers are engulfed by the most brilliantly
executed air catastrophe to grace a film
screen in many years. It lasts a bit longer
than 12 minutes, each one scarier than the last.
What makes the sequence such a standout isn’t
the usual souped-up action extravaganza but its
opposite: impeccable realism, all the more fright-
ening for making you feel like you’re right there.
It helps that Denzel Washington is as well. He
stars as Whip, a pilot so good at his job that he’s
a well-tended legend, complete with supermacho
nickname, impenetrable aviator glasses, and a
smooth way with the ladies. He has something
else, too, that only a few people know about: a
massive addiction to booze and coke. Before the
plane takes off, we see him knock back some
orange juice spiked with three little bottles of
vodka. That’s not much more than a couple of
generous screwdrivers at a Sunday brunch, but if
he’s found out, he’ll be at risk of losing his license
and going to prison.
For all its breathtaking moments—and there
are plenty throughout—Flight isn’t an action
film; it’s a character study of a gifted man who
can’t stop playing Russian roulette with his life.
Who hasn’t known someone like that—elusive,
charismatic, and so self-absorbed it amounts to
blindness? Playing Whip, Washington is in top
form, and he’s never less than gripping. He’s also
not alone. Before the airplane sequence, there’s a
chaotic scene in which a woman furiously fends
off the advances of her skeevy landlord. She’s a
photographer—or at least she still has her expensive equipment.
Once the creep’s gone, we see how stunning she is, and we’re
shocked, too, to behold this beautiful woman with a hideous little
hole in the crook of her arm. Like Whip, Nicole (Kelly Reilly) has
the kind of habit that can kill people. After she barely survives an
overdose, they meet in the hospital when each of them sneaks out
to the stairwell for a forbidden smoke.
The Oscar-winning Zemeckis has garnered high honors for
films that are thumpingly obvious (exhibit A: Forrest Gump), but
he has also made charmers such as Cast Away and the Back to the
Future franchise. Flight could easily have been an example of a
burgeoning genre, the come-clean sobriety movie, or its roman-
ticized down-and-dirty opposite, like Barfly. But by zeroing in on
Whip’s masked but growing panic, the movie goes deeper than
any particular craving, whether for heroin or thousand-dollar
shoes. The root of any addiction is located in a hole much bigger
than the one in Nicole’s arm and almost too deep to fathom. It’s
to Zemeckis’ credit that he doesn’t try to tell us how these two
people got that way; he just lets us watch them struggle with it.
We never know how somebody might commit suicide—whether
suddenly or in slow motion. When they retreat to the small farm
Whip has inherited, he shows Nicole a home movie featuring a
boisterous little boy playing ball with his doting grandpa. Nicole
tells Whip how much she misses her mother, who taught her
everything she needed to know and died too soon.
I’m fond of Cast Away, but Flight may be Zemeckis’ most
CRAWLING FROM
THE WRECKAGE
Crowd-pleasing director Robert Zemeckis
delivers a dark and deft portrait of self-
sabotage—and Denzel Washington takes
us all the way there. Karen Durbin reviews
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COMING DOWN HARD
Washington on the job
(top) and with Reilly
236 www. e l l e. c o m
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ELLE INTELLIGENCE MOVIES
nuanced film. There’s a tragedy at the center of its story, but
there’s humor, as well. That illicit encounter at the hospital
includes a third party—a sardonic young bald guy with inoper-
able cancer who bums a cigarette and cracks irresistible jokes
about death. It’s a small scene—we see him only once—but it
makes the film feel rich and unpredictable, like life itself (if we’re
lucky). The movie is seeded with such moments, as when, before
her OD, Nicole rushes to see a friend, a director of porn mov-
ies who’s good for a dime bag but then piously tells her not to
shoot it up. Then he tries to talk her into doing a movie, insisting
that his next flick is upscale. “I want you to play Desdemona,”
he says, and her incredulous eye roll is almost as funny as the
notion of a porn Othello. But Flight’s best joke is embodied by
Whip’s longtime drug dealer, played by a ponytailed John Goodman with equal parts evil incarnate and,
judging by his ponchos, superannuated ’70s hippie. When he enters the frame, the Rolling Stones’ “Sym-
pathy for the Devil” blares from his earbuds and fills the soundtrack. It’s both funny and scary, but the
song that says it all isn’t in the movie, although the movie brings it to mind. In Randy Newman’s “Guilty,”
a man serenades his fed-up lover: “You know, you know how it is with me, baby/ You know, you know I
just can’t stand myself/ It takes a whole lot of medicine/ For me to pretend that I’m somebody else.”
I
mpudent. Subversive. Violent. Hilari-
ous. That would be Martin McDonagh’s
new comedy, Seven Psychopaths. Asked
if he’s the eighth, he laughingly denies
it from his East End London bache-
lor pad with the Thames rolling past
his windows. It’s a serene setting for a
playwright-filmmaker who splashes about
in the macabre as if it were his Jacuzzi.
McDonagh, a strapping, silver-haired
42, calls Psychopaths partly a send-up of
Hollywood. It opens with a shot of the
famous sign accompanied by a country
song wailing about death. Moments later,
a Tarantino-esque pair of jabbering, self-
satisfied young hit men get blown away.
There’s plenty more of that to come, with a cast of
gangsters, killers, and lethal loons played by, among
others, Woody Harrelson, Sam Rockwell, Christo-
pher Walken, and Tom Waits; their straight man is
Colin Farrell, a stymied screenwriter who can’t get
further than his title—Seven Psychopaths—and ends
up inviting two of them to collaborate on the script.
“It’s a movie that comments on movies,”
McDonagh says. “I always think about how to
subvert stories and explore something. In Bruges [Mc-
Donagh’s Oscar-nominated 2008 debut] explored
the idea of a person who’s decent but has done a hor-
rible thing. So it sets up a hit-man story while simul-
taneously subverting it. This one sets up a violent,
screwball Hollywood movie but raises questions like
‘Does there have to be all this violence?’ ”
McDonagh has mostly set his vivid, mayhem-
rich plays in his ancestral Ireland, but he was born
in London. He started writing at 16 and was 24
when his first play, The Beauty Queen of Leenane, was
staged, and, like all the
plays that have come
after, it won awards and
acclaim on both sides
of the Atlantic. Still, he
insists that he prefers to
make movies—you have
more control, he says,
and “I grew up loving
them, and plays were just too expensive [to see].”
McDonagh isn’t afraid to skewer himself. At
one point, Walken turns to Farrell and says sternly,
“Your women are terrible. They hardly say any-
thing, and they’re always being shot or beaten
up.” That’s right, except for a lovely performance
by Linda Bright Clay as Walken’s ailing wife. But
McDonagh says proudly that the film he’s writ-
ing now has a feminist streak. “She’s a very strong
woman,” he says of this central character, adding
triumphantly, “and she’s in her midfifties.”—K.D. F
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WORLDS
WITHIN
WORLDS
Hugh Grant, Halle Berry, Tom
Hanks, Susan Sarandon, the
Jims Broadbent and Sturgess,
and Matrix villain Hugo
Weaving shape-shift through
multiple roles in Cloud Atlas,
the bold dazzler that Tom
Tykwer and the Wachowski
sibs have made from David
Mitchell’s acclaimed novel
about the stories we need to
shape our lives—whereas the
movie is a brain-bending
cinematic cornucopia inviting
us to spot the stars.
HE’S GOTTA
HAVE IT
With indispensably pitch-
perfect performances by John
Hawkes as a wry poet trapped
in an iron lung who longs to be
relieved of his virginity, Helen
Hunt as the expert
therapist-surrogate who
comes to his aid, and William
H. Macy as the enlightened
priest and friend who blesses
the enterprise, writer-director
Ben Lewin gives us in The
Sessions what we’ve all been
waiting for: an utterly
wonderful movie about sex.
THE HITS KEEP
COMING
Adapted and directed by
Andrew Dominik, Killing Them
Softly is a rare treat that
elevates the gangster genre
instead of wallowing in it.
Mingling wit, gore, a great
ensemble cast, and
exhilarating dialogue, this
tough-guy entertainment
keeps us entranced—and
never more than when James
Gandolfini’s burned-out hit
man confides in Brad Pitt’s
velvet-voiced gentleman killer,
a guy who likes to keep his
work classy.—K.D.
TRUST US
MOVIES
INTO THE CRAZY
In the sophomore effort by the stylish, edgy director Martin McDonagh, a star-studded
cast lights up a spoofy shaggy-dog story involving a hapless L.A. screenwriter, a bunch
of his psychotic pals, and a shih tzu that they shouldn’t have messed with
DOG DAYS Farrell,
Walken, and
Rockwell; McDonagh
and Farrell (below)
DR. FEELGOOD Reilly
hitting the
road;
Goodman
delivering
(right)
238 www. e l l e. c o m
4G speeds not available everywhere. Comparison based on U.S. cities and towns with 4G coverage. Learn more at att.com/network. ©2012 AT&T Intellectual Property. Service provided
by AT&T Mobility. All rights reserved. AT&T and the AT&T logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. All other marks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
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ELLE INTELLIGENCE
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B
efore Tina, Ellen, and Aubrey, there were Elaine, Lily, and
Joan—women who, despite an overwhelming cultural con-
viction that a pair of X chromosomes and a funny bone were
mutually exclusive, felt compelled to make people laugh. Yet
in 2007, 50 years after the late, great Phyllis Diller first brought
down the house, Christopher Hitchens infamously took to the
pages of Vanity Fair to pronounce that even with the “whole male
world at their mercy,” women, on the whole, “are not funny.” Beat.
Cue laugh track. Cut to: We Killed: The
Rise of Women in American Comedy (Farrar,
Straus and Giroux), Yael Kohen’s com-
prehensive oral history of 152 players who
pioneered, propelled, and witnessed the
rise of women in today’s comedy scene.
Part show business chronicle and part un-
abashed (read: drugs, digs, and dirt) con-
fessional, it’s further proof that women, and
the men who heed their talent, will have the
last laugh. Below, what we learned about
some of our favorite comic trailblazers.
THEY KNOW FASHION
Diller—the spitfire with the contagious cackle—would hit the
stage dressed, as one talent agent says, “like she was wearing
rags,” in an attempt to hide her fetching figure. She then gave her
opening act fashion tips while headlining New York’s Bon Soir in
1960. The opener? An 18-year-old Barbra Streisand.
THEY KNOW WHICH WAY THE WIND BLOWS
The Mary Tyler Moore Show’s brash Rhoda was first envisioned as
a plump, insecure sidekick. But as the ’70s women’s movement
flared, she changed with it. “Rhoda started getting more self-
esteem, and she stopped putting herself down,” says show writer
Treva Silverman. “I was responding to it through my work.”
THEY KNOW THAT (SEX) LIFE IS A STAGE
Single-gal-in-the-city prototype Elayne Boosler, who dated both
Robin Williams and Andy Kaufman, understood the plight of the
urban female. On sex: “Men want you to scream, ‘You’re the best,’
while swearing you’ve never done this with anyone before. ”
THEY KNOW HOW TO STAND UP TO THE MAN
At Elaine’s, New York’s now-shuttered celebrity enclave, Woody
Allen refused to socialize with the other patrons, including the
original cast of Saturday Night Live, says former staff writer Marilyn
Suzanne Miller. “And Gilda [Radner], in her usual way of just get-
ting a message through her heart of what was wrong and having
some completely unusual way of expressing it, just turned around
to Woody and punched him in the stomach.”
E
ven casual theatergoers
think they know Annie: that
saccharine comic-strip musi-
cal starring an orphan who
won’t shut up about “tomor-
row.” Even Thomas Meehan,
who wrote Annie’s book, was
disap pointed when he was of-
fered the job in 1972. “I wanted
to work on a West Side Story or
My Fair Lady,” he says, “not
some cartoony thing.”
But the show eventually
created by Meehan and his col-
laborators—composer Charles
Strouse and lyricist Martin
Charnin—is actually a well-
oiled musical theater machine,
perfectly structured, emotion-
ally satisfying, and far more
political than your memory
may indicate. In fact, when the
thirty-fifth-anniversary revival
opens this month on Broadway
two days after the election, the-
atergoers may be surprised to
discover a flat-out indictment of
fat-cat greed and governmental
disdain for the poor. It’s not just
about Annie finding a father,
but about the country finding
a heart; one of the many char-
acters who sings “Tomorrow”
during the proceedings is FDR.
Annie didn’t start out that
way. Harold Gray’s comic strip,
which debuted in 1924, was
populist but pro-capitalist (An-
nie’s savior is Oliver Warbucks)
and, soon enough, rabidly
anti–New Deal. But Meehan
took almost nothing from the
original, and with his collabo-
rators—all “liberal Democrats
dismayed by the Republican
White House”—reset the story
in a Dickensian Depression
world of apple peddlers, home-
less ragamuffins, and pop-up
Hoovervilles. For a villain,
Meehan invented the orphan-
age director Mrs. Hannigan,
based on his own “mother on
rainy days in summer”; she is
so comically rageful that she
seems like Nixon in drag.
The mix of political bite and
personal uplift did not strike
most producers in 1972 as com-
mercial, and it wasn’t until 1977,
when Mike Nichols came on
board, that Annie finally made
it to Broadway. By then, Nixon
had left the Oval Office in dis-
grace, but audiences still lapped
up the allegory; the show ran
for 2,377 performances and
won a raft of Tonys, including
one for Meehan. (He’s won
two more since, for The Produc-
ers and Hairspray.) And though
there have been times when
he never wanted to hear “that
tune” again, Meehan is looking
forward to seeing how “Tomor-
row” registers in a political era
that, with its 99-percenters, Oc-
cupy Wall Streeters, and stark
economic choices, looks sur-
prisingly like, well, yesterday.
FUNNY
BUSINESS
BLUE CHIP
A history of women in comedy—who hit the mic
in the ’60s, upstaged the Hollywood boys’ club in
the ’70s, and rule the airwaves today—unearths
more than laughs. By Justine Harman
After 35 years, Annie’s school of hard knocks
still packs some surprisingly salient economic
commentary. By Jesse Green
OCCUPY EASY STREET The
original 1977 Broadway
production of Annie
240 www. e l l e. c o m
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E V E R Y W H E R E
Join the
Conversation
CONNECT WI TH EL L E!
ELLE INTELLIGENCE MUSIC/BOOKS
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usannah Cahalan defines her unforgettable memoir, Brain on Fire: My Month
of Madness (Free Press), at the outset as “a journalist’s inquiry into that deep-
est part of the self—personality, memory, identity—in an attempt to pick up
and understand the pieces left behind.” The bizarre and confounding illness
that beset the 24-year-old New York Post reporter in early 2009 so ravaged her
mentally and physically that she became unrecognizable to coworkers, family,
friends, and—most devastat-
ingly—herself.
Cahalan remembers vir-
tually nothing about the
month she spent hospital-
ized at the peak of her ill-
ness, suffer ing hallucinations,
psychosis, pro found cogni-
tive impair ment, catatonia,
and epileptic-type fits that
only worsened as her team of
doctors scrambled unsuccess-
fully to correctly identify and
arrest her ailment. “Though
I had been gradually losing
more and more of myself over
the past few weeks, the break
between my consciousness
and my physical body was
now finally fully complete. In
essence, I was gone.”
With her situation deterio-
rating daily, Cahalan at last
was diagnosed by two neu-
rologists, whom she fondly
credits as her own “brilliant
and selfless Drs. House,” with
a rare and deadly type of
autoimmune encephalitis that was con-
firmed by a brain biopsy Cahalan under-
went—which she describes in all of its
Frankenstein-like glory and gore. After
her pre-op shaving, she writes, “I sat on
the bed unfazed with my head wrapped
in a towel, as if I had just received a spa
treatment.”
It has been more than three years
since Cahalan first displayed the flu-
like symptoms that heralded her terrifying descent into a harrowing illness.
She is considered recovered—“But,” she writes, “with every
memory I recapture, I know there are hundreds, thousands
even, that I cannot conjure up. No matter how many doctors I
speak with, no matter how many interviews I conduct or how
many notebooks I scavenge, there will be many experiences,
bits of my life that have vanished.”
Small wonder that she dedicates this miracle of a book to
“those without a diagnosis.”
THE ELLE’S
LETTRES
READERS’
PRIZE
2013
15 ELLE readers vote for
their favorite of three
new books we love—in
our first round for the
coming year, plot-driven
literary novels
1. THE ART
FORGER
B. A. SHAPIRO
(ALGONQUIN)
“If Bridget Jones’s Diary
and The Da Vinci Code
had a love child, this
would be it,” one reader
enthused about this
literary thriller spun
from a real-life art heist
at Boston’s Gardner
Museum. Others found
young artist Claire Roth
a dubious heroine and
the plot—involving the
forgery of a Degas
painting—contrived, but
almost everyone had a
good time with it.
2. AMERICAN
GHOST
JANIS OWENS
(SCRIBNER)
The truth about a 1930s
racial crime in north
Florida threatens the
romance between a
preacher’s daughter
and an inquisitive Miami
grad student. Readers
gave Owens kudos for
style and gravitas, even
when they viewed the
past and present as only
tenuously linked here.
3. LIFE AMONG
GIANTS
BILL ROORBACH
(ALGONQUIN)
Some readers loved the
meandering sweep of
this saga about a
wealthy Connecticut
sister and brother who
witness their parents’
murder but unravel the
truth behind it only
years later; others didn’t
have the patience for
the author’s off-angle
handling of his odd
collection of characters.
For this month’s readers’ comments, go to elle.com/readersprize.
e-mail [email protected]
BODY-SLAMMED
A reporter pieces together the horrendous,
bewildering illness she endured—one now
suspected to be responsible for countless cases
of “possession” throughout history. By Lisa Shea
Cahalan
For details on becoming a Readers’ Prize juror,
EMPIRE OF
THE SON
On November 14, Lulu
Gainsbourg releases
From Gainsbourg to Lulu,
a tribute to his legendary
late father, Serge, with
help from the likes of
Marianne Faithfull, Rufus
Wainwright, and Iggy
Pop.—ALLISON P. DAVIS
Why this tribute now? My
father played the piano to
me when I was a baby. The
day he passed away, I was
five. I spent all afternoon
on the piano, even though
I didn’t know how to play. I
called my mom over and
played things he’d played
to me. I never had the
chance to show him this
gift. How did you choose
your collaborators?
Johnny Depp was the first
person I talked to. He and
Vanessa [Paradis] chose
“Ballade de Melodie
Nelson.” They had named
their daughter after it.
Scarlett Johansson is a
modern-day Brigitte
Bardot; she was exactly
who I wanted for “Bonnie
and Clyde.” How did you
make the album yours?
I wrote one song, “Fresh
News From the Stars.” My
mom used to say the
shiniest star in the sky
was my father. I wanted to
show him my universe.
“My first serious blackout
marked the line between
sanity and insanity. Though
I would have moments of
lucidity over the coming
weeks, I would never again
be the same person.”
BOOGIE-WOOGIE BÉBÉ
The infant Gainsbourg
with his father, Serge
244 www. e l l e. c o m
From time to time the holidays can weigh
you down. Personally, I like to keep it light.
Which is why this season, I’m choosing
palladium jewelry. Palladium jewelry is
today’s lightweight, pure and naturally white
precious metal that’s easy on the eyes…
and skin. Giving really is the greatest gift, but
I have to admit, receiving is a close second.
ELLE INTELLIGENCE BOOKS
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usan Lindley, the narrator of Lydia Millet’s
eighth novel, Magnificence (Norton), lives in L.A.
and works in real estate. She’s an adulterer—
the ambitious, sporting kind, for whom infidel-
ity is more thrill seeking than marital rebuke. Like
many of Millet’s characters (Magnificence completes
a loose trilogy comprising 2008’s How the Dead
Dream and 2011’s critically acclaimed Ghost Lights),
Susan doesn’t seem like the type to want to save
the world—or even to look much beyond her own
desires. But when her husband dies, suddenly and
brutally, a short time after he happens to uncover
one of her affairs, she blames herself. Then fate
intervenes again, and she inherits a rambling old
mansion in Pasa dena with wild, sprawling gardens
and rooms crowded with her late uncle’s museum-
worthy taxidermy collection: hawks caught in mid-
flight, a marlin, an arctic fox, horned beasts, lions,
tigers, a Kodiak bear “standing upright and fero-
cious in the corner, beside a coat stand.”
Susan doesn’t feel especially at ease “alone in
the house with predators,” spending her days “sur-
rounded by dust and fur, by remnants of fierce-
ness…remnants of what had once been the world.”
But she’s relieved to have the distraction, and soon
the house begins to fill up with various lost souls:
Susan’s daughter’s friends, a heartbroken lawyer, a
coterie of elderly
ladies who show
up for a book-
club meeting and
never leave—un-
til this accidental
commune assumes “an air of permanence and con-
tentment, the happy captivity of precious things,” a
menagerie of the extinct and the vulnerable.
Most novels situate us in a familiar physical uni-
verse so we can focus our attention on the mysteries
of its characters’ inner lives. Magnificence is suffused
with emotional complexity, but—as has often been
the case in Millet’s work—its central mysteries abide
in the natural world. In a self-consciously modern
age, we’re expected to understand our feelings—it’s
biology that eludes us, our own bodies changing,
fading, disappearing. This surprising, elemental,
funny, shrewd, and affecting
book isn’t so much concerned
with redemption (how can one
redeem what’s gone for good?)
as with evoking a new kind of
innocence: a world saved not by
perfect people but by us—who-
ever we are, what ever we’ve
been.
O
liver Sacks knows from hal-
lucination. The best- selling
author (Awakenings, The Man
Who Mistook His Wife for a
Hat), besides being a practicing
neuro logist for half a century,
has caught a ghostly waft of ko-
sher wine in his onetime fam ily
home, been led down a moun-
tain by a “life voice” after suffer-
ing an injury, and tested a lab’s
worth of psychedelic drugs. He is singularly quali-
fied to enlighten us on what, as he explains in the
15 chapters in Hallucinations (Knopf), are often not
psychiatric or paranormal but merely neurological
events—testaments to the brain’s demiurgic powers.
“When the brain is released from the constraints
of reality,” Sacks writes, “it can generate any sound,
image, or smell in its repertoire, sometimes in com-
plex and ‘impossible’ combinations.” Mixing case
histories, personal anecdotes, and literary allusions,
he illustrates how trauma, blindness, epilepsy,
migraines, drugs, or simply REM sleep can trigger
that release, generating spectral visions, presences,
smells, and voices—even phantom cell-phone rings.
As always, Sacks explores humanistic questions:
“One must wonder to what extent hallucinatory
experiences have given rise to our art, folklore,
and even religion,” he muses, citing Dostoevsky’s
“ecstatic” seizures. But like others who write
about medicine and culture (Anne Fadiman, Atul
Gawande), and like any good physician, Sacks at-
tends to human experience—how hallucinations “in-
sist on their own reality,” unmooring us, while knowl-
edge empowers us to re- rationalize
the world. As a patient wrote to
Sacks of her sleep-paralysis diag-
nosis, “It is like letting go of…a
mystical, almost magical view of
the world.” This sweeping explica-
tion of the brain’s faculties reveals
it as equally wondrous.
LIFE
,
INTERRUPTED
In a rousing finish to an admired cycle of
novels, Lydia Millet gives us a believable
heroine for our time. By Julia Holmes
Sacks
Millet
TRUST
US
BOOKS
CRAZY WISDOM
The “183rd Imperial
Edition” of The Onion
Book of Known
Knowledge (Little,
Brown), from the editors
of America’s satiric
newspaper of record,
is an encyclopedic fun
house of information
and illustrations
teeming with hundreds
of entries covering
everything from the
letter A to Zibby the
cartoon squirrel.
HIP HERSTORY
My Awesome Place
(Topside Press) dives
headlong into New
York’s scruffy-glam
1990s East Village arts
scene, where blue-
collar-born Cheryl Burke
found cult fame as writer-
performer “Cheryl B.”
Writes Burke—who died
last year at age 38 from
complications of
Hodgkin’s lymphoma—
“I was the girl in the
crooked heels, boasting
cleavage inappropriate
for sunrise while smiling
smugly to myself, as if I
had accomplished some
great act of subversion.”
Call it self-invention.
TOP OF THE POPS
UK critic Dylan Jones’
The Biographical
Dictionary of Popular
Music (Picador) offers
engagingly personal
sketches of more than
350 artists, from living
legends A Tribe Called
Quest and David Bowie
to long-gone greats Nat
King Cole and Billie
Holiday, to instant icons
Lady Gaga and Iggy Pop,
along with loads of
other musical
wunderkinder and
one-off acts.—L.S.
MIND GAMES
Explorations of our altered states. By Elyse Moody
246 www. e l l e. c o m
advertisement
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A
ndrew Solomon spent 10 years interviewing more than 250 families, from which he
generated 40,000 pages of transcripts and fashioned the 700-page tome Far From the
Tree (Scribner). But even those numbers don’t do justice to his wild ambition. The book’s
massive middle chapters—“Deaf,” “Dwarfs,” “Down Syndrome,” “Autism,” “Schizo-
phrenia,” “Disability,” “Prodigies,” “Rape,” “Crime,” and “Transgender”—seek to stretch
our empathy where it might shrink; they are preceded by one titled “Son,” in which Solo-
mon recounts his torment as a gay kid in the ’70s, including outlandish therapies through
which he sought to alter his sexual orientation. And the book ends with “Father,” which
recounts how Solomon and his husband began raising their own son. The book’s over-
arching theme is what Solomon calls horizontal identity—a minority or Other status that
people do not share with their parents. Far From the Tree is fundamentally about the bonds
and burdens of family, and it’s a huge valentine to those who embrace the challenge of
raising children who are in some way not what they had hoped for.—Virginia Vitzthum
How did your own experiences inform this book?
If someone had been able to tell me at 10 or 12, “Someday,
you’ll be married to a guy, you’ll have kids, you’ll go every-
where together,” I could have been saved so much agony.
Aligning gay people with those who are coping with these more
severe conditions is a remarkable gesture.
I’m going to take a lot of flak for saying being gay is
like being disabled. In a way, it’s the anti thesis of what
gay people have been fighting for. But in another way,
no—it’s the essence of what we’ve been fighting for. If we
want to achieve a just society, we have to look at com-
monalities and not all fight for our little bit of territory.
How did you pick the 10 groups you studied?
Where you come from, who you are socially, what body
you’re born with, what’s going on in your mind—I
wanted to pull all these polarities together, and these 10
represented a constellation of conditions. If I was writing
about dwarfs, I didn’t need to write about gigantism.
You distill a lot of science and technology in the book, yet it’s a very heartfelt work. What was it
like combining these characteristics?
With a lot of these conditions, people feel that they have to choose between the politics of
liberation and self-actualization movements, on the one hand, and the medical model,
on the other. The tension between these is so interesting, and you can’t make reasonable
decisions without both. I wanted to translate between the two.
Were there times when being empathetic became difficult, when you found yourself resisting?
Sure. Experiencing your difference as an identity is very empowering, but I don’t believe
it’s always accurate or honest. If you’re deaf and don’t want a cochlear implant and want
to be part of a signing culture, terrific. But if someone else is deaf and wants a cochlear
implant and to engage with the hearing world, don’t try to pressure them not to. Identity
politics can be really aggressive.
You write about offering to set up a dwarf on a date. Do you worry about crossing journalistic lines?
People opened up their lives to me with no gain for themselves, so if I could do some-
thing kind for them, I wanted to. One transgender family had their child taken away
from them, and I helped them get a lawyer. A dwarf told me she was lonely, and I’d just
talked to another dwarf who told me he was looking for someone. I don’t
buy that disengagement is the best way to study a subject. Boundaries are
not my big strength. Of everyone I interviewed for this book, there are a
handful of people I think of as real friends, and there are many others I
have affection for. I have this fantasy of a party where I invite everyone,
and we’d say, “Here we all are.”
GENE GENIES
The author of The Noonday Demon, a landmark work
on depression, returns with an even more profound
inquiry: What does it mean to be born different?
Solomon
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THE
MENTORS
ELLE INTELLIGENCE WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD
THE POWER LIST
In Entertainment Town, USA, everyone is angling
for power. But actually getting it (and hanging on to
it) is all about relationships. It’s the most connected
insiders—from party throwers to tweet-happy
comediennes—who wield the real influence. Who
better to give us a tour of the showbiz power grid
than The Hollywood Reporter editorial director
Janice Min?
C HE L S E A HA ND L E R
The Bad-Girl CEO
J UD D A PAT OW
The Man
The Chelsea Lately host ranked on 2012’s
“Time 100” list of influencers, champi-
oned late-night TV with women 18
to 34, and dominated the New York
Times’ best-seller list (again) with
Lies That Chelsea Handler Told Me.
Meanwhile, Handler’s writer
and roundtable regular, Sarah
Colonna, saw her first book,
Life as I Blow It, debut at No. 5 on
the best-seller list and get a TV
show deal with NBC.
The Bridesmaids producer contin-
ues to serve up girl power. Girls,
which he executive-produced
for HBO, was the cultural phe-
nomenon of the year and cata-
pulted actress-writer-producer-
director Lena Dunham from
indie darling to the unofficial
ambassador for generation
#whatshouldwecallme.
18
ork
h
n-
s, ss
K R I S T E N S T E WA RT
The Wild Card
A NNE HAT HAWAY
The Fresh Maker
E MMA S T O NE
Ms. Versatile
ME RY L S T R E E P
The Perennial
The Notebook star pulled on heartstrings
again in this year’s The Vow, which made
$125 million domestically and more than $196
million globally. But next she’ll play against
type, opposite Noomi Rapace in Brian De
Palma’s racy thriller Passion.
The world’s most nominated actress won her
third Oscar this year for The Iron Lady, but
continues to mix up her roles: After crowd-
pleaser Hope Springs, she’ll star opposite
Julia Roberts in August: Osage County.
With two more Hunger Games installments
in the works, Lawrence is one in-demand
actress—and a flush one (she’ll earn close to
$10 million for Catching Fire). But the once-
indie star is still making time to boost smaller
vehicles, too, such as David O. Russell’s
upcoming Silver Linings Playbook.
The Twilight and Snow White and the
Huntsman star earned nearly $35 million
last year alone. That said, only time will tell if
her summer tabloid scandal will diminish the
22-year-old’s box-office mojo.
A longtime studio sure bet as the lovable
everygirl, Hathaway has recently revealed a
talent for updating classic roles: Her turn as
an edgy Catwoman was a high note in The
Dark Knight Rises, and she’ll put her spin on
Fantine in this winter’s Les Miserables.
After proving a natural anchor for rom-coms
(Crazy, Stupid, Love), dramas (The Help), and
now a superfranchise (The Amazing Spider-
Man), Stone has become a go-to lead across
genres. Next up, Warner Bros. is banking on
her to help fill seats for its Gangster Squad.
THE
SCREEN STARS
THE REIGNING
DIRECTOR
THE NEW-BLOOD
PRODUCER
THE GENEROSITY
MAGNET
K AT HRY N B I G E L OW
Academy Awards hawks are holding their
breath for Bigelow’s follow-up to 2009’s
Oscar sweeper The Hurt Locker. The Osama
bin Laden epic Zero Dark Thirty scored
her access to top secret CIA documents.
ME GA N E L L I S O N
At 26, the daughter of Oracle tech tycoon
Larry Ellison has already gambled
over $100 million on indie films, this year
financing Paul Thomas Anderson’s
Scientology movie, The Master, and
Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty.
As the president and CEO of the
Entertainment Industry Foundation,
Paulsen has helped raise $700 million to
invest in nonprofits and research groups.
L I S A PAUL S E N
COLONNA
DUNHAM
J E NNI F E R L AWR E NC E
The Girl on Fire
R A C HE L M C A DA MS
The Romantic
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252 www. e l l e. c o m
Andie is wearing Visible Lift Repair Absolute in Sand Beige (135).
*Visibly repairs the look of lines and wrinkles.
**Based on a clinical test.
lorealparis.com ©2012 L’Oréal USA, Inc.
ABSOLUTE
PERFECTION
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ANTI-AGING REPAIR
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Andie MacDowell
■ IN JUST 4 WEEKS,
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■ LIGHTWEIGHT, FULL COVERAGE
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■ IN 12 SHADES
ELLE INTELLIGENCE NCE
K AT I E MC G R AT H
McGrath, wife of Hollywood
multihyphenate J. J. Abrams, may not
be a household name, but she’s become
a political, philanthropic, and social
dynamo in showbiz circles. How, you ask?
1. SHE SUPPORTS WOMEN IN POLITICS
McGrath, with Abrams, regularly rallies
support for new political talent such as
California Attorney General Kamala
Harris and Massachusetts Democratic
Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren.
McGrath also serves on the board of the
Children’s Defense Fund.
2. SHE KNOWS HOW TO PAIR UP
McGrath and Abrams keep the company
of the industry’s most established
power couples: CAA ultra-agent
Kevin Huvane and former agent
Ruth-Ann Huvane; Diane von
Furstenberg and media mogul Barry
Diller; DreamWorks Animation CEO
Jeffrey Katzenberg and Marilyn
Katzenberg; Sony Corporation of
America CEO Michael Lynton and
Jamie Lynton; Universal Studios
president and COO Ron Meyer and
Kelly Meyer, a founder of the Women’s
Cancer Research Fund.
3. SHE DRAWS NEW BLOOD
McGrath and Abrams’ events frequently
bring in Hollywood’s new guard,
including Scarlett Johansson, Mindy
Kaling, and Olivia Munn.
NI C O L E AVA NT
The Ambassador
Before serving two years as U.S.
ambassador to the Bahamas, she helped
kindle $21 million for Obama’s 2008
campaign. Now she and her husband,
Netflix chief content officer Ted
Sarandos, are again rallying Hollywood
luminaries for Obama’s reelection, which
could lead to her being named his official
DC–L.A. liaison.
MA R G E RY TA BA NK I N
The Grande Dame
The political adviser to the stars and
West Coast sounding board for DC’s
most influential (Nancy Pelosi meets
with her when in town) has helped raise
more than $500 million in support
of the environment, civil rights, and
women’s issues as executive director of
both Barbra Streisand’s and Steven
Spielberg’s foundations.
MI NDY K A L I NG & Z O O E Y D E S C HA NE L
This fall, Fox is banking on Kaling’s
Twitter influence (her following is now
1.9 million strong) to make her new show,
The Mindy Project, a hit. It worked with
New Girl’s Deschanel, whose tweets
promoting her show now reach 3 million
followers. Kaling and Deschanel share
an RT circle that also includes Lena
Dunham and adorable Twitter It Girl
Maude Apatow.
@ZooeyDeschanel:
Loved hanging out
with @mindykaling
today at the fox
upfronts. It’s nice
doing business with
your pals!
THE
CONNECTOR IN CHIEF
THE BICOASTAL
POLITICOS
THE PRIME-TIME
TWEETERS
POLITICOS
DESCHANEL KALING
MCGRATH
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD
4
6
5
2
1
3
7
A MY PA S C A L
The Studio Superheroine
It’s been another banner year for the
cochairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment
and chairman of its Motion Picture Group:
Buddy-cop comedy 21 Jump Street and The
Amazing Spider-Man raked in $202 million
and upward of $735 million, respectively,
worldwide; and Sony just acquired the red-hot
distribution rights to Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero
Dark Thirty.
K AT HL E E N K E NNE DY
The Chosen One
As George Lucas segues into retirement,
this year Kennedy was trusted to co-helm
the multi-billion-dollar Lucasfilm, Ltd. (Who
wouldn’t trust a producer whose résumé spans
from the Bourne, Jurassic Park, and Indiana
Jones franchises to indies such as The Diving
Bell and the Butterfly and Persepolis?)
S TA C E Y S NI D E R
The Dream Girl
Six years into her reign as Steven Spielberg’s
right-hand woman and CEO of DreamWorks
Studios, Snider remains one of the most
sought-after businesswomen in Hollywood.
Her alma mater, Universal Pictures, recently
tried to woo her back to head Universal
Studios, but Snider is staying put—for now.
DAWN HUD S O N
The Academy Brass
Formerly head of Film Independent (producer
of the Independent Spirit Awards), the CEO
of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts &
Sciences was hired to bring indie-studio elbow
grease to the venerable institution.
NI NA TA S S L E R
The Network Muscle
With Tassler as its entertainment president,
CBS boasts 12 of the 15 most-watched scripted
shows, including Emmy perennial The Good
Wife and 2011’s No. 1 comedy, 2 Broke Girls.
NA NCY D UB UC
The Subculture Queen
The president and general manager of the
Lifetime and History channels has struck gold
by zeroing in on quirky subcultures with Dance
Moms, Pawn Stars, and Swamp People.
L I S A B E R G E R
The Reality-Tv Matriarch
The mastermind behind the Kardashians’
superstardom, E! entertainment programming
president Berger revisited famous-family
matters this year with Mrs. Eastwood &
Company and Married to Jonas, the network’s
most-watched pilot in years.
THE
EXECUTIVES
254 www. e l l e. c o m
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Laetitia is wearing Infallible Eye Shadow in Eternal Black (999)
and Voluminous Smoldering Liner in Black (645).
lorealparis.com ©2012 L’Oréal USA, Inc.
“THIS LOOK...SMOKIN’ .”
Laetitia Casta
ELLE INTELLIGENCE WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD
MA R GA R E T MA L D O NA D O
Maldonado’s agency represents
an unrivaled roster of high-powered
beauty wizards, and—of course—
stylists such as…
C R I S T I NA E HR L I C H
Loyalists: Julianna Margulies,
Penélope Cruz, Amy Adams
P E T R A F L A NNE RY
Loyalists: Emma Stone, Zoe
Saldana, Mila Kunis
A NNA B I NG E MA NN
Loyalists: Tina Fey, Claire
Danes, Gwyneth Paltrow
S HE R RY L A NS I NG
When Lansing was named president
at 20th Century Fox in 1980,
she became the first woman
to helm a major movie
studio and then became
the chairman and CEO of
Paramount Pictures in 1992.
She retired in 2005, but
not before seeing—and
often facilitating—the
rise of countless female
execs and producers
after her: cochairman
of Sony Pictures
Entertainment Amy
Pascal, DreamWorks
CEO Stacey Snider,
Disney/ABC Television
group president Anne
Sweeney, and sci-fi
power producer Gale
Anne Hurd. When
Lansing left the lot, she
reinvented the Hollywood
second act, too: She is
now known for her many
do-gooder organizations,
including Stand Up to
Cancer, which has raised
over $260 million in
pledges for cancer research
since 2008.
THE
STYLE ENVOY
THE
ART MAVENS
THE DIVORCE
ATTORNEY
THE
GODMOTHER
THE BILLIONAIRE’S
BROKER
THE SOCIAL
CHAIR
THE
NEGOTIATOR
T HA O NG UY E N
The Agent
In her new post at Hollywood
talent agency CAA, ace hobnobber
Nguyen curates the firm’s
contemporary art collection and
represents an eclectic array of
creatives, from architect Rem
Koolhaas to designers Dror
Benshetrit and Yves Béhar.
HO NO R F R A S E R
The Dealer
The former fashion model brings
buzzed-about artists such as painter
Annie Lapin and fashion plate
Rosson Crow to her eponymous
contemporary art gallery.
1980,
man
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of
992.
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NGUYEN
FRASER
L AUR A WA S S E R
L.A.’s “disso queen” (as in “marriage
dissolution”), Wasser charges north of $750
per hour and is currently working to spring Kim
Kardashian and Heidi Klum.
J OYC E R E Y
The veteran real-estate agent pulled in at
least $150 million last year. Her sales record
includes $50 million Bel Air megamansion Le
Belvédère; on her Rolodex: Donald Trump,
Jennifer Lopez, and Renée Zellweger.
A S HL E Y L E NT
At her Soho House screenings, luncheons,
and benefits, the club’s member-event planner
creates a safe space for the glitterati (Harvey
Weinstein, Leonardo DiCaprio, Olivia Wilde,
the Mulleavy sisters, Quentin Tarantino) by
banning cameras, entourages, and, generally,
agents. Plus, she knows everyone.
HY L DA Q UE A L LY
Talent agency CAA’s superagent, Queally
presciently signed Jessica Chastain and
Bérénice Bejo when they were relative
unknowns, and she counts Michelle Williams
and Kate Winslet among the eight-figure stars
on her client list.
256 www. e l l e. c o m
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“This light, quick-absorbing,
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NEW
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Conditions, infuses dry ends with moisture.
Helps control frizz for 48 hours, too.”
Johnny Lavoy
NEW
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“This light, quick-a
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Detangles, shields w
S th fl
MULTI-TASKING
FORMULA:
DETANGLES
SMOOTHES
SOFTENS
SHINES
PRECIOUS OIL TREATMENT
WITH ARGAN OIL FROM MOROCCO
L’Oréal Paris Consulting Stylist
Don’t just get your
dermatologist’s advice on acne.
Clarisonic is a registered trademark and Mia 2 is a trademark of Pacific Bioscience Laboratories, Inc. ©2012 Pacific Bioscience Laboratories, Inc.
Available at clarisonic.com, Sephora, Nordstrom, Dillard’s, Neiman Marcus, select physicians & spas.
Get the acne cleansing
device they use.
New from Clarisonic,
®
the Acne Clarifying Collection.
Previously available only through select dermatologists, now available in prestige
retailers. Armed with patented sonic technology and two speeds, the Clarisonic Mia 2
TM
cleansing system works with the plush Acne Cleansing Brush Head to gently
flush pores and remove impurities from skin. Activated with 2% salicylic acid,
the Acne Daily Clarifying Cleanser treats and clears acne. The Clarisonic
Acne Clarifying Collection, the future of acne has never been clearer.
Oily skin has finally met its matte.
New 8-hour shine control makeup.
A lot of makeup falls short when it comes to shine control.
Enter Neutrogena.
Our primer, foundation and invisible powder all contain our
exclusive Rice Protein Complex, so they eliminate shine instantly
and absorb oil continuously for 8 hours.
Only your confidence will come shining through.
Does your makeup do that?
©2012 Neutrogena Corp.
To prevent unwanted oil slicks,
always prep lids with a powder
shadow (Jaeger used YVES
SAINT LAURENT BEAUTÉ Ombres
5 Lumieres in Riviera) before
layering gloss on top.
C
all it codependent beauty, but some textures work bet-
ter with a counterpart. “I love to work with opposites,”
says Copenhagen-based Zenia Jaeger, the makeup artist
behind the looks on these pages. “The contrast between
matte and shine creates a stronger expression.” In the case of
high-shine lids and lips, matte accents elevate gloss from pre-
teen to polished and prevent an overly oiled finish.
POWER
COUPLE
CELEB STREET STYLE, CLEAR-SKIN PSYCHOLOGY, AND MORE…EDITED BY EMILY DOUGHERTY
www. e l l e. c o m 261
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OBSESSION ELLE BEAUTY
W
hen it comes to executing fashion runways’ holy grail of gloss—wet-look lids—forget precision, an impossible feat with such a
slippery medium. Instead, makeup artist Suzy Gerstein, who often creates the look for indie musician St. Vincent, recommends
“going all out” and coating lids with a dense formula designed for lips, such as Shiseido Benefiance Full Correction Lip
Treatment or By Terry Rose Balm, for an enduring finish. Unlike Vaseline, these have a touch of opalescence. “Don’t use too
much gloss,” cautions Jaeger. This shine may be rich, but portion control is key.—Julie Schott
The easiest—and longest-lasting—way to combine matte with shine is on nails. For a sophisticated textural play, start with an opaque lacquer such as SINFUL COLORS Professional
Nail Enamel in Dream On, follow with a mattifying layer such as CK ONE Long Wear + Shine Matte Top Coat, and finish with a stripe of Dream On again just on tips.
262 www. e l l e. c o m
P
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Discover Nexxus ProMend: a higher standard in split-end treatment.
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©

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INSIDER ELLE BEAUTY
S
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D
A BEAUTIFUL
MIND
For the ultimate skintervention, dermatologist
and psychiatrist Amy Wechsler, MD, proves two
doctorates are better than one. By Emily Dougherty
(From top) CHANEL Joues Contraste powder blush in In Love is Wechsler’s daily essential; “Put SAFFLOWER OIL in a little spritz bottle and spray it on when
you get out of the shower. Your skin will soak it up like a sponge”; VASELINE is “such a good, nonirritating moisturizer” for eyes or lips; “I love CETAPHIL
lotion for patients with very sensitive skin and acne. It moisturizes without making them break out and without causing a rash”; DOVE “does the job:
removes dirt and sweat while leaving natural oils behind”; the “incredible” CHANEL Sublimage La Crème Yeux Ultimate Regeneration Eye Cream.
C
hanel’s newest team mem-
ber, Amy Wechsler, MD,
brings a refreshingly sci-
entific approach to mind-
body skin cures. A board-
certified dermatologist and
psychiatrist (one of just two in
the country), she’s as comfort-
able around Karl Lagerfeld as
she is backstage with Steven
Tyler (“He was first impressed
with my handshake, and then
he found out I’m a drummer”),
so it makes sense that the New
Yorker is equally popular with
UES socialites and downtown
party girls.
A few of your patients told me
that you’re a bit of a psychic, that
you always know what they’ve
been up to.
I can tell when someone hasn’t
been getting enough sleep, or if
she’s been around secondhand
smoke. It could be the dullness
of her skin, acne, or more lines
and wrinkles. A lot of women in
their twenties, they’re burning
the candle at both ends. They’re
partying really hard. They
come to me to undo the dam-
age, asking for Botox and fill-
ers when they don’t need them.
They just need to get more sleep
and stop smoking. They’ll see a
difference in a week.
Is there any reason to use Botox in
your twenties?
If you’ve got a line that’s fa-
milial—something your mom
had, like between your eye-
brows—and it’s already etch-
ing itself in, we can cure you of
it, and you won’t need Botox
there after a few years. We use
just a teeny bit; we call it “baby
Botox.”
When I think about stress causing
my breakouts, I get more stressed-
out. How long does it take for a
meltdown to show up on my face?
You’ll see it the next day, while
low-level stress will show on
your skin in about a week.
What can I do to minimize
the damage?
Any activity that decreases
cortisol and the other stress
molecules. Yoga and massage
work, but not for everyone. For
example, yoga hurts my joints.
And topical acne medications,
over-the-counter ones with
benzoyl peroxide or salicylic
acid or prescription retinoids,
can also help.
I read in your book, The Mind-
Beauty Connection (Free Press), that
humming can help skin repair itself.
Yes, humming releases nitric
acid, which speeds healing. I
think it also increases your en-
dorphins. And humming can
help with pain, more than a
stress ball. During procedures,
you’ll see patients gripping
stress balls, their shoulders all
hunched. But when those same
patients try singing or hum-
ming, they totally relax.
I also read that you use three
fresh towels every morning.
I’m not high-maintenance,
I promise! But I have a body
towel, a dedicated hair towel,
and a separate face towel.
When I was a teenager and
had bad acne, my dermatolo-
gist said, “Never get your hair
oil on your face, ever!”
You used to be cynical about eye
creams. Has teaming up with
Chanel changed that?
I was a real skeptic because
I tried, like, 50 of them, and
most don’t do what they say
they do. First of all, it should
never irritate the skin around
the eye, the most sensitive skin
on the body. Number two, it
has to be extremely moistur-
izing. Number three, it has to
address fine lines. There aren’t
that many out there that do all
three. I love Chanel Sublimage
because it works. And regular
Vaseline is a good alternative
for people who can’t afford
Sublimage or just want the
very basic.
Any other supermarket
beauty secrets?
Applying safflower oil topi-
cally can boost your skin’s
stores of linoleic acid, a natural
moisturizer. Only two oils are
primarily linoleic acid—olive
and safflower—but the prob-
lem with olive oil is you smell
like a salad.
Is there a placebo effect with
pricey creams?
There’s a huge psychological
component to a purchase, be
it a lipstick, a bag, whatever
it is. There’s something about
spending money on ourselves
that is a huge self-esteem
booster. Patients say, “Do you
think it’s worth it?” I ask if they
like it, how it makes them feel.
And they love that cream; it
has a special significance for
them. And I think that’s real.
Real enough to make a
physiological improvement in skin?
Yes, definitely.
264 www. e l l e. c o m
T
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T
he Library of the Italian Academy at
Columbia University is precisely as
you might expect: small, chandeliered,
and brimming with intriguing-looking
leather-bound books. Rivaling the perva-
sive scent of scholarship one evening this
summer, however, was that of fragrance.
This was the launch event for the Academy
of Perfumery and Aromatics, New York’s
mini branch of the French perfume mu-
seum L’Osmothèque, a Versailles-based
whiff-obsessive’s mecca that houses the
world’s largest collection of archival eaux.
As a curator uncorked the sweet, grassy Le
Trèfle Incarnat from 1896, my pen ran out
of ink, interrupting my sniffing-and-note-
scribbling reverie long enough for me to
look up and notice something surprising:
Almost everyone else in the room was
male. In addition to the helpful man seated
to my right—a handsome, leather-jacket-
clad, silver-skull-ring-wearing hipster who
told me he worked for NASA and loaned
me a ballpoint—there was a whole host
of very dudey dudes (baseball caps, plaid
shirts, office-casual suits) huffing the likes
of Guerlain’s romantic Mitsouko with un-
disguised zeal. Interesting, I thought to my-
self and stole the guy’s pen.
What I observed that night, it turns out,
is just the tip of the iceberg. Thanks to the
proliferation of fragrance-freak-geared
website forums (Fragrantica, Now Smell
This, Basenotes, etc.), there’s been a tre-
mendous increase in opinionated, super-
sophisticated scent enthusiasts—the type
who rhapsodize about oakmoss, share
memories of their first-ever whiff of Op-
ium, and weigh the merits of the latest
niche eau to flare the blogosphere’s collec-
tive nostrils. And within that newly pow-
erful group, the most rapidly growing
demographic is male. While the highly
regarded Basenotes, launched in 2000 by
Londoner Grant Osborne, laid the ground-
work (the site’s guy-dominated “male fra-
grance discussion” currently has more
than one million posts, whereas the female
THE
GOODSMELLAS
There are guys who collect cars, cigars, and trading cards. And
then there are those who hoard…perfume? April Long meets
the new scent aficionados
board has only some 317,000), countless
others have taken up the mantle. A quick
Google search will bring up everything
from Fragrance Bros (tagline: “Helping en-
tertain and educate our brothers and sis-
ters about the wonderful world of smelling
AWESOME”) to Whiffguy.blogspot.com,
the work of a self-proclaimed “Average
Guy Fragrance Enthusiast” who gives every
scent he reviews a word-association list (for
Dolce & Gabbana Homme Light Blue: “Lip
balm. Receipts. Crosswalks. Antipasti. Pen-
cil lead. Suede”). And that’s before you even
get to the legions of Y-chromosome-bearing
YouTube perfume reviewers.
“When we first opened our store six
years ago, it was predominantly women
coming in and befriending us,” says Fran co
Wright, who cofounded Luckyscent—a
niche-fragrance hot spot that exists both
online and as a brick-and-mortar boutique
in Los Angeles—with his former graphic-
design-studio partner Adam Eastwood.
“Now that’s completely changed. Proba-
bly 60 percent of our regulars are males.
They’re the ones who are hanging out and
socializing at the store. Some come in al-
most every day.”
If Luckyscent is the L.A. clubhouse for
odor-savvy guys, its East Coast counter-
part is MiN New York—a welcoming SoHo
scent store that, with its dark wood shelv-
ing, tufted leather sofas, and carefully se-
lected vintage curios, has the atmosphere
of an early-twentieth-century-apothecary-
meets-gentleman’s-smoking-den. And it’s
here, a few months after my revelation at
Columbia, that I meet up with a group
of male perfume aficionados who have
nicknamed themselves the Good smellas.
Ranging in age from roughly 25 to 60,
they’re predominantly straight (most are
married) and look, well, pretty ordinary:
They could be truck drivers, businessmen,
or bankers. Among them are Carlos J.
Powell, a bespectacled middle-aged fellow
who runs a Facebook group called Peace
Love Perfume, where members fever-
ishly post their SOTM, SOTA, and SOTE
(scents of the morning, afternoon, and eve-
ning, respectively); Andrew Buck, a suit-
and-tie-wearing business consultant who
writes a blog called Scentrist in his spare
time; Eddie Libassi, aka Frunkinator, a
young, tattooed guy in a black T-shirt who
helms a popular YouTube channel dedi-
cated to testosterone-charged fragrance
reviews, sometimes dispatched from be-
hind the wheel of his car (these are tagged
“Frunk in Motion”); and IT specialist Rich
Scardaville, a self-described “regular fra-
grance fan” who tests perfumes every night
before he goes to bed to determine which
he’ll wear the next day to work. “I’ll put
on five, six, seven things up and down my
ELLE BEAUTY INVESTIGATION
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arm,” he says, “and my poor girlfriend will
want to go to sleep in the other room be-
cause there’s this cloud around me. She’s al-
ways like, ‘Just pick one already!’ ”
The Goodsmellas congregate at MiN on
a regular basis not just for samples, which
cute-couple co-owners Chad Murawczyk
and Mindy Yang distribute readily, but for
the community it provides. Some of them
share “splits” (one buys the bottle, then de-
cants samples for the others); they compare
notes, literally, on their collections (most
own between 150 and 250 full bottles of
perfume, plus several hundred samples)
and storage solutions (Scardaville keeps
his in a hardware bench with alphabeti-
cally labeled drawers; Libassi stockpiles
his favorites in a wine cooler with modified
shelving). They discuss which eaux are
most work-appropriate, consider whether
or not it’s too girly to wear florals (consen-
sus: It’s not), and debate the viability of
having a signature scent. “There’s no such
thing,” Buck says. “There are times when
you want something light and citrusy and
times when you want a deep wood. Noth-
ing fits every occasion. You’re not going
to wear a dress loafer to go out running.”
Sometimes they’ll all have a drink or go
out to dinner together, but mostly they just
wander around the store and inhale.
“We can talk to each other, because we
have this shared value system,” Murawc-
zyk says. “We’re all in completely differ-
ent lines of work, so we have nothing to do
with each other on a nine-to-five basis, but
in this world, we have an interconnect.”
For many of the men in the MiN crowd,
the appeal of fragrance is rooted in their
childhood (“I remember seeing bottles on
my father’s dresser,” Fragrant Moments
blogger Barney Bishop says, “and figur-
ing, ‘All right, that’s what manhood is all
about’”) or arose as the result of some acci-
dental discovery. Scardaville, for example,
fell for By Kilian’s Incense Oud after be-
ing randomly spritzed by a saleswoman in
Bergdorf Goodman. “While I was walk-
ing around the store I was just amazed
at how this fragrance developed and
changed on my skin and became a part
of me,” he says. “When I found out how
much it cost, I almost dropped dead, but
I’ve never regretted buying it.”
Goodsmella Mike Devine’s story is
more dramatic. A police-officer first re-
sponder on September 11, he gradually lost
his sense of smell during months of clean-
up at Ground Zero. “I don’t know exactly
what caused it, and I didn’t particularly
care at the time,” he says. “What mattered
was living through the experience.” It was
two and a half years before he began to de-
tect odors again. “The first thing was con-
crete dust at a construction site,” he says.
“It was welcome to a certain degree, but
all I could really smell were the sinister
smells that took me back to a dark place.
So I started to seek out beautiful-smelling
things to counteract all that negativity.”
Devine began with candles and air fresh-
eners, then moved on to fragrances, which
he now uses to build what he calls “habit
trails,” or new scent memories, by care-
fully selecting a perfume to accom pany a
specific happy episode. “Like, I went on
a cruise to the Bahamas and the only fra-
grance I wore was Acqua di Parma so that
every moment of every day was filled with
that smell,” he says. “Now a couple years
later I can go back to that bottle and the
memories are still there. It’s a very cool
game to play.”
The connection between scent and
memory is well-known (thank you, Proust),
but neurologist Alan Hirsch, MD, director
of the Smell & Taste Treatment and Re-
search Foundation in Chi cago, says that
there’s also a close correlation between
what you smell and the way you feel. “The
reason scent is so intricately related to hap-
piness is because the part of the brain that
smells, or the olfactory lobe, is actually
part of the limbic system, or the emotional
brain,” he says. “If you see a picture of a
horse, first you identify what it is, and then
you figure out whether or not you like it,
but with smell it’s the exact opposite. You
smell something and immediately react
to it, and then you figure out whether it’s
a rose or a lilac or whatever. Smell is the
quickest way to change someone’s mood
or behavior, because it happens totally in-
dependently of thought.” The scent of lav-
ender, for example, has a calming effect,
while vanilla, oddly, that smell of inno-
cence and baking, has been found to be
sexually arousing. Jasmine, according to
three separate studies—the first on mice,
the second two on humans, including base-
ball players—can have as profound a calm-
ing effect as Valium and can dramatically
improve hand-eye coordination.
The sharp delight of smelling some-
thing glorious lasts only a few seconds be-
fore the nose gets accustomed to the scent,
so it becomes a bit like chasing a ghost—
and this thrill-of-the-hunt aspect seems to
be in keeping with the way male fragrance
fanatics are hardwired. As Murawczyk
says, “The quest is to find something that
feels like it’s lighting up a new part of your
brain.” Most of the Goodsmellas started
their collections with widely popular eaux
such as Acqua di Giò, then gradually be-
gan to explore the niche realm looking for
more off-the-map olfactory experiences.
“I started out just going into department
stores and smelling fragrances,” says Li-
bassi, “but when I got to the point when I
could walk along the wall in Sephora and
go, ‘That smells like almond, that smells
like rose…’ then I was like, ‘Where’s the
next wall?’ ” (Although he wouldn’t rule
out something just because it’s main-
stream: “A good juice is a good juice.”)
“After a while,” Buck says, “you start
looking for something that smacks you in
the face and makes you think, Wow, I’ve
never thought of that combination of notes
before. You might be like, ‘This isn’t for
From left: TOM FORD’s new Noir is an ultramasculine blend of black pepper, nutmeg, and patchouli; DECENNIAL Bois Bourbon was created by perfumer Jerome Epinette exclusively for Luckyscent;
GUERLAIN Arsène Lupin, a fresh, woody oriental; LE LABO Rose 31 is a Goodsmellas favorite; DIOR Eau Sauvage is a classic citrus chypre, launched in 1966; FREDERIC MALLE L’Eau D’Hiver is a unisex
scent centered around an iris note; MONTALE Louban combines Turkish rose and oud; the spice-infused BYREDO Black Saffron; HOUBIGANT Fougère Royale is a re-creation of the original from 1882. D
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SCENT OF A MAN
268 www. e l l e. c o m
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me, but it’s fascinating.’ ”
Fragrance is intrinsically associated
with sex and attraction, and one can as-
sume that the average male scent spritzer
isn’t putting the stuff on merely to de-
light his nose alone: A recent 22-minute
dispatch titled “How to Get More Com-
pliments With Your Fragrance,” from
YouTube fragrance reviewer DracDoc,
garnered more than 2,100 views. Still, most
hard-core juice junkies maintain that they
wear and collect perfumes primarily for
themselves. In fact, most of the Goodsmel-
las say their girlfriends and wives, while
tolerant, don’t share their passion for scent
(“It stinks,” says Libassi, seemingly oblivi-
ous to his pun). They do, however, like it
when women indulge—top picks among
the group include Hermès Un Jardin Sur
Le Toit, Frederic Malle Carnal Flower, By
Kilian Liaisons Dangeureuses, and Stella
by Stella McCartney. “When my girl-
friend wears Amouage Memoir Woman,
I’m just mesmerized,” Scardaville says. “I
could follow her around all day long.”
While none of the Goodsmellas object
to anointing themselves with fragrances
marketed toward the opposite sex (Powell
says he gets most attention from women
at work when wearing Dior’s heady ori-
ental Hypnotic Poison), they are drawn
to more traditionally masculine elements.
Of the all-time favorites they name—
including Creed Spice and Wood, Xerjoff
Richwood, Tom Ford Black Violet, and
By Kilian Back To Black—nearly all fea-
ture warm patchouli, tobacco, musk, and
woody notes. Lucky scent’s Eastwood says
that “dirty, smoky” oud and leather tend
to be popular with his store’s male cli-
entele: “They’re interested in those fra-
grances that are a little bit bolder, richer,
and more complex.”
In general, Eastwood says, male fra-
grance devotees “can be a little more in-
tense” than their female counterparts. “We
have guys who call us the second they read
about a new fragrance, asking if we can
overnight it to them right away or want-
ing a preview. ‘Does the leather note last
all the way through? How strong is the sil-
lage? What’s the dry-down?’ ”
“Men like to be connoisseurs,” Wright
adds. “So when they get into fragrance, it’s
like they get into cars or music. There’s a
lot of interest in the ingredients. Just like
men are obsessed with small-batch bour-
bon, they could just as easily be obsessed
with a certain specific note in a fragrance
and who the perfumer was.”
Buck compares the commitment of a
perfume collector to that of an oenophile:
Both are pleasure-seeking hobbies, and
neither of them are cheap. “We might be
spending $300 on a bottle,” he says, “but
at least it lasts longer than wine, where you
might spend the same amount and then
drink it in a night.” Says Devine, without
a hint of regret: “I think my fragrance col-
lection is worth more than my car.”
A decade ago, collecting fragrances
might not have been deemed a particular ly
manly pursuit, but times have changed.
Roughly 50 percent of men now buy their
own scents (as opposed to having them
pressed upon them by significant others);
between January and October 2011, the
men’s fine-fragrance category grew faster
than women’s (with sales increasing 12 per-
cent and 9 percent, respectively); and the
explosion of the niche-perfumery market
has offered myriad ways for Goodsmella
types to get nerdy. Wright attributes the
fact that guys seem to be willing to drop
more cash on smelling good to the same
shift in twenty-first-century culture that’s
made seeing dudes drinking $12 artisanal
cocktails as common as spotting those
quaffing PBR, or the same gender-blind
appreciation of the finer things that has
made Brad Pitt the first male face of Cha-
nel No. 5. “Not all guys we sell fragrance
to are fascinated with the minor details,”
he says. “There are a lot of regular guys
who come in looking for a scent who just
don’t want to wear the mass-market stuff.
It’s like, as you grow older you get more
discerning about your wardrobe—I think
that that’s seeping into the mentality of
guys when it comes to fragrance. The guy
who’s moving away from Levi’s and start-
ing to get into hard-core indie jeans from
Japan is probably also getting into edgier
fragrance brands like Comme des Gar-
çons or Escentric Molecules.”
“One thing that guys understand is an
upgrade,” Murawczyk says. “That makes
sense to them. I think any guy with a sense
of self is trying to figure out different cat-
egories in which he can improve him-
self, or hone his identity through what he
consumes and what he surrounds himself
with, and fragrance is one of those things.”
He gestures to the clientele currently mill-
ing around MiN—a couple spraying scent
strips and waving them under each other’s
noses; a mother struggling to keep her tod-
dler from capsizing a display table; and a
few men carefully scrutinizing shiny fla-
cons and venturing cautious sniffs.
“Perfume is having a real moment
across the board, but this giant awakening
is happening with men in particular be-
cause women have understood the power
and seduction of fragrance for a lot longer,”
Murawczyk continues. “But, you know, we
get it. It’s not about using the fragrance to
get the girl or using the fragrance to land
the job—it’s just life enriching. And when
you figure that out, it’s like seeing color.”
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“I’LL HAVE THE COLOR DU JOUR.”
Claudia Schiffer
REPORT ELLE BEAUTY
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T
he white plastic tube that I kept in a bathroom drawer looked
innocuous enough—as small as a travel toothpaste, with a
happy little yellow sunburst over the logo: CARAC. Still, I had
been actively avoiding it for six months, since my dermatolo-
gist prescribed it with a warning: Using it wouldn’t be pretty.
I work, I have a kid, I have to go out into the world and can’t
afford to look like a leper—these were the excuses I’d summoned
to delay the inevitable. But given my history of skin cancer (I had
three basal cell carcinomas surgically removed from my face in
2011 alone), my doctor said I absolutely had to apply fluorouracil,
or 5-FU, a topical chemotherapy treatment that targets precan-
cerous cells. The medicine would reduce the likelihood of future
surgeries, she said. It could also save my life.
So, I finally cracked open the tube. I knew from the Internet
how bad the coming weeks would be. A 37-year-old Indianapolis
woman posted a video blog of her experience with 5-FU. “My
face,” she announced, “has officially melted off.” Another user
said he’d stopped two-thirds of the way through the nightly
21-day treatment because he couldn’t bear the pain, while yet an-
other explained his appearance like this: “I told them I’d won the
bobbing for french fries competition.”
Fluorouracil first got traction in the late ’90s, after the Ameri-
FACE OFF
Amy Wallace’s skin-cancer history made her a
prime candidate for a new cream to prevent the
disease. The only wrinkle? It made her look as
though she’d been sandpapered
can Academy of Dermatology filed a much-publicized lawsuit to
protest Florida Blue Cross and Blue Shield’s refusal to cover its
use for actinic keratoses, those flat, scaly growths caused by too
much sun exposure. The AAD did a study that found that AKs
were in essence squamous cell carcinomas waiting to happen
(since then, research has shown AKs can develop into basal cell
cancers as well) and concluded that early treatment was essential
to prevent them from progressing into invasive skin cancers.
As I approached the midcentury mark, I didn’t have a lot of
visible AKs—which made me an unusual Carac user. In prescrib-
ing it, my dermatologist was being aggressive because of my fair
skin and recent history: the skin-cancer surgeries that had left 23
stitches on my left cheek and upper lip.
Skin cancer is the most common form of cancer in the United
States, and its incidence is growing. According to a 2005 study
in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the number of
women under age 40 diagnosed with basal cell carcinoma has
more than doubled in 30 years, while cases of squamous cell car-
cinoma among women under 40 increased almost 700 percent.
Basal cell carcinomas are very rarely life threatening, but they can
do a lot of damage. Last year, when the tiny, dry-seeming spot on
my left cheek, which I noticed immediately, turned out to be just the
tip of the iceberg (its removal left me with a two-inch scar), I asked a
nurse what happened to people who ignore warning signs. She had
a sobering answer, recalling a man who lost an eye to skin cancer.
Squamous cell carcinomas, meanwhile, while not necessarily
life threatening, can be fatal if left untreated. Same with mela-
noma, which can metastasize, spreading cancer through the body.
The good news, of course, is that almost all forms of skin cancer
are highly treatable if caught early.
The Carac took almost a week to kick in, but once it got roll-
ing, it wasn’t subtle. At first my skin was dry and red and itchy,
and I had occasional dull headaches (a side effect). Next my face
started to swell, then crack and peel. Friends asked if what I was
undergoing was the equivalent of a hard-core peel. It certainly
looked like one. Except for this: Because the medicine reacts to
precancerous cells (the ones growing a tad faster than normal),
my T-zone was toast, and I had angry red stripes on my cheek-
bones—like war paint—but other parts of my face were clear.
Every night after I applied the vile stuff, my skin would sting
wildly. It felt like a terrible sunburn, and as it worsened I was
aware that the sensation was familiar. By re-creating the worst
burns of my life, the medicine prompted memories—the child-
hood camping trip to the Florida Panhandle when I burned so
badly I had to wear clothes in the ocean, the ski vacation I took
as a teenager when rays reflecting off the snow made me blister.
Mostly I hunkered down in my house, soothing my skin with
Aquaphor and losing myself in old episodes of Breaking Bad. But
when I went out, I was surprised how quickly my self-consciousness
faded. Carac had turned me from a competitor in Los Angeles’
merciless beauty wars to a mere spectator, which wasn’t all bad.
People looked at me with fleeting concern but just as quickly
looked away. It was the same feeling I’d had years before, when I
swam laps while eight months pregnant. Fellow swimmers—both
men and women—gazed at me with fascination (I was awesome in
my hugeness) but without a trace of lust or envy. Here again, I was
off the grid, on hiatus—invisible. I didn’t want to stay that way for-
ever, but prettiness is such a weird part of the human puzzle, and its
value ebbs with time. To go without it, utterly, opens an aging girl’s
eyes. I was looking ugly to extend my chances of existing at all.
For weeks after the treatment I stayed pink, but my skin was far
smoother and fresher than before. At my follow-up visit, my doctor
mentioned a new medicine that works similarly to Carac but requires
only two or three applications. It’s called Picato, and around the time
you’re reading this, I’ll be slathering it on my arms and chest.
272 www. e l l e. c o m
lorealparis.com ©2012 L’Oréal USA, Inc.
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Stone-cool fox: ELLE editors took a vote: The top red-carpet look of 2012 was Emma Stone at the Paris premiere of The Amazing Spider-Man.
Chanel celebrity makeup artist Rachel Goodwin used Chanel Rouge Coco in Rivoli on Stone’s lips and dusted the soft, peach-rose Revlon ColorStay 16
Hour Eyeshadow in Addictive on her lids. Hairstylist Mara Roszak curled Stone’s hair with a one-inch-barrel iron before pinning up one side. “Cross
your bobby pins to get them to stay,” Roszak says, “and finish with a glossing spray.”
From the favorite DIY updo to the secret to getting in action-hero shape, ELLE’s
annual superstar cheat sheet covers celeb style from head to toe
ACCESS
HOLLYWOOD
ELLE BEAUTY
280 www. e l l e. c o m
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FETE READY
For 2012’s best big-night hair, these mix masters paid tribute to
Old Hollywood while pulling inspiration from fall runways.
By Julie Schott
OLD HOLLYWOOD FALL ’12 RUNWAY RED CARPET CHEAT SHEET
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Bouncy waves pushed over
one shoulder à la Blake Lively
offer a modern update on the
Brigitte Bardot (by way of
Veronica Lake) original. At
Versace Couture, stylist Guido
Palau prepped damp hair with
Redken Full Effect 04, then
gave strands a rough blow-dry
before wrapping sections
around a medium curling iron
and pinning to set. Shake out,
then blast with a blow-dryer
for a full-volume finish.
If hair extensions scream
high-maintenance diva, then a
pixie cut conveys the opposite:
carefree cool with loads of
confidence. Going ultrashort is
often coupled with an equally
extreme dye job: Think of
Michelle Williams’ platinum
blond rendition and Anne
Hathaway’s deep brunette.
The key is to avoid overstyling.
Skip the blow-dryer and
smooth with a boar-bristle
brush while damp.
Reigning queen of the quick
change, Cher has worn her
hair in countless ways, but
pin-straight, middle-parted
strands set her on the path to
superstardom. “The precision
of the center part is the key,”
Redken stylist Palau says.
“The look is strongest when
the line is clean and perfectly
centered.” Mila Kunis kept the
style wearable with height at
the crown and a bit of modern
movement.
No longer reserved for
princesses and brides, the new
toned-down tiara does best
when nestled into an unfussy
updo like Kirsten Dunst’s. “The
key to making decorative
pieces work is to keep the
styling simple and the texture
natural,” says Palau, who
recommends pulling hair into
a low pony and twisting into a
chignon before adding the
adornment.
Brigitte Bardot
Jean Seberg
Cher
Elizabeth Taylor
Versace
Couture
Felipe Oliveira
Baptista
Akris
Dolce & Gabbana
Blake Lively
Anne Hathaway
Mila Kunis
Kirsten Dunst
282 www. e l l e. c o m
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ELLE BEAUTY
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F
or thousands of years, odes to the fe-
male form celebrated the grace of a
delicate ankle, a swanlike neck, a hol-
low clavicle. There was no mention of
six-pack abs in the love sonnets of Shake-
speare. Lunges and isometric deltoid reps
were nowhere in Cleopatra’s beauty rou-
tine. In the late 1980s, though, Hollywood
changed that feminine ideal; hard bod-
ies became the norm, and a decade later,
actresses were expected not only to keep
superfit but also to offer up their cardio-
to-strength-training ratios as interview
fodder. Lately, however, Hollywood has
seen a resolute, if quiet, rejection of that
pervasive my-body-is-my-brand ethos.
For an ever-growing group of young
stars, their bodies seem almost an after-
thought: elegantly shaped, yes, but neither
aggressively honed nor flashily exhib-
ited. In this club are sprites like Carey
Mulligan and Emma Stone; paper-thin
women like Rooney Mara, Taylor Swift,
Alexa Chung, Zoe Saldana, and Mia
Wasikowska; and “normal” girls like
Kristen Stewart, Zoë Kravitz, Jennifer
Lawrence, Solange Knowles, Michelle
Williams, and Zooey
Deschanel. The
trend isn’t about
Hollywood accept-
ing curves or larger
sizes. These women
still have the sort of thin, sample-size fig-
ures that are far from the American every-
woman’s. They’re movie stars, after all.
Instead, the difference lies in an air of ef-
fortlessness, in the refusal to seem to work
as hard as the preceding generation—even
if they actually are. “I work out with a
trainer who once asked: ‘Who do you
want to look like?’ ” Carey Mulligan has
said. “I said: ‘I don’t want to look like an
actress—I want to look like a person.’ Nor-
mal people don’t go to the gym six times
a week.” When asked about her workout
routine this spring, Emma Stone replied,
“I haven’t worked out for a month and I’m
proud if it! Running is bad for your knees,
and I like to do things I actually enjoy, like
going for a swim.”
Their charms, these women want us to
know, lie elsewhere. It’s their taste, brains,
and talent—as opposed to a bionic-looking
bum—that they would like to define them.
These women would rather you think
they’re drinking a six-pack with friends
than acquiring one with a trainer.
Hollywood body standards are, of
course, a reaction to what came before, and
we’re in the midst of pirouetting from one
extreme to another. The aughts were an era
of body-con, starting with Britney Spears
in her snake-charming bikini and end-
ing with the va-va-voom curves of Blake
Lively and Scarlett Johansson poured
OUT-OF-BODY
EXPERIENCE
Unlike the obsessively toned Jessicas and Jennifers of the past
decade, a new generation of Hollywood stars have brands with
little to do with their body parts. By Noreen Malone
ALL THE REAL GIRLS
(Above, from left)
Mulligan, Stewart,
Knowles, Williams,
and Chung lead
Hollywood’s new,
less-body-focused
pack.
into second-skin fabrics. Meanwhile, their
elders, Jennifers Aniston and Lopez, and
Gwyneth Paltrow, stayed on Hollywood
hot lists by dint of unrelenting body work.
(“It’s not luck, it’s not fairy dust, it’s not
good genes,” Paltrow has said in regard to
her svelte figure. “It’s killing myself for an
hour and a half, five days a week, but what
I get out of it is relative to what I put into
it.”) That’s not to say that Stewart and com-
pany don’t play some version of the gym
game—sure they do (see where exactly on
page 308)—or that there won’t always be a
place at the multiplex for biceps-wielding
bombshells. But right now, the aspiration is
leaning toward the effortless.
The shift could be linked to the rise of
indie culture. Stewart, for instance, is the
face of one of the world’s most successful
franchises. Yet she toils to cultivate the air
of the outsider, showing up at premieres
in sneakers and scowling like a goth teen
forced to attend the prom. Williamsburg,
Brooklyn, not Malibu, is where the locus
of cool has shifted. In those circles, trying
too hard is frowned upon, and anyway,
layers and loose clothing are encouraged
no matter how defined the body beneath.
Or perhaps this strivers’ backlash
comes from a deeper place in the Ameri-
can psyche. Conspicuous consumption
is no longer hip—at least not compared
to the retail gluttony of Mischa Barton,
Lindsay Lohan, and the like during their
tabloid heyday, when five- and six-figure
shopping sprees were a frequent report—
and that restraint bleeds into all areas of
spending and self-presentation.
As modern and “real” as all of this seems,
the fact is, the new feminine ideal may
be even more unattainable than its gym-
created forebear. The hard-bodied look of
the ’90s and aughts was, despite its excesses,
a democratic one. Work hard, put in the time,
achieve perfection. Or if it doesn’t come that
easily, buy it with plastic surgery or expen-
sive personal training. But there were cau-
tionary tales also. Who among us isn’t a little
terrified of Madonna’s arms, which began
to transform into veiny ropes around the
time Madge could see 50 looming? And we
all remember how impossibly slim Jessica
Simpson whittled down to for The Dukes of
Hazzard. For Simpson, size 0 did turn out to
be impossible—or at least not sustainable. It
just wasn’t what her body was wired for.
Hollywood’s new culture of restraint,
though refreshing in many ways, under-
scores some inequalities—it was ever thus.
Youth and genes are things you can’t pur-
chase. The people who come to the table
blessed with certain innate advantages,
with the ability to look beautiful without
visibly appearing to try at it, are the ones
with the glory. They are the one percent.
HOLLYWOOD/BODY
284 www. e l l e. c o m
ELLE BEAUTY ACCESS HOLLYWOOD
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DUTY FREE
We all fantasize about the red carpet, but what
we really want to know is: How do celebs look
sogood on their time off? Crystal Meers gets
their 24/7 essentials
NEUTRALSHIFTNatural doesn’t mean naked: Tinted moisturizers and
bronzers make skin look perfect in seconds, no glam squad required.
LIPSTICK QUEENS A swipe of bright rose or crimson gets celebs out the
door in under 30 seconds. Sunglasses let them skip eye makeup.
(From left) PER-F’EKT Lash Perfection Gel tints and treats lashes; YSLTouche Éclat has erased dark circles for 20 years; DIOR Dior Addict Lip Glow, the world’s chicest lip balm, gives a hint
of color; CHANEL Vitalumière Aqua foundation “brightens complexions and makes skin look taut,” says Kate Lee, makeup artist for Keira Knightley; apply BENEFIT COSMETICS Coralista
bronzer at the top of cheekbones and on the bridge of the nose, suggests Lee; create the “easiest red lip” with NARS Velvet Matte Lip Pencil in Dragon Girl, Lee says.
T
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PNicole Richie
Amber Heard
Emma Watson
Blake Lively
Christina Hendricks
An herbal-tea base
keeps BODY & EDEN I Have
Strength light and lovely.
Green newbies love the
yummy, slightly sweet
PRESSED JUICERY Greens 2.
MOON JUICE Fennel, Frond
& Herb is famous for its
debloating effect.
With a zingy limeade
taste, PALETA’s Kale Kooler
makes kale cooler.
Pineapple helps THE JUICE
PRESS Doctor Green Juice
go down easy.
d d
YOU VOTED!
ELLE READERS’
OFF-DUTY
FAVE
Stars have
traded their
Starbucks
ventis for
bottles of
glow-getting
green juices.
Here, the kale
cognoscenti’s
juiceries du
jour:
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20 ye
286 www. e l l e. c o m
JOIN US ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND YOUTUBE
|
NAPOLEONPERDIS.COM
ELLE BEAUTY ACCESS HOLLYWOOD
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FLY GIRLS
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KNOT’S LANDINGOn their stylists’ days off, nine out of 10 starlets go for an
easy but oh-so-cool samurai bun when running errands.
WAVE RIDERS Liberal doses of dry shampoo and touch-ups with a curling
iron keep pro blow-outs perfect long after celebs clock out.
(From left) BUMBLE AND BUMBLE Surf Spray creates easy, beachy waves; RENÉ FURTERER Naturia dry shampoo is a blow-out’s lifeline; L’ORÉAL PARIS Elnett hairspray brushes out for impromptu
style changes; stylist Danilo’s clients (such as Gwen Stefani and Rooney Mara) often swipe his softening PANTENE Aqua Light Conditioning Shake; a starlet’s first splurge? A clutch-size
MASON PEARSON boar bristle brush; for the perfect topknot,“gather hair high on the top of your head, wrapping it around itself completely, and secure with an elastic,” says Harry Josh,
stylist to Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen; JOHN FRIEDA Touch-Up Flyaway Tamer keeps the style sleek; SHU UEMURA Essence Absolue Nourishing Protective Oil seals split ends.
Lily Collins
Beyoncé Knowles
Jessica Biel
Taylor Swift
Gwen Stefani
Miranda Kerr looks
just as luminous
landing at LAX as
she did when boarding
the flight in Sydney 14
hours before. Granted,
she’s a supermodel who
flies business class.
Here, our favorite
in-flight bring-along
amenities that can make
seat 48B feel like 2A.
An Ugg alternative, rabbit-
fur LIKA MIMIKA espadrilles
keep feet cozy.
Packed with vitamins, BEROCCA
tablets bubble like champers to
perk you up prelanding.
With green-
tea and algae
extracts,
TATCHA
Luminous
Dewy Skin
Mist protects
skin from the
moisture-
zapping cabin
air.
SK-II masks hydrate—and
discourage the creep next to
you from trying to chitchat.
PRE-
FLIGHT
A U lt ti bbi
e
POST-
FLIGHT
RENÉ FURTERER
WAVE RIDERS Liberal doses of dry shampoo and touch ups with a curling
iron keep pro blow-outs perfect long after celebs clock out.
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288 www. e l l e. c o m
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woman I know who met Raj Kanodia, MD, at last year’s
Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress in Monaco—an an-
nual medical meet-up where doctors share new techniques
and possible breakthroughs—recalled him as a man attended
by a retinue of Megan Fox look-alikes. “There was the blond
Megan Fox, the Indian Megan Fox,” she marveled afterward,
“each more beautiful than the last.” As it happens, Fox—in par-
ticular, her small, defined, perfectly proportionate proboscis—is
one of Kanodia’s most-requested models.
Kanodia, the king of the Hollywood nose job, went to Monaco
to deliver a talk titled “The Beverly Hills Challenge: Treating Stars
and Starlets.” That challenge, in essence, is an aesthetic shell game:
How do you tweak a face that has been memorized by the masses
so that, as Kanodia puts it, “the camera continues to like them,” but
the human eye can’t spot the difference? “It’s a question of enhanc-
ing a painting without imparting my own characteristics on it,” he
says. “It’s like restoring a Rembrandt. After the work is done, it’s
still a Rembrandt, not a Kanodia.” In Kanodia’s analogies, some-
times God is Rembrandt and sometimes the surgeon is. Paying for
his work “is the difference between a $2 painting you buy at Kmart
and a $20 million painting you get at Sotheby’s. It’s not the paint;
it’s not the brush,” he says. “The difference is the artist.”
Parisian surgeon Jean-Louis Sebagh, MD, regarded in Europe as
the ne plus ultra of plastics, offers up a no less grandiose endorse-
ment. Of Kanodia’s work with injectibles—like most other plastic
surgeons, the minute Botox, Restylane, and Juvéderm opened up
the possibility of sculpting faces with no downtime and in 15-minute
sessions, Kanodia started using them—Sebagh opines, “I believe he
may be the only cosmetic doctor practicing in the United States
who is able to perform this procedure properly. Of course, in ad-
dition to the actual technique, there is the personal touch and aes-
thetic vision that cannot be taught, but which he also has.”
For patients who have to have the best—and have no qualms
about paying for it—Kanodia is one of very few doctors at the top
of a very short list. He’s on the record as having fixed Cameron
Diaz’s nose after she broke it surfing. He is so frequently credited
with Ashley Simpson’s 2006 rhinoplasty that he doesn’t bother
denying it—though he doesn’t confirm it, either. Online specula-
tors also debate whether Blake Lively, Scarlett Johansson, Ashley
Tisdale, and, yes, Ms. Fox have spent time in his office, whether
for surgery or even-subtler pick-me-ups.
It’s not easy to be a beauty Houdini in a post-Housewives world,
in which every tabloid reader—and casting director—is on the
lookout for telltale signs of intervention. Since the first Botox
backlash began several years ago, platypus lips, ski-slope noses,
freeze-frame foreheads, and expressions of permanent surprise
(with their sad reek of desperation and poor decision making) have
become a bigger career risk for an actor than the human foibles
they’re intended to correct. Picture an overinjected star or one with
an evident face-lift, and then try to remember the last time you saw
her in a (good) movie. If you think that indicates some kind of new-
found acceptance, some progressive forgiveness of age or imper-
fection—Good news, Hollywood: We’re letting you off the hook!—think
again. The work is still getting done. It’s just getting done better.
For anyone who pores over the pages of Us Weekly thinking,
Did she or didn’t she?—and who hasn’t fallen down that rabbit
hole?—spend an hour in Kanodia’s office and you will laugh at
your own naïveté. Directors, producers, hairstylists: They all send
DOC HOLLYWOOD
In an industry in which choosing a plastic surgeon can be a career-making—
or career-ruining—decision, celebrities trust their noses to one doctor:
Raj Kanodia, MD. Maggie Bullock heads to Beverly Hills
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their actresses Kanodia’s way. He’ll review
movie footage before consulting with, say,
the 45-year-old whose next role is that of
a 38-year-old lawyer (younger—but just
enough) or the gorgeous 22-year-old whose
upper lip happens to thin a bit too much
when she smiles. But his real niche may
be the actors who come to him when their
contracts specify that they should not alter
their faces in any way. In those cases, the
tweak must make a woman subtly prettier,
fresher—without even tipping off the cin-
ematographer who is framing her close-up.
In his office, Kanodia, a youthful 65-
year-old with dark, combed-back curls, on-
trend gray Nikes with red laces, and a loose
linen shirt, is concentrating on the face of a
patient who wasn’t supposed to be a patient.
She’s in town from Tbilisi, Georgia, to pro-
vide moral support for her aunt, who looks
more like her sister and who is shopping
around for a nose job. While she’s here,
though, why not get “a little lip?” the niece
suggests. Why not, indeed? “Lips are like
hummingbirds,” says Kanodia, sliding the
needle into each side of her upper lip, then
once into the middle. “They’re very light.
They have to move when you talk. Add too
much, and they’re too heavy.” Prick, prick,
prick, and he’s done. The mouth that was,
to my eye, already naturally full and sym-
metrical, on a face that looks like that of a
young Bianca Jagger, is now just a bit more
pillowy. But it is not overblown or bruised
or even uncomfortable—and, presently,
it curves into a satisfied smile. “Ooh,” she
coos. “I have lips now.” Including the few
seconds it took to make the decision, she
has altered her face in less time than it
would take to change her neon-coral toe-
nail polish. “And with less than half of a cc,”
Kanodia says, stepping back to admire.
This is Kanodia’s point of difference:
He works small. Botox he delivers via a
hair-thin, 32-gauge needle—the smallest he
can find, imported from France to deliver,
with minimal pain, a supercontrolled, mi-
cro amount of the neurotoxin. Likewise, he
prides himself on using the absolute mini-
mum amounts of filler—a drop here, a drop
there—for an enhancement you can’t put
your finger on. His rhinoplasty technique
is also distinctly less-is-more. Rather than
cutting the nose at its base and peeling the
skin back to expose its bone-and-cartilage
undercarriage, he prefers a “closed” tech-
nique, in which multiple incisions are made
inside the nostril. The procedure is a bit like
working underneath a sleeve; there’s some
mystery to it. Patients love that it’s not all
that gory—Kanodia is fond of saying
it’s less bloody than a finger cut (though
when I observed his OR, this proved to
be a slight exaggeration). But critics of
closed rhinoplasty say it’s limiting—with-
out opening the nose all the way, you can
only do so much. Kanodia would argue
that’s exactly the point. “That’s one of my
debates with other rhinoplasty surgeons,”
he says. “Please do not change the nose.”
But walking out of a doctor’s office with,
for example, less than half a cc of Juvéderm
at a cost of $500 to $800 isn’t for everyone.
Kanodia can afford to reject the women who
want “more, more, more,” he says. “Every
week, I turn down about 20 lips.” He also
rarely takes on the lucrative and surprisingly
common work known as revision rhino-
plasty, aka do-overs, on procedures that either
went awry or simply didn’t go far enough. I
THE PROFILER
USE YOUR ILLUSION Above, two of Kanodia’s signature subtle nose jobs. He may work on celebrity faces,
but don’t bother telling him “I’ll have what she’s having.” Most patients who demand a specific
star’s nose are turned away. “If you want to look like yourself,” says Kanodia, “I’m your guy.” C
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watched him politely but firmly turn down
one woman who came in looking for what
would have been her second or third nose
job. (Perplexingly, it was her engorged lips
that seemed most in need of medical inter-
vention. She never mentioned those.) “I
could do her nose and probably make it a
little better, but it would never be great,”
Kanodia said afterward. “Then she’d go
around telling people I did it, and they’d
think that’s what my work looks like.”
K
anodia has a favorite joke: “When I go
to medical conferences and show slides
of my before and afters, all the other
doctors say, ‘Raj, why do all the pretty
girls go to you?’ ” His subjects titter politely
when they hear this, but it’s true: Women
would pay top dollar to look like Kanodia’s
“befores.” In one three-hour stretch, I sat by
in shock as stunner after stunner perched on
the fleur-de-lis-upholstered chairs in his of-
fice and asked him to “fix” something. The
journalism major with the Texas tan and
the lustrous Pantene-commercial ponytail;
the ex-model law student who looked like
a curvier Carolyn Bessette; the Cali high
schooler who is surely the subject of football-
team reveries. In most cases, you had to
stare hard to discern the flaw in question.
They also didn’t appear to be terribly
insecure or cowed by body dysmorphia.
No, these were self-assured women who
probably turn heads everywhere they go—
the kind of girls who can’t help but know
they look good. Many of their complaints
didn’t even sound like complaints: “I really
like my nose, but….” This is Kanodia’s fa-
vorite kind of work. To use another of his
axioms: “God knew what He was doing,
but He didn’t finish the job.”
Sometimes, though, you have to wonder:
Maybe God just hasn’t finished the job yet.
Kanodia’s average age for nose jobs is 17 to
25, but he starts as young as 14. At that age,
I referred to my own nose as “the upside-
down strawberry.” But by 20, I’d grown into
it. More importantly, I’d grown up. Yes, my
nose became slightly less producelike, but
my mind also became engaged in things be-
yond my own face. Shouldn’t these girls be
given the same opportunity? “Once upon a
time, I could have entertained that thought
process,” Kanodia says. “But now what
I’ve seen is the change in the person’s per-
sonality, the confidence it instills—it’s life-
changing.” As he sees it, if something that is
plaguing you can be fixed, why wait? “This
nose, which is at the center of the human
face, becomes a focal point of insecurity,” he
says. “Then it’s the right time to rectify it.”
For this, Kanodia’s patients fly in from
all over the country, as well as from Rus-
sia, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, and
Australia. The average price for rhinoplasty
292 www. e l l e. c o m
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in this country is $4,200. Kanodia’s go for
$15,000 to $18,000, down slightly from the
low-$20s figure he was able to charge for
some cases circa 2007. “If not the most ex-
pensive,” he says, his procedure is “in the
top percentile.” For the client who flies in
with her entourage from Russia or the Mid-
dle East, pays to park her private plane for
a week at LAX, and rents out a presidential
suite at the Four Seasons for her recovery,
“it becomes a million-dollar operation,”
Kanodia says with a chuckle. “My fee is the
least of it.” Some women have told him he’s
a bargain, in fact—that he really should be
charging more. Post-op thank-you gifts—
say, a $10,000 Lalique vase—are common.
And there seems to be no shortage of
these price-is-no-object patients (or perhaps
patrons is a better word). When one gal-pal of
a Russian oligarch splurged on a girls’ week-
end, she brought a private jet full of friends
to see Kanodia. During their individual
consultations, “each girl comes in the room
and says, ‘I don’t want to look like her,’ ” he
says, meaning whichever of her friends
had just left. “And then the next one comes
in and says the same thing.” At least three
Saudi princesses, in varying pre- and post-
op phases, graced Kanodia’s office in the
two days I was there. (You can spot them, I
learned, by the slightly incongruous gentle-
man in their wake. This would be the private
doctor assigned to travel with each family.)
For the right price, some royals (Kanodia is
not saying which ones) can get the doctor to
come to them, and some have been known
to rent out entire hospital wings to have him
attend to their clans. On one such occasion,
Kanodia, his anesthesia nurse, and another
cosmetic surgeon, specializing in below-the-
neck work, were flown in to work on a sul-
tan’s family but encountered a glitch upon
landing at the airport. Kanodia had to stall
in the security line, attempting to explain
why he had arrived with five suit cases full
of surgical instruments, until an emissary
swooped in and ushered him through.
There, he says, he was brought in to meet
with a queen, who was seeking a third-try
nose job—but that wasn’t all. The woman
threw open her robe, grabbed his hand, and
placed it over her rock-hard implant, de-
manding to know his opinion. “Originally,
I was told I wasn’t even supposed to speak to
her,” says Kanodia, “and I knew the cam-
eras were watching.” He extracted his hand,
exited, and called in the breast man.
A
t dinner among the olive trees in
the West Hollywood rooftop gar-
den of members-only Soho House,
Kanodia extracts a small plastic bag-
gie from his pants pocket. It holds three
fresh cubes of ginger. With the help of
four full-time gardeners, Kanodia spends
hours each week planting and pruning
the lush, expansive hillside behind his
antiques-crowded California Mediterra-
nean manse. In gated Bel Air, he lives one
house up the hill from Nancy Reagan and
one down from what was until recently
the home of Elizabeth Taylor. He re cently
purchased a second property, across the
street, where he plans to construct a mod-
ernist fortress with parking for 30.
The ginger, he hands to the waiter—this
being L.A., the guy is only momentarily
thrown—for a round of Moscow Mules; he
prefers the real thing to the standard sweet-
ened syrup. Also from the garden: four
small, hot green chili peppers, which he dips
in olive oil and munches instead of bread.
This place is near to Kanodia’s heart
because it has a sweeping, movieworthy
view of downtown L.A., the town he loves,
and also because it overlooks the site of
the office building where he got his start
in 1979, working as a fellow for one of the
original Doc Hollywoods. Morey Parkes,
MD, nip-tucked some of the most famous
faces of the silver screen including, many
believe, the nose of Marilyn Monroe.
Sitting here must also serve as a poignant
reminder of how far he’s come. Kanodia
grew up the eldest boy of six children in
Calcutta, where he remembers riding the
bus past Mother Teresa’s mission. Even in
his middle-class family, “you only saw doc-
tors for life-threatening situations,” Kano-
dia says, and there was no such thing as
elective, let alone cosmetic, surgery. But
even as a child, he was “obsessed, enam-
ored with beauty,” stopping to really stare
at a flower or analyze a face; as early as six,
he was infatuated with the most beautiful
girl in his class. (“I thought, I have to get in
on that,” he says.) His authoritarian father
was a self-made businessman who had run
away from his village to eventually become
the chairman and CEO of the largest insur-
ance agency in India. In their household,
there was no time for games; education was
everything. “It was drilled into my head,”
he says. “Nobody comes in second in the
Kanodia household.” By 16, perhaps plot-
ting his escape, he was regularly going to
the U.S. cultural center in Calcutta to read
about America. The same year, the Beatles
came to town, seeking enlightenment with
the sitar player Ravi Shankar—and bring-
ing with them enough Western glamour to
intoxicate a long-haired would-be Calcutta
hippie. “All those things came into the
same path,” Kanodia says. “A, I have to go
to America. B, I have to be a doctor. And
C, I have to be in the beauty business.”
After dinner, Kanodia leads his small
crew on a lap of the Soho House bar. The
place is crowded with lanky girls in leather
leggings, and muscular, John Varvatos–clad
men wearing oversize watches. They all
seem to know each other, and many of them
know Kanodia. In the low light—deftly
engineered to encourage discreet canoo-
dling, power brokering, and combinations
thereof—it’s hard to tell natural beauty from
that which is more assisted. It’s even harder
to discern young from old, or, perhaps,
young from not-as-young. The authentically
nubile are easy enough to spot, but above
the age of, say, 28, everyone dresses alike,
talks alike, looks a little bit alike. Kanodia
himself is probably one of the club’s elder
statesmen, but in his loose shirt and lace-
less sneakers, who could know?
A colleague of Kanodia’s whispers to me
that he’s the only plastic surgeon to have
been invited to become a member of Soho
House. Running into your plastic surgeon
on a Saturday night can be so awkward.
But no one here seems to fear being found
out. Kanodia doesn’t need to approach
his clients—“They’re the ones who always
come up to me,” he says, just about the
time a curvaceous girl with bottle-red hair
swoops in, arms outstretched. He embraces
her warmly before she’s swept back into
the crowd. “I had no idea who she was at
first,” he says, a little sheepishly. “A Russian
girl. I guess I did her nose last month.” The
redhead sidles up to a friend at the bar, and
Kanodia chuckles. He has done both of
their noses, but neither one knows. C
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THE CONSTANT GARDENER Kanodia, in his Bel Air backyard, with his medical assistant Heather Voss
296 www. e l l e. c o m

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FACE AGAINST TIME
Aging is inevitable…or is it? Certain leading ladies seem to defy nature —or at least the fine
lines and loss of tone that result from the breakdown of collagen. Here, 25 years of Hollywood
faces, plus the hot dermatologic treatments of each era. By Janna Johnson O’Toole
1987 1992 1997 2002 2007 2012
For lip and line
plumping, bovine
collagen (extracted
from cow skin) was
the gold standard of
the ’80s. Unlike
fillers of today,
however, the protein
could trigger allergic
reactions, making
preinjection testing
a must.
Old-fashioned peels
targeted acne scars
and photodamage,
but the harsh acids
(phenol, TCA) often
led to downtime of at
least two weeks. By
contrast, early-’90s
derms bestowed
glows with newly
FDA-approved, milder
alpha hydroxy acids.
Botulinum toxin
type-A (Botox) was
used off-label (it was
FDA-approved only
for eye spasms) to
soften lines on the
face; powerhouse
retinoids became
kinder and gentler
with designer Rx
formulas of Retin-A
Micro and Renova.
The FDA approved
Botox for frown lines;
the first hyaluronic
acid filler, Restylane,
was about to debut
in the U.S. (celeb
derms had smuggled
vials from overseas);
and radio-frequency
firming treatment
Thermage showed
promise.
Nonablative
fractional-laser
devices (such as
Fraxel, FDA-
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became the go-to
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treatment. The laser
left untreated skin
between zapped
spots for faster
recovery.
Ultrasound
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Ulthera is the new
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a patient’s own
fibroblasts (LaViv) or
platelet-rich plasma.
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P
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M
y friend was glowing. Not post-
sex glowing or good-makeup glow-
ing or beach-vacation glowing. This
was different. A moment earlier,
I’d walked right past her on an otherwise
empty sidewalk near my house in Port-
land, Oregon, not recognizing her until she
touched me. Her body language seemed
remade, lighter yet more deliberate. “Oh!”
she laughed. “I’m just back from Peru. It’s
probably the ayahuasca.”
Ah, ayahuasca. I had overachieving
friends across the country who regularly
attended ceremonies where they imbibed
the hallucinogen—and gushed about the
experience as transcendent, life-altering,
mind-blowing. Purported by self-described
shamans and a small body of research to
cure what ails you emotionally, spiritually,
and, to some extent, physically, ayahuasca
is the yoga of drugs: Mushrooms and acid
might open your eyes, but this heals. Or so
I’d been told.
Explanations of how the magic worked
were uniformly vague: You’d drink a few
ounces of ayahuasca and sit all night with
a shaman who’d lead you into the “spirit
universe” and, voilà, you’d come out feel-
ing shiny and new. I was dubious, until my
glowing friend and a writer acquaintance
separately attended monthlong retreats in
Peru, drinking the elixir nightly in one of the
jungle lodges that are part of the country’s
booming ayahuasca-tourist industry. Each
emerged in a state I’d best describe as one of
enlightenment. It wasn’t that they’d reached
some universal plane of understanding but
rather that they emanated a clarity of being;
a calm, loose openness. I wanted that.
My friends gently counseled that the
experience could be unpleasant. Because
ayahuasca induces hallucinations, my fears
could chase me, snarling and aggressive.
Also, I’d likely vomit, possibly a lot, which
I was assured was worth the price of admis-
sion to see my version of God.
I had ample time to ponder this deal
because I had to ask around for a year, in
ayahuasca circles on both coasts, before
landing myself in a ceremony. Though the
drug has gotten lots of buzz—it made cam-
eos in Weeds and the recent film Wander-
lust—ayahuasca is illegal, its use under the
radar. With their concentration of artistic
souls and cash, New York City and Hol-
lywood are obvious places for shamans to
build followings, and a handful of celebs
in both cities—among them Oliver Stone,
Tori Amos, and Sting—have extolled aya-
huasca’s virtues. Paul Simon even wrote a
song about it (“Spirit Voices”).
An e-mail from the shaman’s assistant
a week before my scheduled ceremony
advised me to come up with “intentions,”
in order to guard against getting lost in the
mind’s rabbit holes. Unsure what “inten-
tions” were exactly, I approached the task
like therapy, arriving at the appointed yoga
studio at 8 P.M. with a scribbled to-do list:
Figure out career, deal with ex issues, and
address eating—the mild, shape-shifting
eating disorder that has plagued me in
every conceivable way (overeating, not eat-
ing, purging, overexercising, etc.), always
disguised by deadlines and diets, never
quite rising to crisis level. Entering my thir-
ties, I was frankly surprised I still wasn’t
free of food angst. It’s exhausting.
To start, we sat in a candlelit circle, and
the shaman, an imposing fortysomething
who said his medicine name was Metsa,
asked us to state our intentions. The group
included a computer programmer, a non-
profit consultant, a middle-school coun-
selor, a retiree, and a handful of women P
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WALKING ON
SUNSHINE
Seekers from L.A. to New York are after a kind of rapture said to
come only from a drug: ayahuasca, which devotees claim offers
life-changing self-awareness, clarity, and insight. But first, you
must get violently ill. Arianne Cohen takes the trip of her life
302 www. e l l e. c o m
ELLE BEAUTY PSYCHOLOGY GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
my age. It turns out that an Amazonian
ceremony is precisely what you’d imag-
ine. People sitting in a dark circle around a
flame? Check. Shaman smoking tobacco?
Check. Burning sage? Check. All that
seemed out of place were the four Fiji water
bottles filled with the brown, sludgy aya-
huasca. “Purge buckets” were handed out
ominously.
The ceremonial space is enclosed and,
if you believe in this sort of thing, sacred:
What happens there stays there, wrapped
in the ritual. It’s like a cross between an
intensive church group and a marathon-
training club that makes you puke.
There’s a hush over proceedings, every-
one is grappling with vulnerabilities, and
you instantly bond.
Pharmacologically speaking, ayahuasca
combines two jungle plants that mix
DMT—a hallucinogen that induces pow-
erful visionary states and psychospiritual
epiphanies—with monoamine oxidase in-
hibitors (MAOIs), the pre-SSRI antidepres-
sants. DMT is typically inactive orally be-
cause the monoamine oxidase in your gut
neutralizes it. The MAOI prevents that.
As mind-altering substances go, it’s
relatively safe. “The median lethal dose is
roughly 20 times a ceremonial dose,” says
Robert Gable, PhD, a psychology profes-
sor emeritus at Claremont Graduate Uni-
versity who specializes in risk assessments
of drugs. In 2007, he published an exten-
sive safety evaluation in the journal Addic-
tion, reviewing 80 published studies of aya-
huasca, as well as studies involving DMT
and MAOIs. Drug researchers contextual-
ize toxicity by comparing substances: 10
times a serving of alcohol can be lethal; 15
times a dose of cocaine or ecstasy; 20 times
codeine; 1,000 times marijuana. “Compar-
ing ayahuasca to codeine would be right
in terms of safety,” he says. “It’s safer than
alcohol, but not as safe as marijuana.”
The greatest risk, Gable said, is serotonin
syndrome—a cardiac condition of spiking
heart rate and blood pressure—usually in-
stigated by mixing high doses of ayahuasca
with other medications, particularly anti-
depressants like SSRIs or St. John’s wort.
People who take such drugs should not
drink ayahuasca, and Gable also suggests
that those with “strong paranoid tenden-
cies” or “extreme anxiety” avoid ayahuasca
because it alters perceptions of reality.
And no one, really, is immune from
having a harrowing ride on ayahuasca.
On a travel website, one guy who tried it
in Ecuador called the experience “hell on
earth.” “I began to lose track of who I was;
I couldn’t form abstract thoughts; I turned
into an animal looking for survival....It
entered my mind that maybe I was dead,
and that if I wasn’t, maybe I should be.”
Another user, on a drug site called Blue-
light, summed up his trip this way: “I can
literally say I know what it feels like to be
insane now.”
In general, Gable says, nonregulated
drugs come with two main risks: not
knowing what, exactly, is in that powder or
beverage and potentially injuring yourself
while high. Both, he claims, are attenuated
in ceremonies with established shamans or
at ayahuasca centers.
Ayahuasca has been used by indig-
enous Amazonian cultures for centuries.
In 1993, a group of multidisciplinary re-
searchers, including ethnopharmacologist
Dennis J. McKenna, PhD, and Charles
Grob, MD, a professor of psychiatry and
biobehavioral science at UCLA’s medical
school, studied a Brazilian church that uses
the drug as a twice-a-month sacrament. “It
was kind of a shotgun study—no one had
collected human data on ayahuasca in
controlled conditions, so we didn’t know
what we were fishing for,” says McKenna.
They tracked everything from pupil dila-
tion to body temperature and published
the results in a half dozen medical jour-
nals over the next six years. Blood sam-
pling of 13 longtime users and 10 controls
found that users have elevated serotonin
transporters in the brain for two to four
weeks following ceremonies, which may
indicate an increase in the neurotrans-
mitter. Low levels of transporters are as-
sociated with alcoholism, depression, and
anxiety disorders. “I find it fascinating
that ayahuasca may actually reverse this
long-term biochemistry, by affecting the
brain’s bioplasticity,” McKenna says.
The researchers also conducted psycho-
logical evaluations of 15 church members
chosen at random and 15 control subjects.
In an article in The Journal of Medical and
Nervous Disease, they reported surprise at
both the exceptionally healthy psychologi-
cal profiles of the regular users and their
backgrounds: Five had prior alcoholism;
two, depressive disorders; and three, anxi-
ety disorders—and all were in remission.
(Among the controls, just three had similar
conditions, two active.) Though the find-
ings are far from definitive, McKenna,
who’s a cofounder of the Heffter Research
Institute, which funds studies on medical
uses for hallucinogens, says the former
addicts told similar stories about how the
drug kick-started their recoveries. “The
first few ayahuasca experiences were pretty
rough—pretty scary, pretty terrifying. But
a lesson presented as to the direction their
lives were going. It was often a redemptive
vision, sometimes involving Christ. I think
catharsis is an apt word to describe what
ayahuasca and other psychedelics do. The
person has a strong emotional reaction,
and a kind of spiritual renewal.”
Grob puts it this way: “The ripple effects
of a powerful, mystical experience can re-
verberate for the rest of an individual’s life
span.”
Although very little controlled research
of ayahuasca’s therapeutic effects has been
undertaken since the 1993 work, a New
Mexico–based church with Brazilian
roots went to the Supreme Court in 2006
seeking protection for its ayahuasca use
under the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act and, to make their case, presented
1,000-plus pages of observational reports
attesting to the safety and efficacy of the
drug. (The court ruled in the church’s
favor.) Grob speculates that, in addition
to acting on the central nervous system,
the hallucinogen affects our so-called gut
instincts—what some call our second, pri-
mal brain. “It seems to be activating neu-
rological receptors in the gastrointestinal
system, which is filled with serotonergic
innervation, and may be involved with
very deep and primal levels of conscious-
ness.” Further formal research isn’t likely
forthcoming, however, because it’s diffi-
cult to investigate a substance that can’t
be produced synthetically—unlike, say,
psilocybin—and is mostly illegal. (To
acquire religious protection, individual
shamans would have to petition the
courts like the New Mexico church did.)

F
or 40 minutes after drinking the foul-
tasting liquid, nothing happened. We
sat silently in the dark. Then my pulse
quickened, and my eyes clicked into cat
vision, able to see into the adjacent dark
room. My head and chest warmed until
my fingers felt cool on my eyelids. Around
me, people began to “purge.” Ayahuasque-
ros (the Spanish name for the ceremonial
leaders) see the vomiting as removing spir-
I could feel the energies of the men in the group gently roaring at me
from across the circle. In an instant, I threw away 30 years of thinking
that gender differences were more nurture than nature.
www. e l l e. c o m 303
itual blockages and toxins from unhealthy
diets and lifestyles, leaving a clean slate for
healing.
An hour after drinking, I was still sober-
minded, but I’d become all senses: I could
feel the energies of the men in the group
gently roaring at me from across the circle.
In an instant, I threw away 30 years of
considering gender differences more nur-
ture than nature—what was coming off
these guys seemed innate, emanating from
their cores. With this new sixth sense, the
women were vibrating on a whole different
frequency, a fluttering of warmth and quiet
light, a cliché incarnate.
And then a swirl of color exploded in
my forehead and removed me from the
room. Everywhere I looked, eyes open or
closed, I saw reddish-pink demons bar-
ing their teeth at me, as if to block my
entrance. I was wildly synesthetic: Colors
crossed with feelings and thoughts, with
red-pink being the overwhelming wave.
The vomiting came violently, into the pro-
vided bucket. I lay on my stomach, clutch-
ing my pillow, before getting sick again.
And again. I was thirsty and nauseated
and couldn’t hold either thought, repeat-
edly failing to make the leap from “feeling
in mouth” to “thirst” to “I should reach for
my water.”
At one point, I opened my eyes to note
that I’d just spent 10 minutes with my
forehead on the rim of my bucket, breath-
ing into it. This was, hands down, the
most unpleasant hour of my life thus far.
I collapsed back onto my mat. The one
thought I could muster was, Arianne, this
is the worst idea you’ve ever had.
S
inging. The shaman was singing, a
barrel-chested, haunting minor-key
melody at full volume for more than
four hours, sometimes whispery, some-
times guttural, sometimes aggressive; his
assistant chimed in with harmony. I later
asked the woman next to me about it. “Oh
he wasn’t doing it. He’s channeling it.”
There is a wide range in shaman qual-
ity. I’d heard of beloved Yoda-like figures
as well as opportunistic healers who sleep
with vulnerable women. It is equally hit-
or-miss on Peru’s tourism circuit. Metsa
was an attractive six-footer with short
brown hair and sparkling saucer eyes.
With no context, I would have pegged
him as a Russian former footballer. He is
actually French: After drugging through
his mid-twenties, he got sober but, still
floundering, he decided to take a friend’s
recommendation to visit Peru’s Takiwasi
Rehabilitation Center, led by a French
doctor researching traditional plants and
addiction.
In his first ceremony, Metsa and his
shaman quickly concluded that he was a
“seer.” As he told me, most sitters spend
five hours immersed in their own minds;
Metsa said he could drink ayahuasca, look
at a person, and see a vision—he describes
it as a 3-D image of shapes and dark areas
and dots and color representing physical,
emotional, and spiritual pathologies. He
spent the next decade apprenticing with
local shamans in vegetalismo, the physical
and spiritual pharmacology of plants, em-
barking on fasts and diets and ayahuasca
ceremonies, and learning to summon spir-
its by singing.
The shaman’s job description is comical
in scope: He is the ringmaster for 16 people
on a strong hallucinogen, some of whom
are rookies, many confronting their deep-
est, darkest stuff. My group included three
addicts and two child-abuse survivors. As
you can imagine, it would be easy for the
addicts in the corner to fall into a funk or
for everyone to just lose it. Metsa’s role was
to “remove negative energies and redirect
positive ones.”
After a while, I gave myself a little talk-
ing-to. “Arianne, you can feel sorry and
sick, or you can pull it together.” I flipped
over onto my back, tried to ignore the
nausea, and let my mind float. The pink
cleared, and I saw myself as a white Pills-
bury Doughboy–style blob floating down
my street. Reaching out to stop me were
the inconsequential tiffs and difficult peo-
ple in my life, each spraying colorful fields
of their particular crazy. My blob wanted
an unobstructed roadway. A voice in my
head said, Your baggage is totally un-useful,
Arianne. Seriously.
This is how I learned that ayahuasca
talks. With a slight Valley Girl accent.
Interesting. This hadn’t occurred to me as
a possibility. My blob kept moving. Just give
’em the space to be their crazy selves.
The next three hours were like a tumul-
tuous dream, with an internal magic wand
that I waved over my soul, pausing each
time I felt a soft spot. Imagine scrolling
through, say, all your ex-partners and stop-
My eating issues did not arise until the sixth
sitting, when I was the sickest I’d ever been: an
hour of screaming nausea overlaid with
lightning-speed mental images.
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ping each time you feel a twinge to address
the source. I floated nonchronologically
and nonlinearly from one scene to the next.
Giggling babies to pretty bikes to cherry
trees. Sometimes I asked myself, “What are
you not dealing with?” and flew there.
I also had an uncanny ability to perceive
precisely what the people in my life wanted.
I just thought of them, and, ding, I knew.
Mom just wants appreciation. Give it to her.
This was great. Surveying my life sans
ego, the solutions to various problems
became immediately apparent. Many of
our troubles are not, actually, complicated.
You’re going to act or not. What’s compli-
cated are your emotional attachments and
obligations and others’ feelings.
I was scaling the ayahuasca learning
curve. Sometimes it talked, or showed me
things; other times I sensed the presence
of others, what some consider the spirits
of the natural world (plants, tress, rocks) or
loved ones past and present. If an answer
to what was bedeviling me wasn’t imme-
diately apparent, I floated for a while. And
then I swan dived into a delicious make-out
dream, with fantastical tongues intertwined
in sparkly energy. It was like 10 years of
therapy—good therapy—in a single night.
T
he final hour felt like coming up
from a fever, and then—boom!—I was
back. It was 4 A.M. The group chatted
quietly over tea: One woman told me
she’d dreamed up three new business
ideas. Another guy spent the night doing
what’s called “ancestral healing,” letting
go of emotional patterns repeated over the
generations. Another woman described
her night as “shattering,” simply saying,
“I sorted a lot of emotional garbage and
moved on.” I went home and typed two
pages of epiphanies, all immediately ac-
tionable: the next three projects I should
work on, a food plan of three meals plus
all the fruit I want, an exercise plan, tactics
to deal with the difficult people in my life.
The next day I awoke and kept typing.
The insights just kept rolling in. By after-
noon I felt exhausted, like when you and
your boyfriend have gone back and forth
so much about your relationship that you
just can’t say another word. That weekend,
my dreams were long-tailed and vivid, as
if my mind had been sprinkled with sur-
round sound and Technicolor fairy dust.
Two weeks later I was walking home
when I realized I wasn’t sad. For my whole
life, all my thoughts have been tinged with
melancholy. My natural wiring is a light
blue that can easily drop into gray. Walk-
ing along, I wasn’t giddy or happy. I just
felt as though my thoughts were flowing
freely. My chest felt light. And in the weeks
and months that followed, I could just do
my work; the usual cycle of procrastina-
tion and “this paragraph is awful” had
disappeared.
I’ve since drunk ayahuasca seven times,
and frankly I’m baffled that our govern-
ment bothers to criminalize drugs at all,
especially one that can be so astonishingly
helpful. The only commonality among the
ceremonies I’ve attended has been a mag-
netic pull toward the issues I need to deal
with (whether I want to or not), followed
by revelations about how to proceed. One
time, I wandered into rescripting and
reliving all of my awful breakups. Rather
than following my usual MO of acting like
a clingy mess in denial, I made observa-
tions like, “This isn’t working for either of
us. I really love you, and this is hard for me,
and I need help.” Carrying the emotional
memory of these cleaner splits has helped
me move on; I no longer wince when I
think about my past relationships. I mostly
don’t think about them.
My eating issues did not arise until the
sixth sitting, when I was the sickest I’d
been: an hour of screaming nausea over-
laid with lightning-speed mental images
(Neon door! Cars! Barking dogs! Blind-
ing flashing lights!) and pink lava slinking
along the walls and up my body to drown
me. Through the haze of illness, it seemed
as though I was vomiting up 20 years of
body hate. It felt deeply buried, down near
my hips, and as if I needed to be physically
shaken to loosen it up, which was exactly
what was happening.
I slept most of the next day, and when I
awoke I felt absolutely clear. Which is not
to be confused with empty. I could eas-
ily access emotions and thoughts and was
aware of what my body wanted—food,
exercise, sleep, etc. In the weeks that fol-
lowed, I continued to listen to my body’s
signals, one of which, one day while I was
working, was to go buy a snack. While I
was waiting in line at a nearby health-food
store, a woman from my yoga class came
in. She looked at me quizzically. “You look
different,” she said. “You’re glowing.”
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work on, food and exercise plans, tactics to
deal with the difficult people in my life.
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BODIES OF WORK
Whether they’re toning up or slimming down, celebs find strength
in numbers at these fit factories. By Crystal Meers
“Movement specialist” Jason
Walsh keeps blockbuster
beauties Jessica Biel, Rosie
Huntington-Whiteley, Emily
Blunt, and K-Stew in fighting
shape. “If a supermodel needs
to do a lot of running in a movie,
she can’t look like a frog in a
blender,” Walsh says.
“We’ll teach her how
to run.”
Ballet Bodies founder Andie
Hecker keeps string beans like
Rooney Mara, Natalie Portman,
and Miranda Kerr long and lean
with her blend of Pilates and
ballet. Ex-corps dancers with
personal-trainer certification
teach Hecker’s most popular
classes: dance-centric Cardio
Jazz and
interval-training
Jump.
Instructors shout motivational
gems such as “Think about what
your ass looks like when you
walk from the bed to the
bathroom naked” to keep
SoulCycle diehards Karolina
Kurkova, Katie Holmes, Nikki
Reed, and the
Olsens spinning
during each
45-minute
session.
At Tracy Anderson’s studio,
Gwyneth Paltrow, Nicole Richie,
J.Lo, and Ashley Greene sweat
through two-hour dance
sessions that incorporate
inventive apparatuses (giant
rubber bands, plastic hoops).
Anderson’s acolytes speak in
code: Each cardio choreography
has its own name
(“Franco,”
“Runway”).
THE ACTION HEROINES THE SWANS THE SOUL SISTERS THE TINY DANCERS
For a “101 on healthy eating,”
Walsh puts new
clients on
home-delivery
meals from Paleta.
Coconut oil, posh
trail mix, and
Smartwater
Postclass, Angelenos
hit up Earth Bar for
Miami Beach or Slim
Down smoothies.
Preworkout, Anderson’s
Perfect Performance
protein shakes; during
class, Zico or NeuroSonic
Personal-trainer standards like
Spider-man walks: a deep crawl
on all fours, knees pressed out
to each side, down the length of
Walsh’s WeHo gym
Sous-sous teasers done on a
Cadillac are the quintessential
ballet-meets-Pilates assault on
the lower abs.
“Jumps” engage the core:
Moving to the beat, cyclists pop
up out of the saddle, drop down
to touch the seat, then quickly
lift up again.
Free arms (shoulder rotations
done with arms extended) and
standing abs (muscle isolations
created by shifting the rib cage
side to side, front to back)
No-frills workout wear: generic
sweats, serious cross-trainers,
polarized
sunglasses
Flashdance
rehearsal chic:
Splits 59 bralettes
under slouchy
designer tees
Tighter than tight:
Loose-fit anything gives
newbies away. Don’t
forget a signature
bandana on upper arm.
First-timers: Lululemon, head
to toe. Regulars bring two sets
of showy sports
gear and change
between sessions.
“Are my glutes getting too
defined?” “The DP said my arms
look so much better.”
“Oh. My. God. Orlando Bloom
just walked in on me while I was
changing.”
“My world is put on pause every
Monday at noon.” “She’s a
two-toweler.”
“You look so tiny!” “Could
Matthew [McConaughey]
keep up?” “Circus into We Found
Love and then Franco?
Killed me.”
R
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The women behind L.A.’s
hippest boutique also
throw the city’s chicest
dinner parties. Julie Vadnal
dresses for the occasion
PHOTOGRAPHED BY J UST I N COI T
H
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SHOP
GIRLS
WHO TO SEAT NEXT TO NAS, FIERY-HOT COCKTAILS, AND MORE… EDITED BY JULIE VADNAL
STEP SISTERS Satine’s
Jeannie Lee and Kelly
Sawyer Patricof, both
wearing the L.A.
boutique’s private
label, await guests.
more? elle.com/living www. e l l e. c o m 311
ELLE LIVINGENTERTAINING
W
hen L.A.’s discerning (i.e., Ugg-free) fashion types need a
fresh style perspective, they go to Satine, the West Third
Street boutique that former real estate lawyer and Italian
Polimoda fashion-school grad Jeannie Lee opened nine
years ago. Her idea was to cater to the city’s “mixing Chanel
bags with vintage rock tees and ripped Levi’s” set. Since then,
her boutique has expanded to Venice, too, becoming a must-
shop-stop for A.L.C. tops, Jenni Kayne frocks, Alexander Wang
minidresses, and Alaïa pumps.
If Lee is Satine’s mastermind, then Kelly Sawyer Patricof is
its muse—a Vancouver-raised former Elite model who splits her
time between acting as creative director for Satine’s private-label
clothing line and gathering new and gently used baby gear for
her charity, Baby2Baby, which provides strollers, diapers, and
clothing to needy moms. Six years ago, she and her husband, Ja-
mie Patricof (the indie-film producer behind Blue Valentine and
next year’s The Place Beyond the Pines), remodeled their three-
bedroom home in Hollywood (where they now reside with their
two daughters, Riley, six, and Sawyer, four) to mimic his parents’
Greycroft estate in East Hampton, New York.
But it’s in the lush, English garden–evoking backyard where
Sawyer Patricof does most of her entertaining—like the baby
shower she threw for her best friend, Jessica Alba, with whom
she first bonded over being “miserable and pregnant” while their
husbands ate sushi and drank sake one night at dinner. Tonight
she has arranged a poolside dinner for 25 or so Satine loyalists,
including Alba, Nicole Richie and husband Joel Madden, Ra-
chel Zoe (Satine stocks her line) and hus-
band Rodger Berman, WhoWhatWear
.com cofounders Hillary Kerr and Kather-
ine Power, actress Soleil Moon Frye, actor
Anthony Mackie, and rapper Nas, Jamie’s
friend from his days at Rap Sheet magazine.
“Nas is coming, so that’s exciting,” Saw-
yer Patricof says energetically a few hours
before cocktail time, ready to accept the
challenge of adding him to her carefully arranged seating plan.
“I might have to put him between Jamie and me so my friends
don’t get in a fight over who gets to sit next to him!”
The art of L.A. entertaining, after all, is to seem laid-back
while making sure every detail is thoroughly planned. And if
there’s one thing Sawyer Patricof is particular about—other than
the white roses, floating orchids, and hanging amaranth that
she selected at the flower market a few days earlier, as well as
the perfect “if Isabel Marant made a tablecloth” lace linens she
sourced to complement the vintage lace ones she already owns—
it’s where her guests sit. Couples are always separated, and she
spends hours, if not days, handwriting and laying out place cards.
GARDEN SECRETS (Above,
clockwise from left)
Sawyer Patricof
rearranges place
cards before guests
arrive; the backyard
at sunset; grape
salad; heirloom
tomatoes and ricotta.
(Below) SP and
Samantha Ronson;
Power and Zoe
312 www. e l l e. c o m
spare me the guilt chip.
“they say if it feels good, do it. with popchips i can.
never fried. never baked. they only taste like they’re bad for you.”
S
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ELLE LIVINGENTERTAINING
She’s only half joking when she calls
her four-day seating-chart obsession for
tonight’s party “a little psychotic.” At her
2003 St. Barts nuptials, one particularly
love-struck guest made the mistake of mov-
ing her card next to that of her crush. Saw-
yer Patricof caught the switcheroo on video.
“I was like, ‘Are you serious? I spent, like,
three weeks coming up with this plan!’ ”
But what Sawyer Patricof describes as her “hyper-Virgo,
detail-oriented” self is also what makes her such a charming
hostess, her magnetic pull so strong that Hollywood’s who’s who
happily ditch the nightclub of the moment to groove to Jay-Z on
her back porch, beyond the reach of paparazzi flashes (though
there’s always Instagram). Her party-planning precision, along
with her impeccable eye, is what led Lee two years ago to ap-
point her the creative director of Satine’s label, a collection of
cool-girl gear that this fall includes pink boxy blazer-vests, lace-
paneled cocktail dresses, and leather leggings. “You know how
you have those clients who just ‘get it’? ” Lee says. “I started hav-
ing her come in and consult on our buy, and literally everything
she picked would sell out. Our process is not at all traditional. It’s
really emotional. It’s about what feels right.”
The pair apply the same rule to their parties. By the time
guests take their assigned seats with cocktails (made by the Spare
Room, the Roosevelt Hotel’s chill, board game–equipped an-
swer to Teddy’s) in hand, they don’t seem to mind a little spousal
separation, mostly because chef Ralph Johnson of Jared Meisler
and Sean MacPherson’s gastropub the Pikey has set out his grape
salad and perfectly ripe heirloom tomatoes with ricotta. Up next
are grilled red snapper with marinated peppers and fennel and
roasted Niman Ranch pork loin with summer squash and salsa
verde. Frank Ocean is wafting from the backyard speakers, and
between courses guests play musical chairs to chat with friends.
And, in some cases, make new ones. As the sun sets, Alba and
Richie trade iPhones to snap pics with Nas, who in this crowd is
the kind of star that other stars are struck by. “He said, ‘I’m try-
ing to get more followers, so put me on Instagram,’ and we were
like, ‘Um, no problem!’ ” Sawyer Patricof says of her Twitter-
happy crew. Most important, neither Lee nor Sawyer Patricof
seem to notice that, by now, the labored-over seating chart has
been totally disregarded.
CALIFORNIA LOVE
(Clockwise from top
left) SP greets guests;
Sawyer Patricof and
Lee, both in Satine,
on the porch;
Madden, Richie, and
Ronson; Alba snaps
an Instagram; Alba,
Nas, SP, and Richie
Pour cocktails from
Markhbein Kibic’s spiked
pitcher. $136, amrag.com
Avoid the Ivy, but shop at its
attached home store, Indigo
Seas. theivyrestaurant.com
Ease seating-chart anxiety
with palm-tree place cards.
$13 for 10, jonathanwright.com
Try Venice’s Bountiful for
vintage linens and elegant
antiques. bountifulhome.com
Wear Satine’s fall line,
naturally. Kate vest, $450,
satineboutique.com
A BACKYARD DINNER PARTY, THE SATINE WAY
4 basil leaves, muddled
¾ oz lime juice
¾ oz simple syrup
¼ oz jalapeño tincture
(made with Everclear 151)
½ oz Campari
1½ oz vodka
Lime for garnish
BAJA WILDFIRE
(BY THE SPARE ROOM’S MARK CONLON)
1. Combine all ingredients in
a shaker.
2. Shake, then strain into a
cocktail glass.
3. Garnish with a lime wheel,
and, using an aerosol mister,
stream a f lame of jalapeño
tincture over the top of the
cocktail when serving.
R
E
C
I
P
E
oid the Ivy but shop at i
ARTY, THE SATIN
Wear Satine’s fall line
314 www. e l l e. c o m
CARIBBEAN CHICKEN &
KEY WEST COCONUT SHRIMP
rubytuesday.com • facebook.com/rubytuesday
Purchase a Seafood, Steaks, Chicken, Ribs, or Pasta entrée and get up to $10 off any
entrée. Please present coupon at time of order. Not valid with Steak and Lobster limited
time offers, daily specials, other coupon or holiday offers, for alcoholic beverages, or
in conjunction with our GiveBack Program. Limit one coupon per check. Duplicated or
altered coupons will not be accepted. Tax and gratuity excluded. Valid for dine-in only.
Excludes Hawaii locations. Coupons cannot be resold or traded and have no cash value.
VALID THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2012
comes FREE with all of our
Our Signature
FRRFT9AL0
$10 OFF TWO ENTRÉES
T
here’s something about Jim Halpert,
John Krasinski’s character on The Of-
fice, that, for the first few seasons of
the show, at least, spoke to a very spe-
cific kind of millennial melancholy—the
romantic soul-sickness of the too-smart,
too-sensitive office drone. Jim was a sign
of intelligent life in a desert of podunk pro-
cess management, a flicker of smart-ass
hope for the future of humanity, the last
stand of the lovable, low-expectations beta
male. Part of what made Jim so appeal-
ing—aside from, you know, the whole per-
fect-boyfriend thing—was that he wasn’t a
striver. The promise of his unexploited po-
tential could only be glimpsed obliquely,
in tiny gestures and deadpan asides. If not
necessarily destined for better things, then
he was at least made for a better world.
There was humor, but also heartbreak, in
his sense of resignation.
It’s tempting to conflate the character
with the guy who plays him. But while Jim
and Burt, Krasinski’s character in Away
We Go, are studies in good-natured alien-
ation—Burt and his equally sensitive preg-
nant girlfriend, Verona (Maya Rudolph),
are trying to find a place to raise their child
that won’t offend their finely honed, slightly
rarefied sensibilities—in person Krasinski
comes across as someone who’s at home
anywhere, likes everyone, and jumps into
life feetfirst. For instance: Did you know
he filmed the glimpses of Scranton, Penn-
sylvania, in the opening-credit sequence
for The Office? In 2005, he was so excited
to have the job that he set off on a research
mission, shot some footage, and picked up
some local business cards for show runner
Greg Daniels, just in case.
“It was my minuscule version of Daniel
Day-Lewis becoming a cobbler,” he says.
“ ‘I’m going to take three hours and drive
from New York City to Scranton and just
immerse myself—for lunchtime!’ ”
Krasinski meets me in the garden of
L.A.’s Chateau Marmont, looking fresh
and crisp despite the heat. Even though
I arrive a few minutes before he does, he
has already secured a shady corner table.
Friendly, boyishly handsome, and infec-
tiously enthusiastic, he emanates, at 33,
something like genuine happiness. I mean
happy as in happy childhood, happy mar-
riage, congenitally happy, felicitous align-
ment of the stars at birth. There’s an air
about him like a cloudless sky. He’s also—
and, honestly, there’s no better way to put
this—incredibly nice, and so self-effacing
and unassuming that it’s easy to forget
he’s just come off of cowriting a movie
with Matt Damon (with early assistance
from Dave Eggers, who also cowrote Away
We Go), which he also stars in and pro-
duced. That film, Promised Land, directed
He won our hearts as The Office’s winsome slacker, but it
turns out John Krasinski has ambition to spare. Cowriting
a Gus Van Sant–directed feature film? That’s just the
beginning. By Carina Chocano
PHOTOGRAPHED BY DAMON BAKE R
CHARMED,
I’M SURE
ELLE MAN
316 www. e l l e. c o m
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by the peerless Gus Van Sant, comes out just as The Office enters
its ninth and final season, and as Krasinski appears as a husband
in crisis in Nobody Walks, cowritten by the prolific Lena Dunham
and her fellow wunderkind, indie director Ry Russo-Young. For
Krasinski, who once asked an exec at NBC (“the nicest guy”) if he
could have a DVD of The Office to show his mom in case the pro-
gram didn’t make it to air, the feeling is disorienting. He likens it to
being on a precipice, getting ready to jump.
“With the show coming to a close, my identity of being that
character is going to be over. Basically I’ll be relying on what I’ve
built and what I am and who I’m trying to be,” he says. “So there’s
a total terrifying fear there. There’s also the terrifying fear of writ-
ing something and being like, ‘This is actually who I am and who
I’ve always wanted to be—I hope you guys accept that.’ That’s
terrifying. Now I’m talking to you like I’m on a couch. Let’s talk
for an hour about how terrified I am of life.”
Recurring allusions to terror notwithstanding, you get the sense
that Krasinski leads a charmed life. He and his wife of two years,
Emily Blunt, are one of those rare Hollywood couples who seem
to be as humble and genuine as they are talented. Rosemarie De-
Witt, who costars with Krasinski in both Promised Land and Nobody
Walks—and who previously worked with Blunt in Your Sister’s Sis-
ter—says she felt like she knew Krasinski before she met him “be-
cause obviously [he and Blunt are] madly in love and talk about
each other a lot.” Krasinski says Blunt has been his favorite actress
since “forever”—long before they met four years ago at a restaurant
where she was having dinner with a mutual friend. Asked if he’d
ever like to work with her, Krasinski says, “She’s really busy. She
intimidates the hell out of me. She’s really good, she’s really honest.
I’d be nervous to work with her, but I would love it.”
Promised Land is Krasinski’s second script, after his adaptation,
which he also directed, of the David Foster Wallace compendium
Brief Interviews With Hideous Men. The 2009 film, which got mixed
reviews, is about a graduate student who, after being dumped by
her boyfriend, interviews a series of men to find out what goes on
in their heads. It was an ambitious project for a first-time director,
particularly one who was not yet 30.
“I remember thinking about the huge difference between per-
forming for people and having the responsibility of telling a story
and affecting people,” Krasinski says. He spent all of the money
he made from The Office pilot on the rights to the book. Still, he
says, he considers Promised Land to be his first original script, “the
first time I’ve felt that these were my ideas and my words.”
“I think that the moviegoing public hasn’t even seen the tip of
the iceberg in terms of what John can do,” Damon says. “He’s got
a whole range. He’s just so good at comedy that I think he gets put
there a lot. But I think he can do anything.”
Promised Land stars Damon as Steve Butler, a natural-gas sales-
man who with his partner Sue (Frances McDormand) offers cash-
strapped farmers in disenfranchised rural communities money in
exchange for drilling rights to their land. His belief that he is help-
ing people—that he’s one of the good guys—is shaken when an
environmental activist named Dustin Noble (Krasinski) shows
up in town, pictures of dead cows in tow.
The film has been described as being antifracking (referring to
hydraulic fracturing, the controversial method of extracting natural
gas from the ground), but it feels more like a movie about the ethi-
cal choices people make—one that refrains from providing easy an-
swers and underscores the complexity of issues too often reduced to
black-and-white terms. Krasinski says he was interested in making
a movie about American identity. He wanted to explore “the loss of
a sense of community and a sense of trust in one another.”
Krasinski grew up hearing stories about his dad’s upbringing
in Natrona Heights, Pennsylvania, a steel-mill town near Pitts-
burgh. In those stories, life seemed not only simpler but also de-
fined by a sense of communal pride that doesn’t exist anymore.
“Promised Land really captures the humanness of the small
town,” DeWitt says. “It really feels like a throwback to the good-
ness and sweetness of Jimmy Stewart movies, where we were as
Americans and where we’ve come, and how do we get back to it.”
When Krasinski first told Damon about his idea one night over
dinner, Damon was immediately drawn to it. “The only other
person I’ve ever written with is Ben [Affleck],” Damon says. “I
had never sat down and written a script since Good Will Hunting.
And it was just so fun. I just found it to be exactly like writing with
Ben. Ideas wouldn’t totally form until we got together, and when
we got together things would happen really fast.”
The movie was supposed to be Damon’s directorial debut, but,
overwhelmed by work, he had to bow out as director. “It was a
hard discussion to have,” Krasinski says. “But he said, ‘We should
get someone great for this,’ and because it was my first script at
this level, I said, ‘That sounds great—but it will never happen.’ ”
The next morning, “I e-mailed Gus the script, literally, from
the runway,” says Damon. “I was going down to Florida for the
holidays. I was really depressed and sitting on the plane. And they
were about to tell us to turn our phones off, and I e-mailed Gus.
I go, ‘Are you busy?’ By the time we landed in Florida, he’d read
it, and he wanted to do it. So that was our one rocky moment, fol-
lowed by the biggest high that we had in the whole thing—the re-
alization that Gus Van Sant wanted to direct it.”
“To me, that was all that needed to happen,” Krasinski says. “If
nothing had happened from that point on, I’d have been thrilled.”
Van Sant recalls Krasinski’s dedication to the project. “He was
always around,” he says. “He was there every day, and he was
very concerned with every moment of what was going on. He did
a very good job of being part of it, and still, to this day, he’s very
attentive to the project, which is great.”
“He was up every night all night doing rewrites,” DeWitt says.
“He kind of never stops. He’s a machine. And his excitement
about it, his genuine enthusiasm about making it the best that it
can be, is so infectious. You’ll see him first thing in the morning
and he’s just giddy with the new scenes. He’ll pull you into his
trailer and be like, ‘Let me show you the stuff we’re working on,
you’re gonna love it, it’s so incredible!’ ”
Both Promised Land and Nobody Walks are departures for Kra-
sinski, who has so far appeared in comedies such as George
Clooney’s Leatherheads, Nancy Meyers’ It’s Complicated, and the
Ginnifer Goodwin/Kate Hudson vehicle Something Borrowed. In
Nobody Walks, he plays a husband who finds himself irresistibly
drawn to a sexy young houseguest (Olivia Thirlby). DeWitt de-
scribes his character in Nobody Walks as “a man in crisis, a man
under the influence, so to speak. He’s grappling with trying to do
the right thing and grappling with the boundaries of marriage, so
it’s a very adult role for John.”
“I wanted to write a story about American identity, about the loss of a
sense of community, a sense of trust in one another, and the idea of,
what would you be willing to give up, at what price?”
www. e l l e. c o m 317
ELLE MAN
Aside from the chance to work with
Dunham and Russo-Young, Krasinski was
attracted to the role of a guy in a tough
moral spot. “I think that whether you’re
married or not, in any relationship there’s
always the terror that you’re going to screw
something up,” Krasinski says. “I’ve made
a lot of mistakes in my life. And I’m really
sensitive, so I take even small mistakes as
huge ones. I know I’ll never be put in the
position of making the adulterous mistake,
but there are mistakes along the way that
are as complicated, that get blown out of
proportion because you’re not willing to
admit that you’ve made them.”
K
rasinski grew up in Newton, Mas-
sachusetts. His father was a GP, his
mother a nurse at a nutritional re-
search center at Tufts University.
He’s the youngest—and, at 6'3", the
shortest—of three brothers, all of
whom played basketball in high school.
The brothers are close, and absurdly suc-
cessful. (Kevin is an orthopedic surgeon
in North Carolina; Paul is the CEO of a
tech company.)
At the end of his senior year in high
school, Krasinski’s classmate B. J. Novak
(who plays Ryan Howard on The Office and
also writes for the series) approached him
about being in a satirical comedy show.
“I was like, ‘Why would you think I
could act?’ ” Krasinski recalls. “Weirdly,
I think that was the first vote of confi-
dence anyone had ever given me artisti-
cally, and because I hadn’t thought about
it, there was no downside—no fear, no ex-
pectation.”
Krasinski taught English in Costa Rica
for a semester before heading to Brown
University, where his brother was the cap-
tain of the basketball team. He found him-
self at the gym one January, “and after
about three seconds I was like, ‘Nope! Too
big, too good….” On his way back across
campus, he came across a flyer for an im-
prov comedy group. As with most of his
successes, Krasinski describes being asked
to join as an unexpected lucky break. Be-
ing part of a group of artistic people made
college a completely mind-altering expe-
rience. “When I say that, people always
ask me what drugs I did,” he says. “I didn’t
do any!” But he did go from having never
seen an independent film, or heard mu-
sic that wasn’t on the radio, to consuming
massive doses of culture. “I had my brain
ripped open,” he says. “I was so voracious
for this information.”
An English major with a concentration
in playwriting, Krasinski had intended to
become an English teacher. Asked what
inspired that goal, he pauses, then says it
was probably Dead Poets Society.
“Which shows how easily manipulated
I was. That’s my calling —because I saw
it in a movie and a bunch of kids stood
on a desk?” he says, laughing. “But that’s
really what I wanted to do.” Instead, he
did his last semester at the Eugene O’Neill
Theater Center in Connecticut, com-
pletely immersing himself in the theatri-
cal world. After graduation, his parents
picked him up, and 20 minutes away from
campus he announced that he wanted to
move to New York to try to become an
actor. His mother gave her blessing, as long
as he promised to cut bait within two or
three years if he couldn’t support himself
doing it.
He landed some commercials and bit
parts, did a lot of theater, got fired from
seven bartending jobs (the concept of
“muddling” was alien to him), and al-
most two years to the day after making the
promise, he called his mom to say he was
out. “There were just about four weeks left
in the year, and she said, ‘Well, just finish it
out.’ And three weeks later I got The Office.
I wouldn’t have auditioned had my mom
not said just give it one more try,” he says.
“So I feel like I owe her 10 percent.”
I ask if the fact that he had no expec-
tations going in had anything to do with
landing the part. “In a very real way,” he
says. Which reminds him that he also has
to thank Ed Harris for talking about ap-
proaching auditions without expectations
on an episode of Inside the Actors Studio.
Krasinski’s takeaway from Harris’ in-
terview was this: “The minute you think,
I’m going to pay my rent, or get a girl-
friend, or become famous—you’re in
trouble.” The day after watching Harris’
interview, he walked into an audition,
didn’t thank the casting director for seeing
him, and booked a pilot. “So I guess I owe
Ed Harris 10 percent, too. This money is
going fast.”
Our shady spot in the garden is getting
sunnier, so we move to another table in the
center of the garden. He tells me about his
plans to turn his obsession with the Cha-
teau (though he seems like the least “Cha-
teau” person in the business, he lives up
the street and comes here “way too often”)
into a miniseries about the history of Hol-
lywood, using the hotel as a lens. His col-
laborator on that project is Aaron Sorkin,
whom he met in this very spot one night at
dinner, when the legendary TV writer ap-
proached him to say he’d watched every
episode of The Office four times.
For now, though, Krasinski is just
excited to see what comes next. “I think
this movie is a defining moment,” he says.
“It’s sort of my declaration of who I am
and what I want to be.”
Which must be terrifying, but awesome.
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ELLE READER PROFILE
T
hree years ago, Lucy Alibar was about to
take the subway to the reading of a friend’s
play; Alibar was to play the role of a secre-
tary named Ducky, who ends up getting
killed. She was thinking about the charac-
ter and the play, and she had no idea that
the screenplay she’d cowritten—her first—
had just been chosen for devel opment by
the Sundance Institute’s Screenwriting Lab.
No one could call her with the excit-
ing news because her phone service had
been cut off two weeks earlier; she’d fallen
too far behind with payments. In order to
support her writing, Alibar had been leav-
ing her Lower East Side apartment at 5 A.M.
for a job making sandwiches and salads
(“I can’t remember the exact number, but
it was a lot”), then return ing to her apart-
ment to write, then bartending, then home
again to write, then waitressing.
But just before she headed for the sub-
way, she finally got the good Sundance
news, via an e-mail from her friend and
cowriter, Benh Zeitlin, the film’s pro-
spective director. She soon scraped
together enough money to get her phone
service restored, rewrote (and rewrote and
THE GIRL FROM THE
SOUTHERN WILD
Lucy Alibar grew up in rural Florida, came to New York City, was embraced by the
theater community, and settled down to the life of a classic starving artist. But then
she cowrote a movie that’s become a cultural phenomenon. By Steve Friedman
320 www. e l l e. c o m
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ELLE READER PROFILE
“It hasn’t really sunk in yet. That’s probably for
the best. I have to do stuff and walk around.”
Alibar laughs—a wild, ferocious sound of
glee—then catches herself.
rewrote) the film, helped cast it, worked
on more rewrites as it was being shot in
Louisiana, and then learned last winter
that it had been selected to be shown at the
2012 Cannes film festival.
This time, Alibar got the good news via
a phone call. The not-quite-as-good news:
Only the directors of the films chosen are
flown to Cannes as a courtesy. As a mere
writer (and sandwich maker/bartender/
waitress), she would have to pay her own
way if she wanted to go. She didn’t have the
money. So at the urging of theater friends,
she posted an ad on the crowd-funding
website Indiegogo.com. She had $875 in
hand and had arranged for a place to stay;
she needed another $669, and she offered
everything from a hug ($10) to photos of
sunsets from France ($25) to homemade
gelato ($100). Within four hours, she had
the money for her ticket.
In January, the movie that Alibar
cowrote, Beasts of the Southern Wild, had
won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance
Film Festival in Utah; at Cannes in May,
where it was given a 15-minute standing
ovation, it scored the Caméra d’Or prize
for best first feature. Beasts went on to
garner ecstatic critical reviews upon its
June release and became a surprise indie
summer visitor at multiplexes across
America—the little art-house movie that
could. In August, Oprah Winfrey raved
about the film on her Super Soul Sunday
television program; it had been recom-
mended to her by President Obama.
I
t hasn’t really sunk in yet,” Alibar says.
“That’s probably for the best. I have to
do stuff and walk around.” She laughs—
a wild, ferocious sound of glee—then
catches herself and lowers her voice an
octave, until it achieves an immensely self-
important mockumentary timbre.
“I have to be able to walk around!”
Alibar is 5'6", brown-eyed, size-2
tiny, beautiful (notwithstanding her self-
description as having a “flat face, kind of
big frog hands”), and as fit as an otter. Now
she poses on red carpets, pays an agent to
sort through writing offers, runs three miles
six days a week, and practices yoga almost
every day. “Mostly I do Iyengar,” she says.
“I like anything that’s hard enough to make
me cry in class. I like to be pushed over my
limit and broken down a little bit.”
She likes Dolly Parton, Tony Kushner,
Flannery O’Connor, and horror movies.
She’s an excellent baker and a middling
cook. Her meals tend to taste like garlic
and end up on the raw side. (She suspects
it has something to do with understand-
ing the concept of restriction—she says
directors tend to be good cooks, writers
good bakers.) She’s working on an auto-
biographical play about growing up in
a Pente costal Southern Baptist commu-
nity with an atheist father and also on
a “Southern-comedy action- adventure”
movie about a troop of Georgia Brownies.
Her plays have been produced in South
Africa, France, and the UK. She lives
with her Brazilian film-editor boyfriend,
whom she met on the set of Beasts of the
Southern Wild and who was the captain of
his country’s national rugby team and also
happens to be a trained chef (he made the
gelato that helped fund her trip to Cannes).
“Yeah, he went to cooking school. He
mentioned that to me, just offhand once,
and I was like, What?!? It’s like having
your own live-in chef. It’s like being a Park
Avenue socialite!”
Alibar talks fast, in multiple octaves,
and gesticulates with her hands (they’re
really not froglike) to great effect. In a span
of 45 minutes, following a photo shoot in
which she jumps, does headstands, adopts
Tebows, and grins with what looks like
authen tic delight, she will reference Keanu
Reeves, Dumbo the elephant, Odysseus,
God, and backwoods killers.
The first story she remembers writing
involved a gigantic dumb dog. “I was in
third grade. Odysseus and his men, sailing
homeward from the Trojan War, crash on
this island, and there’s a giant dog, and he’s
really sweet, and he plays with them, but
he doesn’t know how big he is. He slurps a
couple of them to death. Then they make
sails out of the dog’s dandruff and escape.
It was gross. I didn’t think it was gross at the
time. I thought it was sort of real. Because
our dog at home had so much dandruff, I
thought, If you had a lot of that stuff….”
The wild laughter again, then the faux–
Important Television Announcer voice:
“One writer’s beginnings!”
A
libar grew up on the Florida pan-
handle, near the Georgia border.
Her father, Baya M. Harrison III, is
a criminal defense attorney—“like
Atticus Finch, but with a lot more ax
murderers,” she says. Her maternal
grandmother, Alice, was a news paper
columnist, and her mother, Barbara, is an
artist. She created her last name by com-
bining their names and legally adopted it
the day she turned 18, right after she got
off her waitressing shift at the Village Inn
on the Apalachee Parkway. (“I wasn’t the
best waitress in the world, but I was cheer-
ful and worked hard,” she told a reporter
from the Tallahassee Democrat. “Most of the
customers were stoned, anyway, and only
there for the all-you-can-eat pancakes. But
I loved hearing them talk. I grew up sort
of isolated in the country…so it was excit-
ing being around that many people.”)
“My grandmother and mom showed
me how to be an artist, how to be a
woman,” Alibar says. “They both had
families, these very happy lives, and they
were both committed to their art, and it
never seemed like a mystery to me how
they did it. My grandmother had six
kids—one died as an infant—and she
was dirt-poor, and all her kids got an
education. And my mom grew up poor.
And they both worked so hard and cul-
tivated so much of their own happiness.
I wanted to have that like an amulet. Not
like armor, but like a magic feather. Like
Dumbo’s magic feather.”
Her mother encouraged Lucy to follow
her imagination. Her grandmother told
Lucy how talented she was. Her father was
more complicated.
“Ever since I was a little kid, he would
say [to Lucy and her two brothers], ‘All
right, men, you’re out in the woods,’ and
he would go through a scenario—‘All
right, men, you’re walkin’ along the road,
and someone pulls up and jumps out of a
car and points a gun at you, tells you to get
in the car.’ ”
Her face collapses, contorts, reassem-
bles itself; it’s remarkably elastic. Her
voice drops a few registers, takes on a
deep-fried, honey-soaked twang—little ole
Southern gal as Big Daddy. “ ‘What do you
do, Boss? What do you do? Boss, you don’t
322 www. e l l e. c o m
get in that car. You get in that car, you’re
dead, Boss! You take your chance and die
on the road, Boss!’ ”
Alibar sits back, curls her legs under-
neath her. “My father couldn’t really
express himself with words all the time.”
In her juvenile writing, Greek warriors
gave way to men with muskets. “I would
write ghost stories that never ended up
anywhere. A girl goes into a house, and
there are a bunch of dead Confederate
soldiers trying to tell her something…
but I never could figure out what they
were saying.”
She moved on to more naturalistic
characters and settings, and when she
was 14 she won a playwriting competition
and got to attend Young Playwrights Inc.
in Manhattan. There, she met a Jewish
kid from Queens—Benh Zeitlin, the son
of folklorists. “I remember there were
a lot of drunks being existential in his
stuff, and I wrote about a lot of Southern
kids…and we became instant friends and
made this immediate, wonderful artis tic
connection.”
She came to New York City again in
2001 to study playwriting at New York
University. She had never tasted Chinese
food. She didn’t have much money, but
she had her writing, and her family, and
her tight group of theater friends. Then,
when she was in her early twenties, her
father had quadruple-bypass heart sur-
gery and a stroke, and she thought he
was going to die. She realized that de-
spite all the quizzes about what to do if
a man with a gun stopped you and told
you to get into his car in the woods, she
had never really heard from—or talked
to—her father about love.
So she wrote Juicy and Delicious, the
one-act play that inspired Beasts. It was
about a boy named Hushpuppy confront-
ing the illness and death of his father,
a man capable of enormous love but
apparently incapable of putting that love
into words.
She made Hushpuppy a boy instead
of a girl because her feelings about the
play’s subject were so raw. She conjured a
place where ancient beasts were rampant,
lemons flew through the air, and feral chil-
dren ate cat food.
And then her old pal Zeitlin saw the
play and told her he wanted to turn it into
a film. And then they got support from
Sundance. The 11-year-old boy became a
six-year-old girl (played by the incandes-
cent Quvenzhané Wallis), Hushpuppy
and her father became black, the ancient
beasts became the movie’s signature fan-
tastical “aurochs,” and Georgia turned
into an impoverished Mississippi River
Delta community in Louisiana.
P
eople have responded to Beasts as a tale
about environ mental degradation, or
race, or political anarchy. And all that’s
fine with Alibar—though none of it is
what she intended with Juicy and Delicious.
“I’m just telling a story,” she says. “It’s
about a little girl and her father. I just want
people to engage. Because everybody has
a dad, and everybody loses that dad, on
some level.”
Alibar says writing the play helped her
understand her father—and her feelings
for him—better. Watching the film she
helped create, she says, helped her under-
stand him even more.
“When I saw Dwight Henry’s perfor-
mance on the screen [as Hushpuppy’s
father], I for the first time really got
his terror, even when he’s at his worst
moments, when he’s angry. I got that
it’s because he’s so afraid of leaving his
child defenseless in the world. I love my
father, and that’s why I wrote this, and
I really needed that to come through. I
really needed his whole humanness to
come through.”
To listen to Alibar talk about her work
is to watch someone wholly engaged in the
process of learning through doing, exploring
through expressing, finding novel insights
emerging out of those already gotten down
on paper. It’s an exhilarating experience.
This alchemy of ideas also seems to
inspire in Alibar a sense of mystery, even
a sensibility of mysticism. “My dad doesn’t
like religion much,” she observes, “but
I grew up very close to the Baptist tradi-
tion. God isn’t this distant thing. God is
right here with you all the time. He’s your
buddy, and you can talk about everything.
And writing this play and working on the
film, seeing it, I felt God’s presence. I just
had more of a sense of my place in the
whole scope of everything.”
To Alibar’s immense relief and delight,
her father loved the movie. “He called me
and said, ‘This was the best day of my life.
You stole a lot of my lines, but that’s all
right…. That Benh Zeitlin, he’s a genius,
Boss! He’s a genius!’ ”
Alibar quit her day jobs last January.
She writes full-time now.
When she feels distracted or is strug-
gling, she goes for a run. Or to yoga. Or
she bakes. Then she returns to her work.
When it’s going well, she says, “It feels
like—if I understood more about physics,
I could talk about the theory of relativity—
but I’m in my own world. I don’t even see
the keyboard. It’s like Keanu Reeves in The
Matrix, when he says, ‘I wish I could see
what my hands are doing.’ It’s like heaven.
I don’t want to go on vacation. I don’t want
to buy clothes. I don’t want to do anything.
I just want to write.”
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ESSAY ELLE READER
I
was 29 when I got married, and I did not expect to be happy
in my marriage. Now, 11 years later, my wife and I are one of
the happiest couples I know of. A lot of this has to do with wit-
nessing friends commit adultery. Although the outward details
of my life are bound to differ from every other life, my emotional
life is probably not so unusual. I am ordinary in most ways. I am
ordinary in my fears and ordinary in my lusts. Although I could
have made other decisions, my decisions, too, are ordinary.
I believed I wouldn’t have a happy marriage because I didn’t
think I would have a happy life. My mother is mentally ill, and
growing up with her had left me with shame and fear and anxiety.
I remember once, when I was a child, my mother slapping me
repeatedly during a family wedding. As her hand landed on my
ear, my nose, my lips, I was conscious of all the people watching,
and I felt embarrassed for her. I felt literally like two people, one
feeling my own torment and one feeling pain for her.
One result of growing up in a family like mine is you lose hope;
you don’t think good things will happen to you. I proposed to my
wife because I thought she wanted me to. I was going away for
business, and she said she wanted a ring. Several years later, she
told me that I had misinterpreted her, that when she had asked
me to buy her a ring, she had meant only that the city I was visit-
ing was famous for garnet jewelry and she would’ve liked to have
some. This part of my story is just a variation of the cliché of a
man proposing because he has been given an ultimatum.
When you have a marriage that begins this way and you have
a personality like mine, there are bound to be problems. Often, in
the early years of my marriage, I felt indifferent toward my wife. I
once told her, “I sometimes think I don’t love you.” We were sitting
at our glass-topped dinner table. My wife looked at me over the
rim of her eyeglasses. After a moment, she said, “I know you do.”
“How do you know?” I asked.
“I see how you light up when I come into a room.” Until she
told me this, I hadn’t known I smiled when I saw her.
Around this time, the first of my friends confessed his adultery.
We were standing in the back of a darkened hall, watching some-
one give a speech. Tom* had a glass of wine in his hand, and he
had come from another reception and appeared pretty buzzed.
As we chatted, Tom offhandedly mentioned that he was seeing a
woman on the side. She was younger than he was and engaged. I
asked him where exactly they had sex. He said she worked in the
hotel business and so had access to rooms.
For several weeks afterward, whenever Tom and I met, we
would talk about this woman. I began building a fantasy of her
in which she looked like a movie star. I googled her to try to find
a picture. Imagining this woman, I started to find my own wife
less attractive. My wife has very light hair on her legs. She usually
shaves her legs to just above her knees. Suddenly, I started being
annoyed that she didn’t shave all the way up her thighs.
It was a while before I saw Tom’s wife, Lauren, after he disclosed
his affair to me. Lauren has pale skin that she makes even whiter
with makeup. It gives her a Kabuki appearance. Lauren, Tom, my
wife, Christine, and I sat in a booth at a restaurant, and all through
the meal Lauren was unpleasant. Among other things, she scolded
Tom for going to the bathroom too many times. Usually I find Lau-
ren annoying. That night, though, every time I looked at her, I felt
sad. She was wearing a shawl, and this made her appear shrunken.
She did not know that her husband was cheating, yet to me she
looked like someone who was ill and suffering.
When my wife and I left and were walking down a sidewalk, I
A PRIVATE
MATTER
Some 30 percent of married men cheat. And for those who don’t, as one man confesses,
the culture of adultery still wreaks havoc with their relationships. Anonymous
*Names have been changed
324 www. e l l e. c o m
put my arm around her. It is hard after you have known some-
one for a while to see her afresh. Sometimes when I have done
something that hurts my wife so much she cries, I can suddenly
see her with new eyes, suddenly see her without preconceptions.
That night, having seen Lauren being harmed, I was able to look
at Christine as if she were a stranger. I could see her as someone
who could be hurt, someone wanting to be happy. I lifted my
wife’s hand to my lips and kissed it. “I love you,” I said.
The image of Lauren in the booth that night, wrapped in a
shawl, her face ashen, has become a touchstone. I think of her,
and a rush of protective love for my wife floods into me. What
happened that night was not just that the door into adultery
got heavier, but that I began to understand how much I loved
my wife.
O
ne of the things women don’t realize is that most married
men live in a culture of adultery. We see it all around us.
We have friends who have cheated on their wives. We
have been on business trips where we went to strip clubs
and our colleagues went into the back for hand jobs or
more. We don’t tell our wives, of course. A lot of hus-
bands still operate with the idea that what gets revealed
among men stays among men. Part of this is based on boyhood
ideas of not snitching. Part of it, however, is based on a more
cynical motive: If we were to tell our wives, they would begin
watching us more closely, and as most of us married men keep
in mind the possibility that one day we too will have an affair,
to tell our wives would be to diminish this chance.
You might believe that your husband or your father or your
boyfriend doesn’t think this way. Researchers say that one of
the strongest predictors of men who cheat and men who don’t is
opportunity. This suggests that most men at least toy with com-
mitting adultery. Social scientists estimate that about 30 percent
of married men cheat on their wives. To get a feel for what this
number means, imagine that 30 percent of married men shop-
lift. A world in which this were true would feel crazy.
Even if a man is committed to remaining faithful, he is af-
fected by the adultery he sees around him. In his head, adultery
becomes a secret passage out of the marriage. Promiscuity takes
on the allure of adventure, of a life not lived. When we are fight-
ing with our wives, the prospect of adultery can come to us.
When there are sexual problems, the fact that we know men
who are having lots of sex outside their marriage makes these
problems bother us more. The knowledge of other people’s un-
faithfulness is one reason fights with our spouses can sometimes
spiral out of control. As we fight, we become unhappy, and we
think about the options that we are not exercising. So we blame
our wives not just for what we are fighting about but also for our
choice to not cheat.
A
lthough my love for my wife had become more real to me,
as had my recognition that I didn’t want to be without her,
I still felt not just envy when I heard of friends’ affairs but
like a wimp for not making passes.
My friend Will, who married young, had been with his wife
for 17 years when we got to know each other. Will’s wife has
emotional problems. She has tried to commit suicide in front of
her children by drinking bleach and by climbing out the win-
dow of their apartment. Because Will was so unhappy in his
marriage, he went out every night, and when he would tell me
about his secret life, it sounded glamorous. The many women
he slept with, the world that can open up when a woman tells
you her story—all this appeared part of a richer life than the
one I was leading. But then Will’s wife learned of his affairs and
threw him out. Suddenly, he went from living in a large, beauti-
ful apartment to living in two rooms with bedbugs and having a
neighbor who fed her cats in the building’s communal hallway.
Most of Will’s money vanished. The first time I met him after he
was forced to leave home, I took him to a grocery store to buy
him food. He was in his midforties, and his furniture included a
futon and milk crates. He said that he couldn’t sleep, worrying
that his children would hate him. He said that his wife had told
his parents what he had done.
My friend’s misery was my great good fortune. I talked to
him every day, and I heard his problems, heard how lonely he
now got on Friday and Saturday nights. While I still envied Will
for his many sexual partners, I could see that there were real
consequences to cheating.
But what made me realize most poignantly that promiscuity
is not some grand adventure came from seeing friends enter the
world of commercial sex. My experience has been that com-
mercial sex becomes more common as men get older and their
lives get busy and disposable income is greater. Its appeal is that
by sleeping with different women, men can delude themselves
into thinking they are as charismatic as James Bond. One of my
friends is a Greek Orthodox priest, another installs telephones,
one works in the city morgue, one works in advertising, several
are in construction, several others are editors, investment bank-
ers, real-estate agents, actors, musicians. Only four haven’t gone
to brothels or massage parlors that offer a little something extra at
some point while married. Recently a friend told me about how
one night, as he was going in for a massage, he saw an incoming
call from his wife on his cell phone and sent it to voice mail. Later,
when he left the establishment, he listened to the message. It was
his little boy, calling to say good night.
Another friend told me about going into a brothel he had
been to before and being asked by a new security guard to take
out his penis. The guard didn’t recognize my friend, and under-
cover cops posing as clients supposedly aren’t willing to do this.
My friend unzipped.
I was once traveling for work and a sales representative took
my boss and me to a brothel. My boss is a good guy, friendly,
cheerful. He has a son with Down syndrome with whom he is
madly in love, and he is also very respectful of how important
his wife is in taking care of their child. And yet, there we were:
in a room with a row of swimsuit-clad Russian women lined up
on a sofa. All of them were watching a television that was bolted
to the ceiling. The sales rep and my boss went into rooms in
back. I stayed in front. I had come along because I hadn’t known
exactly where we were going, and the main reason I didn’t par-
ticipate was because I was scared of letting anyone at work have
something over me. The other two men, who were drunk, their
pupils dilated, didn’t notice that I remained up front.
There was a rawness to being in the brothel that somehow sep-
arated lust from all the other illusions that had clothed it—if only
I were with this woman, I’d be different; the problem is my wife
and not me. Seeing the drunk men and the women in swimsuits
was like seeing these illusions as a sort of insanity.
When sad or worried, I still periodically find myself thinking
that if I were with someone else, my life would be better. This lie
can come in a sly way. I see a young woman walking down the
sidewalk and then I think about being young and then I fanta-
size about being with the young woman, and then I’m suddenly a
young man. I confuse the fantasy of being young with being with
this woman.
But I am getting better at catching myself. I can see my mind
moving into delusions, and I am able to reel it back. Also, I find
that the years of being married have made me happier. Some-
times when I’m waiting for my wife in a restaurant and I mistake
a woman for her, I get excited and realize I’m smiling.
www. e l l e. c o m 325
ELLE READER REPORT
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M
ichelle David never pictured herself as a nurse. She was
squeamish about needles and couldn’t stand the sight of
blood. When she learned, in 2005, that she was pregnant
with a second child, she was a dancer for the NBA’s Phila-
delphia 76ers. She loved the job and hoped to return to it. But by
the time her son, Lyam, turned one, David had left her dancing
career behind and enrolled in nursing school. As a new student,
she was already familiar with some of the medical procedures
being taught—such as how to insert a nasogastric feeding tube:
She’d learned them to care for Lyam.
At six weeks, Lyam was barely eating. One night, his breath-
ing became severely labored. David rushed him to Philadel-
phia’s St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children, where doctors
told her he was going into cardiac arrest. He’d been born with
holes in his heart and would need two open-heart surgeries im-
mediately. Before the first could be scheduled, Lyam started
vomiting blood, and his organs began to shut down. Unable
to breathe on his own, he was placed on a ventilator for four
months. When he was finally stable, he underwent both of the
surgeries in less than a month.
“After the second, it was bad,
because he had drainage tubes,”
David, 31, told me. “It was just—
he looked so bad. I wasn’t pre-
pared for that.” David had been
matter-of-fact, even upbeat,
as she’d described her son’s
medical history, but she
now was overcome
by emotion. “I’m
sorry,” she said,
covering her face with her hand. Tears rolled down her cheeks.
“It just really stinks that he’s going to have to go through it again.”
David was referring to the open-heart surgery that Lyam will
need within the next three years to fix yet another anomaly—
all of which were caused by the boy’s in utero exposure to the
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) Paxil, a Philadel-
phia jury ruled in October 2009.
David’s doctor had prescribed Paxil for the mild anxiety she
suffered after the death of a close friend. When she became preg-
nant a year later, she asked both him and her ob-gyn about the
drug. Neither doctor was concerned, which isn’t surprising: Paxil
was one of the most-prescribed antidepressants at the time, and
a number of psychiatrists were delivering nationwide talks for
their fellow physicians endorsing the safety and efficacy of the
drug during pregnancy.
But in December 2005, two months after Lyam was born, the
FDA asked Paxil’s manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, to change
the drug’s pregnancy-use classification from Category C (“ani-
mal reproduction studies have shown an adverse effect on the fe-
tus, and the benefits from the use of the drug in pregnant women
may be acceptable despite its potential risks”) to Category D
(“positive evidence of human fetal risk”). The move came fol-
lowing the early results of two studies showing that women who
took paroxetine (Paxil’s generic name) during the first trimester
were one and a half to two times more likely to have a baby with
a heart defect—in most cases, atrial or ventricular septal defects
like Lyam’s. The FDA issued a public health advisory to doctors
and clinics about Paxil and the danger of congenital heart defects.
The jury that ruled in David’s favor also found that Glaxo-
SmithKline had “negligently failed to warn” her doctor about
the increased risk of such problems and awarded David $2.5
million in compensation. It was the first and only SSRI case to
ever reach verdict, though Glaxo has since settled more than
$1 billion worth of claims out of court. David’s attorney, Sean
Tracey, says that there are many more cases pending against
Paxil and other SSRI makers—this summer alone, 19 suits
were filed against Zoloft—or awaiting settlement.
Tracey first learned about Paxil-related birth defects in
2006, when another lawyer walked into his office with a client
named Lisa Collins, whose son, Chase, was born with part of
his heart missing. Like David, Collins did not suffer from major
depression or anxiety; she was prescribed Paxil for occasional
claustrophobia. When Collins became pregnant, her family
doctor assured her that it was “perfectly safe” to continue tak-
ing the drug. But just two weeks after he was delivered,
Chase needed open-heart surgery. The strokes he suf-
fered after the procedure left him with brain damage.
GlaxoSmithKline reached a confidential settlement
with Collins in 2008.
Despite cases like Lyam’s and Chase’s, the de-
bate about the use of SSRIs during pregnancy
is far from over. And the number of pregnant
women taking SSRIs is as high as it’s ever
been.
, p
months. When he was finally stable, he underwent both of the
surgeries in less than a month.
“After the second, it was bad,
because he had drainage tubes,”
David, 31, told me. “It was just—
he looked so bad. I wasn’t pre-
pared for that.” David had been
ma m tter-of-fact, even upbeat,
as she’d described her son’s
medical history, but she
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by emotion. “I’m
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like Lyam’s. The FDA
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The jury that rule
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Tracey, says that th
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Postpartum depression is a scary prospect for new mothers and babies,
but are pregnant women with milder conditions needlessly endangering
their infants by taking antidepressants? Dyan Neary reports
THE DRUG WAR
326 www. e l l e. c o m
Given the number of things women are told to avoid during
pregnancy—alcohol, aspirin, unpasteurized cheese, and sushi,
to name just a few—it may seem surprising that antidepressants
aren’t verboten too. But in recent years, doctors have become
as concerned about the impact of depression on the mother and
child as they are about the harm SSRIs might do to the fetus.
An estimated 3 percent of pregnant women suffer from major
depression, giving them a lifetime suicide risk 20 times higher
than average. “The women I see say, ‘Nothing gets me excited.
I don’t want to go out of the house, I can’t get my stuff done at
work, my boss has noticed,’ ” offers Kara Driscoll, MD, a psy-
chiatrist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago who
specializes in treating depressed expectant mothers. “You can
have a severe episode of depression without being suicidal. It’s
just the symptoms are really quite profound.” (Those symptoms
include lethargy, an inability to focus, feeling hopeless or guilt-
ridden, eating or sleeping too much or not enough, and crying
often.)
Perhaps most worrisome, the heaviest predictor of post-
partum depression, which afflicts an estimated 13 percent of
new mothers, is depression during pregnancy. (And expectant
mothers with a history of major depression who go off their
meds during pregnancy are five times more likely to relapse,
according to a 2006 study in The Journal of the American Medical
Association.) Postpartum depression can leave women unable to
care for their babies or form an adequate emotional attachment
with them, causing lags in language, behavior, and intellectual
development. A tiny fraction of cases manifest in a dangerous
illness called postpartum psychosis, marked by auditory hal-
lucinations, alienation from others, and urges to harm oneself
or one’s baby.
Against that backdrop, Driscoll believes that all pregnant
women should be screened for depression, as is the practice at
Northwestern. “Twice during pregnancy, our OBs administer a
screening scale. So no matter what—whether you’re talking about
symptoms of depression or not—they’re going to go ahead and
ask you about them. Because we’ve found women have symp-
toms who haven’t been assessed, who are not being treated.”
Gideon Koren, MD, a Canadian toxicologist and pediatri-
cian who runs Toronto’s Motherisk, the world’s largest research
and counseling center for expectant mothers, is, if anything, a
stronger advocate for screening. An avuncular figure with gold-
rimmed glasses and white hair, he boasts that Motherisk’s “re-
search influences much of the counseling in the United States.”
His counselors use a standard 10-question survey (called the
Edin burgh Postnatal Depression Scale) with any expectant
mother who calls or walks into the office. “A lot of women don’t
feel good, and they don’t know it’s because of depression,” he
says. “The condition is seriously underdiagnosed.”
When a woman scores a 13 or higher, she’s referred to a psy-
chiatrist and will likely be encouraged to start a regimen of anti-
depressants. “If a woman scores between 10 and 13,” Koren says,
“you still have to tell the physician that she’s borderline and she
should be followed up. She’s almost there.”
I have been able to laugh and see the funny side of things
As much as I always could
Not quite so much now
Definitely not so much now
Not at all
I have looked forward with enjoyment to things
As much as I ever did
Rather less than I used to
Definitely less than I used to
Hardly at all
I have been anxious or worried for no good reason
No, not at all
Hardly ever
Yes, sometimes
Yes, very often
Things have been getting on top of me
Yes, most of the time I haven’t been able to cope at all
Yes, sometimes I haven’t been coping as well as usual
No, most of the time I have coped quite well
No, I have been coping as well as ever
I have felt sad or miserable
Yes, most of the time
Yes, quite often
Not very often
No, not at all
Those are my answers to several questions from the Edinburgh
Postnatal Depression Scale test, based on how I felt during the first
trimester of my pregnancy. The baby was unplanned, and sud-
denly I was stressed about how I was going to support her and
get myself into an apartment more appropriate for a child—not
to mention that for the first three months I was vomiting nonstop.
Given the situation, it’s probably foreseeable that I’d score as high
as a 10, which, by Koren’s standards, would have resulted in a let-
ter to my doctor and possibly a prescription for an antidepressant.
That’s despite the fact that I’ve never been diagnosed with a mood
disorder, and by the time I entered my second trimester, my more
troubling answers would have changed for the better. “The thing
about screening is, the more you screen, the more you find,” said
Barbara Mintzes, PhD, an expert on pharmaceutical policy at the
University of British Columbia. “So it’s not necessarily a good rec-
ommendation to screen healthy people, because you can end up in
a situation where you have a lot of false positives.”
According to a 2008 study in the American Journal of Obstetrics
& Gynecology, more than 6 percent of all pregnant women take
SSRIs, a fourfold increase since 1996. While the medical com-
munity is virtually unanimous in the belief that women with
major depression should take medication during pregnancy, the
real, hotter issue—the one that Michelle David says applies to her
case—is whether more moderately depressed or anxious women
“A lot of [pregnant] women don’t feel good,
and they don’t know it’s because of depression,”
says Gideon Koren, MD. “The condition
is seriously underdiagnosed.”
www. e l l e. c o m 327
ELLE READER REPORT
should do the same. It’s not a small matter: A 2009 Psychiatric Ser-
vices study found that nearly four fifths of antidepressant prescrip-
tions aren’t written by psychiatrists; another report, published
last year in Health Affairs, found that nearly three quarters of these
prescriptions are written without a psychiatric diagnosis, and, its
authors point out, patients who get mental-health care from “gen-
eral medical settings tend to have much less severe psychiatric
problems.”
The first point of debate is what harms the fetus more: midlevel
depression and anxiety, or the SSRIs prescribed to treat them.
Talk to a handful of pregnant women these days and you’ll hear
echoes of this concern: “I’m so stressed out all the time—am I
hurting my baby?” Much of the medical research that tries to
answer the question has focused on which factor—SSRIs or
depression/anxiety—has a stronger relationship with low birth
weight and premature birth. That’s because very small and early
babies disproportionately suffer devastating conditions such as
cerebral palsy and blindness, while even less dramatic weight
and gestational deficits have been linked to more subtle neuro-
logical and developmental impairments. And the truth is, when
you sift through the data, it’s something like a draw: Both SSRIs
and depression are implicated with modest upticks in prema-
turity and low birth weight, although often only among poor
women. (For depression, the physiological mechanism for fetal
harm is theorized to be undue exposure to stress hormones like
cortisol or compromises in immune function; for SSRIs, it’s the
influence of extra serotonin on the developing brain.) “People
have a hard time accepting that sometimes science is in the
process of figuring things out, and I think, frankly, that’s where
we’re at,” says Columbia University psychiatry professor Cath-
erine Monk, PhD.
The second issue is whether SSRIs cause, in rare instances,
serious heart disorders like Lyam’s. No one is arguing that de-
pression is the culprit for heart-wall defects, but some doctors say
antidepressants aren’t the reason for them either. Over the years
a number of studies have not found a higher incidence of septal
heart defects in SSRI takers, but some of the most recent research
has turned up noteworthy increases. A 2008 report in the Brit-
ish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology found “major cardiovascular
anomalies” were about five times higher among the infants of
Prozac takers and three times higher among the babies of Paxil
takers. A 2009 study in the British Medical Journal concluded that
children whose mothers took Zoloft were more than three times
as likely to be born missing pieces of their heart walls.
Another worry, because of its severity, is something called
Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension of the Newborn (PPHN)—
a condition in which oxygen can’t be absorbed into the blood-
stream, which afflicted the infants of mothers who took SSRIs
(any SSRI) after their twentieth week at a six-times-higher rate in
a 2006 New England Journal of Medicine report. (Because the num-
bers of serious birth defects are quite small overall, even some-
thing like a sixfold expansion in PPHN means the disease would
occur in six to 12 babies per 1,000, rather than roughly one out of
1,000; the more devastating heart defects are even less common.)
Finally, SSRIs have been implicated in “neonatal abstinence syn-
drome,” a several-week-long drug withdrawal that may include
tremors, excessive crying, fever, rapid breathing, vomiting, prob-
lems feeding and sleeping, and even seizures.

P
erhaps only because it’s been studied more than the other
SSRIs, Paxil’s story—the research on its possible fetal effects
and its winding journey through the regulatory system—pro-
vides a compelling case for why it’s hard to confidently weigh
the risks and benefits of taking antidepressants during pregnancy.
It took 12 years for the drug to go from Category B (“animal re-
production studies have failed to demonstrate a risk to the fetus”)
to Category C to Category D. “Every doctor I’ve deposed says,
‘Well, it wasn’t Category D when I prescribed it,’ ” says Karen
Barth Menzies, an attorney who’s sued Glaxo on behalf of preg-
nant women. “They get very defensive.”
Indeed, David’s family physician testified that Glaxo drug reps
used Paxil’s Category C rating as a selling point for prescribing
the drug to women in their childbearing years. For its part, Glaxo
insisted throughout much of the trial that it had never marketed
Paxil for use by expectant mothers, though three people inde-
pendently told me they’d seen a video the company has shown to
MDs in which a woman named Mary Beth talks with her doctor
about how helpful Paxil was during her pregnancy. Her newborn
was completely healthy, she says, adding that she plans to have
another child and will take Paxil during that pregnancy, too.
Because pregnant women are excluded from clinical trials of
new drugs for ethical reasons, the FDA relies on drug compa-
nies to conduct animal studies for information about fetal risks.
Some of the first research to assess Paxil’s impact on rat pups was
conducted in the late 1970s. Investigators divided pregnant ro-
dents into four groups: Three received varying doses of Paxil, the
fourth nothing. Sixty-six percent of the pups born to the rats on
the lowest dose of Paxil died within four days, and that percentage
increased as the dosage did. Only 12 percent of pups born to the
unexposed mothers expired. In an internal memo obtained by
lawyer Tracey, John Baldwin, an employee of Beecham (which
later became Glaxo) who reviewed the studies, stated that it “sup-
ports the possibility of embryo lethality.” Suzanne Parisian, MD,
a former FDA medical officer, testified at Lyam’s trial that Glaxo
never did follow-up studies, nor did it alert the FDA about Bald-
win’s statements. “They should have,” she said. “But better yet
would have been to address it [with further research].”
This was not the only document that suggested Glaxo was
aware of potential problems with Paxil: Tracey uncovered a com-
pany review from 1998 that found “an alarmingly high number”
of reports of birth defects linked to the drug, and a report showed
Glaxo officials were “almost certain” that Paxil caused the birth
defects that prompted one woman to abort her fetus. (Internal
e-mails that I obtained reveal that Glaxo has tried to hide other
negative information about Paxil, canceling a long-term panic
disorder study in 2000 because it showed that people who quit
the drug suffered withdrawal. “Yes, Virginia, there is a God,”
wrote a medical writer who’d been assigned to describe the
“People have a hard time accepting that sometimes
science is in the process of figuring things out.
Frankly, that’s where we’re at,” says Catherine
Monk, PhD.
(conti nued on page 380)
328 www. e l l e. c o m
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ELLE READER
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ADVICE
IT’S WHAT’S ON THE OUTSIDE
THAT COUNTS
DEAR E. JEAN: Can you tell me who is this
“inner goddess” whom all ladies apparently
carry inside? Inside where? I’m having trouble
finding her! I was never really a girly girl, and
flirting doesn’t come naturally to me, so at 27 I’m
a total seduction rookie. My experience with men
can’t even be characterized as elementary.
I don’t expect to become the next Marilyn, but I
want to tap into my inner femme. How do I get
myself to a place where I can enjoy being admired?
I’m a successful career woman and I know how to
make goals, and this is my new goal: to exchange
sparkly glances sans panic attacks.
—I Just Bow My Head and Flee
MISS FLEE: I have conferred with my inner
goddess. She reports that your inner goddess
is in San Francisco attending a vibrator con-
vention.
Good. With luck, we won’t hear from
your Supreme Broad for weeks. They’re a
boring bunch, these inner goddesses—they
never seem to do anything but whisper:
“Hey, girl, let’s straddle the sofa!” Or, “Hey,
girl, let’s take a bubble bath!”
Anyway, inner goddesses aren’t inter-
ested in men. They’re interested in pleasure.
Get that straight, Miss Flee, or you’ll never
exchange “sparkly glances” with anything
but chocolate cake. So let’s turn our atten-
tion to the deity who actually does enjoy
“being admired”: your outer goddess.
A simple being, your outer goddess has
no secrets. She swears by the hair, the
makeup, the dress, and nothing but the
dress, so help her God(s). Your outer god-
dess knows that if you brush on a bit of
mascara and shimmy into a flirty frock,
men will deduce (correctly) that you want to
flirt, and if they deduce that you want to flirt,
they will flirt with you.
A man’s “mind argues,” wrote Balzac,
that “a woman who knows how to make her-
self so beautiful must have still greater
resources when it comes to lovemaking.” All
you have to do is (A) find the dress; (B) don
the dress; (C) attend a shindig wearing the
dress; (D) not run away when a chap is
attracted to you because of the dress;
(E) look into his eyes; (F) smile. It would be
nice if you also laughed at his jokes, but let’s
not go completely mad the first night out.
The next week, you will slip into a cock-
tail dress and high, high heels and throw a
Thanksgiving board game party.
P.S. I also recommend that you attend
a seminar at Mama Gena’s School of
Womanly Arts (mamagenas.com). There, the
magnificent Regena, who answers only to
Celtic gods, will instruct you in a whole new
view of enjoying (i.e., seducing) men.
BE THE CHANGE YOU WANT
TO SEE…IN YOUR WALLET
DEAR E. JEAN: I’m turning into a real-life
Hannah from Girls. I’m 25 and barely working:
retail, two days a week. My parents just
announced that they can no longer support me.
I’m one of three children, my mom and dad put us
all through college, and my dad is retiring soon—
so I understand.
Meanwhile, my sweet boyfriend is going into
debt trying to keep me in food, clothes, and shel-
ter. I’ve been job hunting every day until my eyes
are crossed! There’s nothing available for my
major. And the best retail places aren’t hiring. I
want to be independent, but at the same time, I
want a small allowance to get me through the
week. How do I ask for money from my parents?
What else can be done for me? I’m at a loss.
—This Hannah Needs Help
HUNNYBUNCH: Whaddaya got there,
Hannah? An iPhone? A Droid? Either
way, sign up at Squareup.com. Jack Dorsey,
the man who invented Twitter, cocreated
the Square Card Reader so you can set
yourself up in business and process credit
cards. (One of Dorsey’s friends couldn’t sell
his handblown glass because there was no
way for him to take plastic—so he and
Dorsey invented a solution to his problem.)
Stop shaking your head, Hannah. In the
next seven days (the time it takes for your
free Card Reader to arrive in the mail) you
will start a business, cease moaning about
the lack of jobs in your “major,” and begin
majoring in making money.
And you’ll do it mooching exactly zero
dollars off your parents. You’ll build a fan-
tastic website, for free, at Weebly.com;
launch your marketing campaign, for free,
on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and
Tumblr; phone for free, with Gmail call-
ing; and watch your progress, at no charge,
on Google Analytics. Square will take 2.75
percent per credit-card swipe—but, hell,
anyone who’s not starting her own business
these days looks like a loser. Here’s a handy
guide to help you take the first steps:
HOWTO
MAKE IT IN THE WORLD
The Hannah Rules
1. Never waste time looking for a job when
you can invent a job.
2. Never invent a job that does not help
solve one of mankind’s problems.
3. Never forget, as you prepare your
Facebook marketing campaign: Women
want to be thinner, and men want to be
taller.
4. Never go with what you love. Go with
what obsesses you.
5. Never worry about failing. You will fail.
Just fail smarter the next day.
6. Never listen to your boyfriend when he
complains that you’re working all the
time. Keep working.
7. Never wear black. Wear red—hot,
cheeky, dangerous red. People will be less
likely to forget you.
8. Never aim for catchy. Aim for true.
9. Never ask customers what they want—
as Steve Jobs said: “People don’t know
what they want until you show it to them.”
Whatever your product or service, Miss
Hannah, I believe 100 percent in your
superb skill at getting money out of people
who can’t afford it. You’ll be paying your
parents back by Christmas. Good luck,
and let us all know how you’re doing!
P.S. Thank you, Seth Godin, for #8.
MOMMY DEAREST.
NO, REALLY
DEAR E. JEAN: My mother is an attractive,
ASK
E.JEAN
Tormented? Driven witless? Whipsawed by confusion?
330 www. e l l e. c o m
interesting woman who reads ELLE and The
Economist, dresses fashionably, and main-
tains a petite size 2 frame. Recently, I found out
that my 39-year-old husband (of 14 years) has
been having sex with her when he attends con-
ferences at the resort near where she lives. When
he told me, I was bothered by the fact that it
didn’t bother me.
He’s a wonderful man—father to our two
children and a good provider—and he’s always
taken care of me emotionally, sexually, and
financially. I know I should be upset; I know I
should feel betrayed on so many levels. But I
just don’t. He says he enjoys the relationship
with her but will stop if it’s what I want.
Honestly, if my mother and husband are
happy in their affair, I just can’t seem to find
the energy to be angry or jealous. So my question
is: Is this normal? Should I be upset?
—No Talent for the Conniption Fit
MY DEAR MISS CONNIPTION: For 20
years, the world’s most attractive idiots,
unrequited lovers, and chafing milksops
(including myself) have babbled in this
column about “unconditional love.” You
are—astoundingly—the first to live it.
So…no. I’m not going to advise you to
feel “upset.” Instead, I’m popping open a
bottle of prosecco and raising my glass to
you, Conniption! You’ve found what so
many seek: True love, like true joy, comes
when you wish your beloved free, and
when you get out of your own head.
The difficulty, of course, as Henry James
pointed out, “is not only to get out—you
must stay out” of your own head. So you
wonder if you should feel “angry”? Bah.
Being human means feeling spiteful, dis-
gusted, sad, ecstatic, bitter, and terrified,
just thinking about changing hairdressers.
Being human also means experiencing
deep, spiritual, liberating feelings of uncon-
ditional love—and a release from anger.
People who say you should be in a rage
don’t understand a thing about love. To
love, totally and absolutely, means to want
your loved ones to be free. No need to turn
yourself into a walking Diagnostic and Sta-
tistical Manual of Mental Disorders just
because you question whether not being
angry is “normal.”
Indeed, what is normal is a man finding
his wife’s mother attractive. People just
don’t talk about it. In the mid-1980s I
trekked across the Star Mountains in Papua
New Guinea. Due to falling down a 40-foot-
deep sinkhole, tumbling into a 150-foot
ravine, crashing off a vine bridge, getting
lost, running out of food, being attacked by
killer ants, crawling through quicksand, and
twisting my ankle so badly that it swelled up
to the size of a water bucket, I was forced to
stay for a spell in the tranquil Atbalmin vil-
lage of Munbil. And what I saw there!
Beauty, serenity, boredom, and a couple
of mothers-in-law (as elegant as Edith Whar-
ton and both under 4'10") enjoying the
favors of their daughters’ husbands. It was
accepted. It was the custom of the country—or
at least the custom in this particular paradise.
(Papua New Guinea is so violent that more
than 820 languages are spoken there.) But
we’re not living in the Star Mountains. If you
ever do get upset, tell your husband to cease.
P.S. My first inkling that you possess a
nirvana-grade freedom from jealousy? You
mentioned a fellow woman wearing a “size
2” in your first sentence, then went on to
write two more paragraphs—a total of 158
words—without slamming her.
THE RING CYCLE
DEAR E. JEAN: I love my man, but
after all my hints and suggestions as to what
kind of engagement ring I want, he went off and
got one that’s pretty—but not what I want to see
on my hand for a lifetime. I want to change it. Is
that acceptable?
—Right Man, Wrong Ring
MISS RIGHT MAN: A lady is permitted
to broach the subject of an ugly ring with the
ring giver upon a single occasion: the fifth
wedding anniversary. It is, of course, cor-
rect to clutch your husband by the hair and
scream a hint when you are giving birth to
your first child, but not absolutely neces-
sary. However, telling the fella who so
tenderly chose the ring that you don’t want
to see it on your hand prior to either of those
two milestones—particularly when he did
get you a “pretty” ring—is hard-hearted,
thoughtless, and in frightfully bad taste.
SUGAR DADDY BLUES
DEAR E. JEAN: My friends are being
fake. They lavish me with compliments—all of
them so phony that I can’t believe they think I’m
not seeing through it. Why? Because my new
boyfriend is loaded—incredibly wealthy. They
ambush us at parties with “pitches” for their
“projects” and pleas to invest in their dreams.
One of my friends spotted us at a café and for 20
minutes nagged us to set up a “business meet-
ing.” It’s getting to the point where I’m afraid to
show up anywhere with the guy!
All this makes me feel lonely and kinda sad.
I’ve even begun wondering: Is everybody
interested in me only because of my boyfriend’s
money? Am I supposed to stop making friends?
Or do I simply not introduce my boyfriend to
my friends?
—Fake-Friend Magnet
MISS MAGNET, MY KUMQUAT: Now,
now. Don’t be so hard on your friends.
I remember the summer when a couple—
handsome, clever, and rich, rich, rich—
bought the Jumping Horse Ranch and
moved into our small Montana valley. We
all went completely batshit. I mean, we
lost our brains! We threw them dinner
party after dinner party, pitched them
business proposals to start new maga-
zines, let them win at Botticelli, squired
them to the rodeo, and so on. By New
Year’s we’d all simmered down and sim-
ply enjoyed them.
I suspect this is what will happen with
your friends. As you love them for their
excellent qualities and their sins—their
humor, their kindness, their always being
late, et cetera—they love you for your
quirky self and the fact that you possess a
spankin’ rich lover-dude.
The problem will sort itself out, trust
Auntie Eeee. Your boyfriend will soon
avoid the friends of yours he doesn’t like,
and your “fake” friends will fade away.
Ask a question! E-mail [email protected]
and tweet to @ejeancarroll. Read past columns
at ELLE.com/AskEJean. Watch videos, write
with anonymity, and exchange genius tips on
Advice Vixens at AskEJean.com. And if you
require a new boyfriend, try Tawkify.com.
?
I thought my Ivy League professor boyfriend was The One because he
reads Madame Bovary in bed. But I’ve just caught him with another girl
for the third time. He swears there won’t be a fourth. Should I take him
back? I love him madly!
!
Take him back? Are you kidding? Madame Bovary is the most boring
book ever written.
www. e l l e. c o m 331
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W
e know that in showbiz, thank you speeches tend to run long. But with this, our
nineteenth annual Women in Hollywood Issue, we’d like to take just a moment to
sincerely—and succinctly—express our gratitude for the nine female dramatists fea-
tured in the following pages. With sidesplitting comedic timing (Sarah Jessica Parker
in The First Wives Club), tear-jerking raw emotion (Susan Sarandon in Dead Man Walking),
kick-ass combat moves (Uma Thurman in the Kill Bill films), and jaw-dropping transforma-
tions (Cate Blanchett in Elizabeth), they’ve helped us understand our world—and ourselves—
a little better. (Indeed, sometimes better than we needed—thank you, Kristen Wiig, for that
bathroom scene in Bridesmaids.) We won’t go into how many Oscar statues are among them
(okay, four; belated congratulations to The Help’s Octavia Spencer)—not to mention Golden
Globes, SAGs, and BAFTAs (14, six, and six). Or even Guinness World Records (we’re look-
ing at you, Emma Watson, highest-grossing female star of the aughts). We’ll just leave it at
this: Virtually every time someone yelled, “Action!” these women—and wise-beyond-her-
years woman-to-be, 14-year-old Elle Fanning—left an indelible mark on our life (or, in the
case of Shirley MacLaine, lives). Cue the cutoff music. P
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WOMEN IN
HOLLYWOOD
www. e l l e. c o m 333
Cherry blossom
jacquard dress,
Alexander McQueen,
price on request, at
Alexander McQueen,
NYC. Ankle-strap
sandals, Casadei,
$650. For details, see
Shopping Guide.
334 www. e l l e. c o m
S
arah Jessica Parker was 12 years old when she
had a standing-room-only ticket to see Andrea
McArdle in Annie—the late-’70s musical phe-
nomenon that had every girl in America belting
out Broadway tunes into her hairbrush. Parker, now
47, had been acting professionally for a few years by
then but wasn’t particularly known for her singing or
tap dancing. Her father, she says, casually opined to
her, “Oh, you know, you’re just not Annie material.”
Parker, however, was undaunted. “I think to myself,
Well, why not?” She scored an audition and won the
role by “working really hard and maybe wanting it
for a slightly pure reason,” she says.
Since then, like a cultural Zelig, Parker has hop-
scotched from one generation-defining role to
another in a career that has spanned decades and
counting: the wisecracking nerd in the ’80s cult-
favorite TV show Square Pegs; the sidekick in the
original Footloose; Lycra-clad ’90s babes in films such
as L.A. Story and Honeymoon in Vegas; the mother of
all It Girls, Carrie Bradshaw, in Sex and the City; and
the stressed-out working woman of the aughts in
The Family Stone and I Don’t Know How She Does It.
Next up we’ll see her singing her heart out on Glee,
and then playing the ultimate women’s icon—Glo-
ria Steinem—in the upcoming biopic Lovelace, with
Amanda Seyfried.
“Sarah Jessica is very glamorous in many ways,
which is an exciting fantasy for many women,” says
Douglas McGrath, her I Don’t Know How She Does
It director. “But unlike some style icons, where it’s
all cold surface beauty, she has a wonderful hu-
manity that always shows through. She’s beguiling,
enchanting—and yet you never forget that she’s a
real person.”
“I’ve always called her the star next door,” says
Michael Patrick King, who wrote, produced, and di-
rected the Sex and the City series and movies. “She’s
sort of like the girl next door, but she’s so unique and
special as an actress that she’s a star. There’s no one
like her: Smart, sexy, funny, deep—she has it all, and
she had something that made her the It Girl for all
those different moments. You can’t really understate
her range.”
Indeed, she brings a dancer’s nimble ease to physi-
cal comedy (her kinetic SanDeE* in L.A. Story more
than held her own against expert pratfaller Steve
Martin), yet can still move an audience in quieter mo-
ments (her uptight character unraveling in The Family
Stone, say, or all those breakups with Big).
Parker also brings range to her life in general,
which these days includes producing (Sex and the
City, Bravo’s reality competition Work of Art: The Next
Great Artist, and the documentary Pretty Old ); politi-
cal activism (she recently hosted a $40,000-a-plate
Obama fundraiser at her home); a fragrance and
fashion empire (with hit perfume lines Lovely, Covet,
and SJP NYC for Coty; her stint as president and
chief creative officer at Halston Heritage; and her
fondly remembered clothing line, Bitten)—oh, and
she’s been married for 15 years to Matthew Broder-
ick, with whom she has three children: James Wilkie,
10, and 3-year-old twins, Loretta and Tabitha.
“I think it’s just curiosity,” she says about her will-
ingness to take on such a crushing workload. “If
something’s exciting and challenging and I can do
it with people I respect and can learn from—who
would say no?” (Director and choreographer Adam
Shankman, one of her best friends, says her secret is:
“She does not sleep.”)
Shankman says that once he called her at home and
Broderick told him she wasn’t there. When he asked
where Parker was, Broderick said, without missing a
beat, “Oh, you know, out taking over the world.” But,
Shankman points out, “She’s not a control freak.” And
this is why we love Parker: for being both the hardest
working and the most fun-loving gal in Hollywood.
As her State and Main director, David Mamet, puts it,
“She is both a trouper and a pussycat. Can better be
said of anyone? I think not.”—Rachael Combe
Q Was it painful to be an adolescent in the public eye?
A People had opinions about what I should look like, but
something in me knew that if I fixed that or changed this, it
wouldn’t fundamentally change me. I just thought, Thanks
for telling me, and I guess I should pluck my eyebrows, but
the rest of it I dismissed. Q What kind of characters ex-
cite you? A Something I haven’t done. I don’t love the idea
of playing another woman who loves fashion and is slightly
flawed in New York City. I loved Carrie, and I don’t want to
do the poor man’s version of her. And while those are of-
ten the lucrative things to do, it’s more reason to look in
the other direction. Q Was there a role that got away
from you? A Recently I saw a clip of Hugh [Grant] and
Andie [MacDowell] in Four Weddings and a Funeral, and I’ll
always think, Ahh, I wish I’d gotten that part. I auditioned
for it many times. She also did another movie I auditioned
for many times, Groundhog Day, which I loved. And she
was really lovely in both. Q What movies do you go back
to for inspiration? Woody Allen’s. He was like my broth-
ers: smart, funny, and he looked different. I immediately
related to that and to how he felt as a character: always
a slight outsider looking in but somehow invited into the
conversation. Q Have you ever had to stand up to some-
one who wasn’t being helpful? A If someone is saying
things that are mind-numbing, I ask the person to say
less. Or I don’t look into their eyes when they’re giving me
notes, because I know they’re trying to put a performance
into my head. I just look at the ground and say, “Um-hmm.”
SARAH JESSICA PARKER
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: ICON
In her decades-long career, Parker has remained the perennial
It Girl, as both a style icon and a true master performer
PHOTOGRAPHED BY AL E X I L UBOMI RSKI STYLED BY S TACE Y BAT TAT
WATCH IT!
SMART PEOPLE, 2008 “I loved this
part because, in relation to other
parts I’ve played, the character
was unusually withholding and
remote. And I especially loved
acting opposite Dennis [Quaid],
who I believed to be quite
wonderful in the role.”
STATE AND MAIN, 2000 “I was in a
perfect state of panic the whole
movie, primarily because I was
so intimidated by the idea of
Mamet and so wanted to please
him and get it right.”
THE FAMILY STONE, 2005 “Just a
completely satisfying and happy
experience both professionally
and personally. I was enchanted
by the cast and our writer-
director [Thomas Bezucha],
and the part was wonderfully
challenging for me.”
SEX AND THE CITY, 1998–2004
“Something I would never have
planned—to be on a television
series, for so many years. But I
wouldn’t change a thing about
playing Carrie, or about anyone I
was so fortunate to work with. It
was enormous happiness.”
ED WOOD, 1994 “Sometimes I
think my time with Tim Burton
was something I imagined—
perhaps because I love Ed Wood
so much. Love Johnny [Depp]
in the role, and I still can’t quite
believe I was fortunate enough
to be part of it.”
FOOTLOOSE, 1984 “I think of it as
an important step in my pursuit
of independence. It was the first
occasion I was alone, without a
guardian. And I loved it. I paid
my bills on time, fell in love, and
came home with some really
important memories and a little
pocket change.”
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www. e l l e. c o m 335
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336 www. e l l e. c o m
I
n the beginning, there was the Voice, Cate Blanchett’s
resonant pipes and perfect diction ushering millions
of movie fans into the Lord of the Rings trilogy: “Dark-
ness crept back into the forests of the world. Rumor
grew of a shadow in the East, whispers of a name-
less fear….” Now that Blanchett reprises her role next
month as Galadriel in the Rings prequel, The Hobbit: An
Unexpected Journey, maybe it’s time to get at the secret of
not the Ring, but the Voice. Her attitude is, What’s the
fuss about? “Oh, I don’t know,” she says with a touch
of embarrassment. “It’s acting. I grew up listening to
radio plays with my grandmother, and I love it when
you conjure a whole world through audio.”
Remarkably, Blanchett, in spite of her Australian-
ness and a day job for the past five years as co– artistic
director, with husband Andrew Upton, of the Sydney
Theatre Company, has achieved iconic status not only
as the elf queen of Middle-earth but as a regal pres-
ence in another mythical land: Hollywood. In just the
past decade, she’s worked with the cream of Ameri-
can auteurs—Martin Scorsese (The Aviator), David
Fincher (The Curious Case of Benjamin Button), Wes
Anderson (The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou), Todd
Haynes (I’m Not There), Steven Soderbergh (The Good
German)—and is at this moment shooting films with
both Terrence Malick and Woody Allen.
The Oscar roll call to date: Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Kath-
arine Hepburn in The Aviator, and nominations for
Best Actress (Elizabeth and Elizabeth: The Golden Age)
and Best Supporting Actress (Notes on a Scandal and
I’m Not There).
No one could sound more surprised by this turn
of events than Blanchett. “I’m not very experienced
in Hollywood,” she says. “It was a long time before I
shot in Los Angeles, before I knew what ‘on the lot’
even meant.” But as soon as Blanchett, a well-regarded
young stage actress in Australia and virtually unknown
outside of it, took to the screen as Queen Elizabeth
I, back in 1998, Hollywood was smitten. “There is a
natural grace about Cate that you can’t fake or teach,”
Peter Jackson, her Rings and Hobbit director, says. The
industry has no problem producing sexy girls on de-
mand, but Blanchett, with that dancer’s leggy elegance
and distinctively husky voice, has only to appear on
camera for a moment to announce that a real woman
has arrived. I suggest to her that she’s a throwback to
those grown-up actresses of an earlier era, and she’s a
little startled. (“Oh. Wow. That’s nice.”) “They were ab-
solutely inspirational to me growing up,” she explains.
“When you look back to the Joan Crawfords and the
Bette Davises and Katharine Hepburns, they were
driving extraordinary film narratives. And they were
never referred to as being in ‘women’s pictures.’ They
weren’t patted on the head in that way.”
“She’s incredibly brave,” says her friend and fellow
Aussie Hugo Weaving, Elrond the elf king in the Jack-
son movies. “She puts herself out there with intelligence
and intuition.” We may carry an image of Blanchett as
queen above it all, Galadrielian, but in many of her
best films, she’s a woman on the edge, desperately try-
ing to hold it together. In Notes on a Scandal, her hu-
miliated schoolteacher practically hurls her colleague,
played by Dame Judi Dench, through a china cabinet.
And yet in her stage work, she can be incredibly loose
and funny. “She enjoys foolishness and horseplay and
mucking around backstage,” Weaving says. Together,
they turned Uncle Vanya, a Sydney Theatre Company
production that recently played New York City, into
a rollicking sex farce—and Blanchett into a physical
comedienne in the mold of one of her idols, Lucille
Ball. As usual, she declines to take the credit: “[Great
actors] throw things at you. You have to try to bat it
back as best you can.”—Joseph Hooper
Q You’ve got a strong marriage, three kids, and an
amazing career. If a younger actress told you she
wanted all those things, what would your words of
wisdom be? A Well, don’t try to achieve that by next
Wednesday. The choices don’t all present themselves
in one big blob. At every fork in the road, you have to
ask yourself, What are my priorities here? I don’t think
I’ve necessarily made all the right decisions. Q What is
challenging for actresses in Hollywood these days?
A You don’t just want to play a good character, you
want to be in a good film. And those two things don’t
always happen now. [The film industry] concentrates
on the woman’s acting rather than how powerful the
film is. Often, the most interesting film means you die
on page nine. But that’s fine. Q Favorite actress?
A I loved watching Bette Davis and Lucille Ball all
through their careers. But my favorite? Liv Ullmann. She
has a core understanding of the subterranean nature
of relationships, and her ability to reveal those is pretty
much without parallel. Q Surreal Hollywood moment?
A I had finished shooting [the fourth] Indiana Jones
with Steven Spielberg and was working on The Curious
Case of Benjamin Button on the same lot. I was in my full
prosthetics [for scenes as the elderly Daisy], and I went
over to the Indiana Jones assistant director and told him
that I was from the Make-A-Wish Foundation and wanted
to meet Mr. Spielberg. He came over and shook my hand
and he was thinking, Why didn’t someone warn me that
this mad old woman was going to accost me? I told him
it was me, and he still didn’t believe me.
CATE BLANCHETT
A modern Hollywood darling built like an old-school star
and a theater vet who always radiates gravitas to the rafters,
Blanchett is the best of every world—even Middle-earth
PHOTOGRAPHED BY AL E X I L UBOMI RSKI STYLED BY K AT E L ANPHE AR
WATCH IT!
THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED
JOURNEY, 2012 “What a rare
treat, to return to Middle-earth
10 years on with the same bunch
of wunderkinder. I fell hopelessly,
irreversibly in love with Ian
McKellen. An elf and a wizard—is
that so wrong?”
A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE,
2009 “Working with Liv Ullmann
was like a homecoming; it was
liberating. Her fearless grace and
searing emotional intensity as
an actress is legendary, but as a
director she brings a disarming
honesty and enormous love for
the actors.”
GROSS UND KLEIN, 2012 “I had
long loved this play, but it was
only through collaborating with
Benedict Andrews again that
we discovered how funny it was.
Crazy dancing…über-alienation as
Lotte Kotte searched for a place
to belong. It was an exhausting
but thrilling ride.”
I’M NOT THERE, 2007 “Todd
Haynes is a genuine maverick, as
is Dylan. Nothing was off limits,
and once I stuffed the sock down
my undies, it all seemed to fall
into place—and man, was it wild.”
THE AVIATOR, 2004 “When Marty
[Scorsese] asked me to play
Katharine Hepburn, I moved
quickly from elation (at the
prospect of working with him) to
profound knee-sweating terror.
In the eyes of her adoring fans, I
feared disappointment loomed….”
ELIZABETH, 1998 “Meeting
Shekhar and the Working Title
team changed everything for me.
They took a huge risk casting me
as Elizabeth, and for that I will be
forever grateful.”
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338 www. e l l e. c o m
B
efore the night Octavia Spencer became a star,
winning an Oscar for her portrayal of Minny
Jackson, the abused wife and maid in The Help,
she had 91 credited characters to her name,
nearly half of which were nameless: Troubled Woman
(The Soloist); Bank Coworker (Drag Me to Hell ); Street-
walker (The Nines); Jurist (Medium); Landlady (Pulse);
Child Welfare Rep (CSI: NY ); Big Customer (Beauty
Shop); Check-In Girl (Spider-Man)….
Occasionally she landed a recurring role, like the
lusty Constance Grady in Ugly Betty. But for the most
part, Spencer took whatever she could get, even if it
meant playing “Nurse” 10 times, the first being her
break in A Time To Kill. Working as a production as-
sistant on the 1996 film, “I asked Joel [Schumacher] if
I could read for the role of the woman who started the
riots,” Spencer, 40, recalls. “He said, ‘No, your face is
too sweet. You can read for Sandy’s nurse.’ ”
But you can’t muck with fate—another produc-
tion assistant on the set was Tate Taylor, a fellow
Southerner who became Spencer’s BFF, longtime
roommate, and, ultimately, the director of The Help.
“I’ll give you the trash,” Taylor says ribaldly, in lieu of
hello. He remembers when they met: “I delivered call
sheets to the casting office and Octavia kept trying to
sleep with me.” Taylor, who’s openly gay, starts laugh-
ing. “I’m not kiddin’! She was laying it on thick.” Did
Spencer get her way? “Hell no! She got an Academy
Award. That’s the stiff statue she got outta me.”
Lush, lovely, loquacious, she was his Minny from
the minute he optioned the book and adapted the
screenplay. “Octavia can’t cook for shit, or clean
worth a damn, but she had the essence of Minny,”
Taylor says. “Her eyes, those big eyes, are a gateway
to her emotion. You want to climb into them and see
what’s going on. She’s just infinitely watchable. And
her laugh is infectious.”
So much so that when Taylor and their friend Me-
lissa McCarthy (Bridesmaids) started out in improv in
L.A.’s the Groundlings, they’d plant Spencer in the
audience. “If a skit wasn’t going well and we could get
Octavia laughing, everyone would laugh,” McCarthy
says. “We’d be in the back and someone would say,
‘She’s here!’ And we’d be like, ‘It’s going to be okay!’ ”
“It was so great that we all were on the same trajec-
tory and in it at the same time,” says Spencer, sound-
ing nostalgic. “We scraped by. Tate and I borrowed
the same $500 from each other for years.”
Luckily, no one had a backup plan. “Octavia knows
her gifts as an actor—her physical attributes, her soul,
her heart, those things that are unique to her—she never
plays against that,” says James Ponsoldt, who directed
Spencer as a recovering alcoholic in the hotly antici-
pated Smashed. “A lot of actors can’t quite figure out
what kind of actor they are. They don’t seem comfort-
able in their own skin. But Octavia is a fish in water.”
What she really wants to do is produce. “George
Clooney—yes, I’m dropping a name—told me to find
projects, work with the best,” Spencer says. She just
optioned Raven: The Untold Story of Rev. Jim Jones and
His People. “I thought it was time for people to under-
stand where that phrase ‘Don’t Drink the Kool-Aid’
actually came from. There are so many parts in it. I
don’t want to have to carry the weight of anything.
I want to share the load. I want to always be part of an
ensemble.” She wants to keep her friends close—old,
new, and those she hasn’t met yet.
“It’s hard to have a casual relationship with Octavia,”
says Viola Davis, her costar in The Help. “You feel like
your heart is invested, even if you met her for a few min-
utes.” Davis remembers shooting the scene when the
riots break out. “Minny says, ‘The world has gone crazy,
Aibileen,’ and we’re holding each other,” Davis recalls.
“I’m so shy, I always have this boundary issue. But it
felt so natural to hold Octavia. I just wanted to hold her
forever. When does that ever happen in a career—or a
lifetime—when a person walks into your life and you
know that they’re going to stay?”—Holly Millea
Q Who inspires you? A Oprah, for one. I was a chubby
teenager, and when I saw Oprah on television, I thought,
Oh my God, I can do this—I can dream this for myself.
Q Have you ever had to stand up to a director? A Early
on I had to stand up to a producer—I won’t say who, but
he’s famous, famous. He dressed me down in a crowded
office. I told him right there in front of a hundred peo-
ple, “You don’t know me well enough to use that tone.
I’m not your wife. I’m not your daughter. Keep it profes-
sional!” And then I ran to the bathroom and cried like a
baby. But he never addressed me that way again. And he
was known as a yeller. Q How’s your love life? A I’m not
married. Let’s just say I’m open for business. I used to ob-
sess about it—I have to keep kissing these frogs to find the
prince. Well, you know what? I’m not looking for the prince.
The prince is going to have to come looking for me. Q He
is, as we speak! A I have to tell you, I started freaking out
when, you know, our eggs have an expiration date. And I’m
thinkin’, Oh my God, my eggs are gonna die on the shelf!
And I thought, Then it will mean the good Lord wants me
to adopt if I get to the point where I can’t have kids. I’m no
longer worried by the trappings of life. Q Have you ever
had a casting-couch experience? A Well, I wanted some
casting-couch experiences! I gotta tell ya, I wanted to be
on the Ridley Scott movie The Counselor. Look at that cast!
Javier Bardem, Brad Pitt, Michael Fassbender.… I literally
walked in to meet with Scott Free Productions and said,
“Who do I have to sleep with to be in this movie?”
OCTAVIA SPENCER
Ever the emotional center on-screen, she’s gone from struggling
to juggling, adding writer-director-producer to her credits
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE STYLED BY SAR AH SCHUS SHE I M
WATCH IT!
UNTITLED DIABLO CODY PROJECT,
2013 “I loved working with
Diablo because, as both the
film’s writer and director, she’d
always envisioned how each
scene would be played. So when
she was happy with a take, I was
thrilled!”
SMASHED, 2012 “It was
exhilarating to be a part of an
amazing project with such a
great cast and crew. We all rolled
up our sleeves, did the work, but
really enjoyed the process.”
FRUITVALE, 2013 “At first I was
convinced that I wouldn’t be able
to do this part justice because
I was so angered by the subject
matter and the fact that she was
a real person. Ultimately, arousing
social consciousness outweighed
my aversion, and I signed on.”
THE HELP, 2011 “Playing Minny
changed my outlook on life. I
realized that it doesn’t matter
if the glass is half empty or half
full. What matters is that you
own the glass.”
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340 www. e l l e. c o m
F
ree-associate on the subject of Uma Thurman and
the image that likely pops up is of the gorgeous 6' tall
Amazon who achieved film immortality as Quen-
tin Tarantino’s muse, with highly stylized perfor-
mances in just three films—dancing the twist with John
Travolta in Pulp Fiction or mowing her way through
an army of sword-wielding villains in Kill Bill Vols 1
and 2. A nice image, to be sure, but far from the whole
story. Consider Hysterical Blindness, the HBO film she
made with director Mira Nair a decade ago, in which
she played a working-class Jersey girl beset with daddy
issues, a deluded bitch-on-wheels who, miraculously,
you can’t help rooting for, so aching is the vulnerabil-
ity Thurman projects on-screen. Or go back almost to
the beginning of her career, to her June Miller, wife of
novelist Henry Miller, in Henry & June. Hiding in plain
sight is a performance of emotional intensity that is as
least as breathtaking as that’s film’s art-porn obsession
with her 20-year-old body. “I enjoyed getting to do a
good, strong piece of dramatic acting,” Thurman says.
“Of course, I struggled to find another role like that. I
still do. Twenty years later, it’s the same deal.”
Contemplating the paradox of a sublimely beautiful
and talented A-lister who struggles to find work that
plays to her greatest strength as a dramatic actress,
you fall back on tabloid headlines: Does Holly wood
Know What to Do With Uma Thurman? “I think the
answer to that is no,” says director and friend Kather-
ine Dieckmann, who cast her in her low-budget indie
dramedy Motherhood a few years back. “Besides being
beautiful, Uma is incredibly smart and fiercely articu-
late, and that’s a challenging combination in our cur-
rent movie environment.”
Not fitting the mold is in her genes, being the
daughter of Nena Thurman, a former Swedish mod-
el, and Robert Thurman, the first American Tibetan
Buddhist monk turned Columbia professor. Uma has
followed her own idiosyncratic path ever since she
left her New England prep school at 15 and, in the
space of a few years, became a portrait of undraped
cinematic nubility in films such as The Adventures of
Baron Munchausen, Dangerous Liaisons, and Henry &
June, then adding a one-and-a-half-year marriage to
Gary Oldman to this provocative mix. In more recent
years, she admits, she has devoted less energy to her
professional life than to her private one—“personal
growth, family life, all that stuff.” In the past decade,
she divorced her second husband, Ethan Hawke, is
raising their two kids in her New York City home, and
is involved with French financier Arpad Busson, the
father of her four-month-old daughter.
The baby has provided an enforced but welcome
midcareer sabbatical. “It’s a good, contemplative time
to take a look at everything,” she says. Thurman feels
caught in a no-woman’s land, between the little indie
films that she loves and the superhero franchise fare
that she has nothing against but isn’t her thing. “There
is a whole midrange of dramatic movie that isn’t
being made so much anymore,” she says. “Of course,
it leaves me feeling underrealized. I’ve felt pent-up for
a long time. I love to act.”
Television is intriguing to her. She did a guest-star
turn in last season’s TV musical series Smash and
walked away with an Emmy nomination. “I did that
to get a feel for TV,” she says. “What is a television
day like?”
Playing against expectations, as usual, she’s also
made a home for herself in mainstream Hollywood
comedies, starring in such films as The Truth About Cats
& Dogs, The Producers, Prime, and My Super Ex-Girlfriend,
in which she was screwball funny. But however much
she loves comedy—“once you have a taste for it, it’s
hard to stay away”—she feels energy for the serious
dramatic work that, weirdly, has never been the main-
stay of her career. “I feel very overdue in the dramatic
department,” she says. “I think I’m actually kind of a
late bloomer. It took me so long to get comfortable in
my body, to find my center of gravity.”—J.H.
Q What was it like to make yourself into an action
star for Kill Bill? A I’d just had my son. I’ll never forget
walking onto the set the first day of shooting having had
my costume taken in an inch a week during the training
period and just barely making it to the opening shot with
the bulges tamed. The intensity of doing that movie—I
found my feet. I was able to get into the physicality of
the dance scenes in The Producers because of Kill Bill.
Q Growing up, I take it you weren’t the captain of the
field hockey team. A I was sort of a poetry-reading girl
with big feet. Q What was it like when you were thrown
into those supersexualized roles at such a young age?
A It was something to get through. I was definitely ahead
of myself. Being forced into becoming an early bloomer
kind of makes you a late bloomer. That’s the most precise
but not too obvious way of answering that. Q Surreal
Hollywood moment? A Dancing with John Travolta in
Pulp Fiction. We all have these iconic images of him from
Saturday Night Fever burned into our heads. To not be a
professional dancer and look up and see the most iconic
disco dancer in cinema history staring you in the eyes, that
was cool. Q You’re not keen on the state of Hollywood
films right now. A All you have to do is open the newspaper
to know that Hollywood is focused on large tent-pole
movies; there’s not as diversified a slate of movies as
there used to be. It makes it harder for everybody. The
independent world still seems vibrant. And a lot of actors
are going into television. There’s a big push to do that.
UMA THURMAN
Becoming a new mother (for the third time) has given this
savvy stunner a chance to ponder what to conquer next
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE STYLED BY SAR AH SCHUS SHE I M
WATCH IT!
PRIME, 2005 “As with most
actresses, the dream come true
is to work opposite Meryl Streep.
I loved every minute of it. Having
positive feedback from her
was the only review that ever
mattered to me.”
SWEET AND LOWDOWN, 1999 “I’d
heard so many stories about
what it would be like to work
with Woody Allen. I found him to
be one of the easiest directors
to work for. So precise, a
dream.”
KILL BILL VOL. 1, 2003 “The
hundred days in my yellow suit
were some of the toughest I’ve
ever had to get through and
some that I’m most proud of.
I’d just had my son, and I was
trying to get back in shape. I was
trembling—I barely made it.”
THE TRUTH ABOUT CATS & DOGS,
1996 “I always wanted to get into
comedy. And this was a sweet
movie. People liked it; they went
to see it.”
PULP FICTION, 1994 “I was in my
early twenties, and I’d been
in some movies and I guess
I struggled a bunch. Quentin
wanted me to have a great time
on this movie, to fall back in love
with acting. I did. I’ll never forget
wishing the shoot would go on.”
DANGEROUS LIAISONS, 1988
“One of my first films—an
experience burned into my mind.
A person can spend her whole
career and not have such a great
team to work with again. I wish
I’d known that at the time.”
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WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: ICON
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342 www. e l l e. c o m
I
n 2001, a reedy-voiced, frizzy-haired slip of a girl
in a school cloak and tie slid open a train door on
the Hogwarts Express and uttered her opening
line: “Has anyone seen a toad?” Thus the world met
Emma Watson, who, at nine years old, beat out squil-
lions of other hopefuls for the role of magical Muggle-
born witch Hermione Granger in Harry Potter and the
Sorcerer’s Stone. “I just knew, from the moment I read it,
that I was meant to play that role,” says Watson, now
22 and having undergone, over the course of the nine
Potter films, a Polyjuice Potion–worthy transforma-
tion from that tiny, tenacious Hogwarts newbie into
a gamine, self-possessed, exceptionally charismatic
grown-up. “My first impression of her was that she
was so young and successful and beautiful, but had so
much to prove to herself. That gave her a lot of depth,
and also a touch of loneliness,” says Stephen Chbosky,
who directed Watson’s first major post-Potter role, in
an adaptation of his 1999 best-selling novel, The Perks
of Being a Wallflower, about a group of high school mis-
fits. As Sam, a troubled but tenderhearted teen, she
projects both a surprisingly mature emotional intelli-
gence and a riveting, bursting-from-the-screen energy.
“She is one hell of a leading lady,” Chbosky says.
While her Potter costars began to take on other
projects before the final chapter of the franchise hit
theaters, Watson chose to hit the books at Brown
University instead. “I craved normalcy,” she says. “I
wanted to have a college experience like other people
my age.” Now (with one semester left), she’s suddenly
in the curious position of being an on-the-rise starlet
more than a decade after she became world famous,
having landed plum roles in a series of auteur-helmed
films. Next spring, she’ll appear as tramp-stamped
L.A. luxury-goods thief Nicki in Sofia Coppola’s The
Bling Ring, based on the stranger-than-fiction story of
Alexis Neiers, the reality-TV star who burgled Lind-
say Lohan’s house in 2009. Next, she’ll play “Emma
Watson” in metacomedy The End of the World, cowrit-
ten and directed by Seth Rogen, in which a group of
celebs—including Paul Rudd, Michael Cera, Mindy
Kaling, and Rihanna—are attending a party at James
Franco’s house when the Apocalypse arrives. “It was
essentially a stand-up-comedy situation,” she says.
“So for me, it was like landing on Mars. I was like,
‘I can’t do this, this is mad,’ but eventually I just kind
of let go. I have no idea where I got half the stuff that
came out of my mouth.”
That willingness to pull out the stops has directors
spellbound: Both Chbosky and Coppola praise the
freedom and fluidity with which Watson loses herself
in a scene or a role. (“She transformed into the part,”
Coppola says. “She could switch back and forth be-
tween a posh British accent and a slutty Valley Girl,
just like that. Oh, and I was really impressed by her
hip-hop dancing.”) She also has an intrinsic ability to
home in on her characters’ humanity. “When I read
the Bling Ring script,” Watson says, “I was like, This
is about a superficial, materialistic, attention-seeking
girl. But then I realized she was pursuing things she
believed would make her feel loved. It made me sad.”
Watson, who has also established herself as some-
thing of a pixie-chic fashion It Girl with stints mod-
eling for Burberry and Lancôme, is currently film-
ing Darren Aronofsky’s biblical epic Noah alongside
Russell Crowe, and developing her forthcoming role
in Beauty and the Beast with Pan’s Labyrinth director
Guillermo del Toro. (“He’s obsessed with the idea of
creating worlds,” she says. “We’re even going to have
this amazing language that we made up.”) But Watson
isn’t one to forget where it all began. “I put one of the
Potter films on the other night,” she says. “And it was
amazing to me that I had done all of that. I have to
remind myself every now and then.”—April Long
Q You’ve said that being famous makes you uncom-
fortable. How so? A I’m dealing with people’s projections
of me. I don’t know when people look at me if they see a
beautiful dress I wore on the red carpet, or all of the magic
and hype of Harry Potter. They very rarely just see who I
am, which is a normal, human 22-year-old girl. Q Have you
had to fight for a part? A Not exactly. But after audition-
ing for Sofia [Coppola], I didn’t hear from her for a while.
I thought, Oh my God, I really want this part, so I wrote
her an e-mail being like, “Look, I know I’m not the obvi-
ous choice, I couldn’t be more unlike the girl you’d prob-
ably cast in this, and I appreciate that I have a lot of work
to do, but I feel really passionate about this. Please, would
you just consider me?” And I got an e-mail back saying,
“You already got it.” Q Are there certain types of roles
you particularly want to play? A Eventually I’d love to
do something where I get to sing, even though it would be
terrifying. Q Do you think you’re hitting your stride at
a time when women’s roles are getting more diverse?
A Definitely. That’s one of the reasons why it was such an
honor to work with Sofia—she writes such complicated,
interesting female roles. I think there’s a shift, thanks to
movies like Bridesmaids and people like Lena Dunham and
Emma Stone. There’s a space for female characters that
are more than two-dimensional, an understanding that we
can be lots of different things at once. We can be funny,
we can be a little fucked-up—it’s not just about being the
martyr or the whore, the smart one or the dumb blond.
EMMA WATSON
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: EMERGING ICON
As Harry Potter’s wand-wielding, scene-stealing, know-it-all
sidekick Hermione Granger, Emma Watson grew up before our
eyes. Now she’s working her magic in a series of challenging,
high-profile adult roles. Hogwarts? What Hogwarts?
PHOTOGRAPHED BY AL E X I L UBOMI RSKI STYLED BY SAR AH SCHUS SHE I M
WATCH IT!
THE BLING RING, 2013 “I loved
and hated playing Nicki. It was
so liberating on the one hand
and felt so dark and unpleasant
on the other. It was pretty
surreal. We hung out in Paris
Hilton’s house for, like, four
days.”
MY WEEK WITH MARILYN, 2011
“Lucy was such a small part but
such an interesting role. I love
that she said no at the end of the
movie but was still able to show
compassion.”
THE PERKS OF BEING A
WALLFLOWER, 2012 “Sam goes
through this journey that really
spoke to me. She’s trying to figure
everything out, and that was my
teenage experience, too—just
trying to understand why things
were the way they were.”
HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY
HALLOWS: PARTS 1 AND 2, 2010;
2011 “The last two movies were
tough because we shot them
back-to-back. It’s nice to know
I can deal with anything I have
thrown at me. I know I’m not
easily fazed, which is very
comforting as I continue with
my work.”
HARRY POTTER AND THE
SORCERER’S STONE, 2001 “My
first movie experience. My hair
was amazing. As a conscientious
nine-year-old, I hated looking
nerdy. Now I love getting into
character.”
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www. e l l e. c o m 343
Leather trench coat,
Valentino, price on
request, at Valentino
Boutique, NYC. Patent
leather pumps, Tom
Ford, $1,100. Her own
jewelry. For details, see
Shopping Guide.
344 www. e l l e. c o m
S
usan Sarandon has been the standard-bearer of a
welcome movie trend: Actresses no longer have
to watch their careers shrivel at midlife but are
getting a lot of work—including roman tic leads.
This year alone, Sarandon’s made 10 movies and has
signed on for at least six in 2013, including one with
her daughter, Eva Amurri Martino. “I think of my-
self as a character actor,” Sarandon says modestly, “so
they’re all supporting roles.” Then she corrects her-
self. “Well, I have some offers in the pipeline.”
No doubt. At 66, Sarandon is a great actor, still
radiat ing on-screen the sexual charisma of Annie,
her baseball groupie in Bull Durham 24 years ago, and
the erotic mystery of her nightly ablutions in Atlantic
City (1980), as her quiet casino worker stands at her
kitchen window, slowly stroking her skin with lemon
juice. Both movies got Oscar nominations. Although
Sarandon had been a major star since 1975’s The Rocky
Horror Picture Show and had just starred in The Witches
of Eastwick, at 40 she had to fly from Rome to Los
Angeles on her own dime to pursue the part in Bull
Durham. “Costner and I wanted her, but we didn’t
have any clout,” says the movie’s writer-director, Ron
Shelton. “Susan is very smart and politi cally serious,
but she knew the power of the right dress—red and
white stripes and just clingy enough to be Annie.”
Ever so politely she dropped in to say a quick hello to
the studio head, then went on her way. Shelton soon
got a call: “How about Susan Sarandon?”
Bull Durham’s success catapulted Sarandon into
the ’90s and her two most famous and iconic roles. In
1991, the whole country seemed to be talking about
Ridley Scott’s megafeminist saga Thelma & Louise, in
which she and Geena Davis go on the run after Saran-
don’s character kills a would-be rapist. A few years
later, she won the best-actress Oscar for playing Sister
Helen Prejean opposite Sean Penn’s death-row inmate
in Dead Man Walking. Sarandon’s portrayal of the paci-
fist Prejean is a marvel: At once gentle and relent less,
she makes us feel the power of this woman who can re-
trieve a lost soul and fill it with remorse. Besides her Os-
car, Sarandon has earned four more best- actress nomi-
nations—for Atlantic City, Thelma & Louise, Lorenzo’s Oil,
and The Client, along with more than 40 other awards.
Recently, the media got all giddy over the age of
Sarandon’s romantic and working partner, Jonathan
Bricklin, who’s 35. “People make him out to be much
younger than he is—and me older,” she says wryly.
What’s unmistakable is how Sarandon has shaken up
and energized her life and work, as evidenced by her
four vivid roles in this month’s Warner Bros. tent pole,
Cloud Atlas, directed by Tom Tykwer and Lana and
Andy Wachowski. Sarandon disappeared so thor-
oughly into the role of an Indian man called Yusouf
that she startled her unrecognizable self in the mirror.
The Wachowskis famously avoid commenting on
their work, but they made an exception for Sarandon,
composing a real valentine: “Generosity emanates
from Susan like warmth from a fire. As an actress, she
offers everything you could ask for. As friends, we’ve
shared beautiful conversations about art and love, and
each one has left us feeling enriched.”
It’s no surprise that Sarandon should inspire such
glowing sentiments; she truly walks the walk. “I
think the struggle is to live an authentic life,” she says.
“Often, being comfortable and courting the illusion
of safety cannot coexist with being authentically who
you are. Anytime I have drastically changed my life—
which has happened a number of times and, I hope,
will happen many more—it’s always been a mixture
of terror and e xhilaration and discovery. But I believe
that being surprised and being somewhere that’s
uncomfortable because it’s unknown is really one of
the main rules to live by.”—Karen Durbin
Q Ever had a casting-couch experience? A Yes. It was
not successful—for either of us. I just went into a room,
and a guy practically threw me on the desk. It was my
early days in New York, and it was really disgusting. It
wasn’t like I gave it a second thought, it was so badly done.
Q What was one of your best moments in front of the
camera? A Something in the process of filming, not in
hindsight, I’d have to say working with Sean [Penn] was re-
ally a highlight. There was no blocking, no props, no make-
up. It was kind of a bare presentation of two souls, and he
was very there for me. All we had to work with was our
connection. And that’s what an actor thrives on, and he’s
one of the best. So it was really special. QHas any woman
particularly influenced your career? A I would say Van-
essa Redgrave, because I find her courageous both on-
and offscreen, and I believe anything she attempts, even
when she’s completely miscast. Q Which roles do you
still have to fight for? A I don’t know about them until it’s
too late, so I don’t get a chance. Now things are packaged.
It’s not like they’re going to mull over who they’re going to
go to. I haven’t been in a position where I was even given
the opportunity to fight for something. I don’t know how
that works in this stage of the game. Q What made you
want to be an actor? A Honestly, I just fell into it. I was
acting for a number of years before I came to grips with
the fact that this was what I was. I always thought it was
an interesting means to an end, but I never thought of it
as a goal I had set to get to. It found me.
SUSAN SARANDON
She bids fair to be crowned the hardest-working woman in
showbiz as she sashays into her fifth decade of stardom—and
her awesome, smoldering, unapologetically sensual screen
presence is still dialed up all the way to 11. Long may she reign!
PHOTOGRAPHED BY AL E X I L UBOMI RSKI STYLED BY K AT E L ANPHE AR
WATCH IT!
DEAD MAN WALKING, 1995 “The
most intense love story I’ve ever
been a part of. Sean [Penn] and
I had nothing but each other in
one scene after another. He was
so present and generous.”
THELMA & LOUISE, 1991 “We
had so much fun that summer,
driving all around those
beautiful national and state
parks. We had no idea it would
end up meaning so much to so
many. I thought it was a cowboy
movie with girls and trucks.”
LORENZO’S OIL, 1992 “I found
out I was pregnant during the
shoot, and we finished in my
fifth month. If you look carefully
you can see my silhouette grow
and shrink.”
BULL DURHAM, 1988 “It restored
my faith in team playing in
moviemaking. Through all the
pressures of a small budget, Kevin
[Costner] protected Ron [Shelton],
Tim [Robbins], and me. Ironically, it
was in the men’s locker room that I
was treated with the most respect.”
THE WITCHES OF EASTWICK, 1987
“Every few days we would get
new pages for the ending. It
just kept unravelling, and we
kept shooting. But we had Jack
[Nicholson] to amuse us—and
lots of good hair.”
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE
SHOW, 1975 “Every day we drove
an hour to the studio, and there
was little heat. We were half
dressed and often wet. I got
pneumonia, but I am so happy I
did it. Don’t dream it. Be it.”
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WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: ICON
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F
or seven seasons on Saturday Night Live, Kristen
Wiig churned out one hilarious misfit after another,
each throwing back at us those tics and foibles that
we’d never cop to—and didn’t have to, since she
channeled them with such outrageous gusto. Lorne
Michaels, SNL’s creator and executive producer, says,
“There were few people in the history of the show—
Dana Carvey was one, she was another—that were just
built for the work when they arrived.” But it was Wiig’s
spot-on ability to turn a tic, a shrug, or a high-pitched
voice into a fully formed character that made her an in-
stant breakout. “An actor always has to go for the truth
in the moment,” Michaels says. “But with us, it has to
end on a laugh, too. So if you’re going to work the truth
in, you have to do it without getting in the way of land-
ing on the laugh. She does that brilliantly.”
For the final sketch of Wiig’s SNL career, Michaels
and company sent her off with the kind of quasi-
sentimental tribute reserved for such titans of the show
as Will Ferrell and Phil Hartman. Wiig shimmied on-
stage with her cast mates in a peach peplum Lanvin
mini, visibly trying to hold back tears while Arcade
Fire played the Rolling Stones classic “She’s a Rain-
bow.” In that final hurrah, Wiig became something
more than, in her words, the “odd, middle-aged, short-
haired women in turtlenecks” she’d deliciously in-
habited for so long. This wasn’t just the funny girl we
laughed with, but the everygirl we cried with, too.
Like we did in the wild but emotionally hefty Brides-
maids. The Judd Apatow–produced film, which Wiig
starred in and wrote with writing partner Annie Mu-
molo, made more than $287 million worldwide,
earned critical praise (Wiig and Mumolo were nom-
inated for the Best Original Screenplay Oscar), and
busted every grim expectation for R-rated, female- led
comedies. “When people describe it as a ‘raunchy fe-
male comedy,’ I think, Aw, well, that wasn’t really our
intention,” she says. “To us, it’s a movie about female
friendship, getting older, and saying goodbye.”
“The best barometer of her success,” says Michaels,
“is that everyone talented wants to work with her, be-
cause they know she’s the real thing.” It was after Wiig
spun her three-and-a-half-minute bit in Knocked Up into
one of the movie’s most memorable scenes that Apatow
asked her to pitch her own feature. She’s landed up-
coming roles as Ben Stiller’s fantasy girl in his passion
project The Secret Life of Walter Mitty; as a spitfire who
upends the life of Robert De Niro’s aging insult comic
in The Comedian, directed by Sean Penn; and as part of
a ’60s-era ensemble (reportedly alongside Paul Rudd)
in Freezing People Is Easy, only the second scripted fea-
ture from legendary documentarian Errol Morris.
If it all sounds a little heady for the 39-year-old
sketch-comedy vet (Wiig came up through L.A.’s
Groundlings improv troupe), then maybe you missed
the tragicomic cameos she snuck into her reel—
including a bored ’80s-era cokehead in All Good Things,
and Jon Hamm’s increasingly disillusioned wife in the
indie rom-com Friends With Kids. “If people know you
for doing one thing,” says Wiig, “then the curtain goes
up and they expect you to keep doing that thing. I
hope audiences give me a chance to do more.”
Not that she’s waiting around. At this year’s Toronto
International Film Festival, Wiig made her debut as
an executive producer with Imogene, in which she stars
as a playwright who stages a suicide attempt to lure
back a man, only to land in the care of her estranged,
equally unhinged mother, played by Annette Bening.
“She’s always spontaneous,” says Bening. “That’s
magical in moviemaking. Because the whole process—
the machines, people, and just the amount of stuff going
on around you—conspires against that. But even in her
most outrageous characters, there’s something inside of
them that’s real and simple. She’s so genuine that part of
you aches while part of you laughs. It’s funny and insight-
ful, but mostly, it’s entertaining.”—Nojan Aminosharei
Q Your farewell from Saturday Night Live was surpris-
ingly emotional. How did you handle it? A I thought I
was going to lose it as soon as I got onstage. But I’d cried
so much those last couple of weeks—on set, at rehearsal,
hiding behind walls—that my eyes had dried out! Q Brides-
maids’ success seemed to throw the industry for a
loop. How did you feel about that? A We were so happy,
but at the same time, we were a little disheartened. When
Annie [Mumolo] and I wrote the script, we just wanted to
film something that could bring together the women we
know and show off how funny they are. But are executives
really that hesitant to green-light comedies with women
in them? There are so many actresses out there who peo-
ple would be surprised to find out are really, really funny.
Q What’s the best career advice you’ve gotten? A Say
no. Q How does it feel to make it big in Hollywood later
in your professional life? A You mean not as a 10-year-
old kid? Q Let’s say as a 39-year-old woman. A When
you’re an actor, you can’t really control when you get that
big job. I’m glad I’m here when I am. Q What’s the worst
audition you’ve ever had? A Oh God, where do I start?
There have been many. It’s hard to walk into those rooms!
I once auditioned for something that wanted “dancers.”
I’m not one, but…I thought I should audition for it anyway?
They asked me to start on the ground and twirl up like a
flame. It was mortifying. I did a slow, very awkward one-
eighty and gently raised my hands up, and they looked at
me with their mouths open. Then it was: “Thank you, bye!”
KRISTEN WIIG
She was an SNL all-star in the tradition of Gilda, Tina, and Amy.
Now, with several roles opposite screen legends, Wiig’s a box-
office-busting Hollywood sweetheart to boot
PHOTOGRAPHED BY AL E X I L UBOMI RSKI STYLED BY SAR AH SCHUS SHE I M
WATCH IT!
BRIDESMAIDS, 2011 “The famous
bridal-boutique scene came at a
good point in the movie, where
it could let out some of the air
after all the tension had built up.
Each character had her own little
moment to shine—and we got to
destroy a beautiful set.”
IMOGENE, 2013 “When I met with
Annette Bening at the Bowery
Hotel with [directing duo] Shari
Springer Berman and Robert
Pulcini, it was nerve-racking. I just
wanted her to say yes! The scenes
we had together were some of the
best acting moments of my life.”
ADVENTURELAND, 2009 “Bill
Hader and [director] Greg Mottola
and I all decided on who these
characters were. It was a choice
we made together to play them as
two people who really shouldn’t
be running a business, let alone
an amusement park.”
KNOCKED UP, 2007 “This was
my first time working with Judd
Apatow. He was behind the
monitor, and I was out there
improvising. He’d yell, ‘We’re
going to try to do her as bossy.
Now do her as a wallflower! Now
do her as passive-aggressive!’ ”
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE, 2005–2012
“After seven years, it becomes a
challenge to find new characters.
Sometimes it started with
hunching your shoulders in the
writers’ room and saying, ‘I want
to write a lady who stands like
this. Who is she?’ ”
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WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: ICON
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A
seven-year-old girl travels slumped in her baby-
sitter’s arms, face sooty and sad eyes heavy, be-
ing lugged aimlessly through the crushing
Tijuana desert heat with neither home nor help
in sight. She’s too tired to be scared, but we’re terrified
for her. The same girl, now age 11 and a willowy 5'7",
ice-skates in slow circles while her father watches with
tenuous and bleary-eyed attention. But we can’t take
our eyes off her. At 14, she’s a copper-headed beatnik
in October 1962, protesting the bomb that could wipe
out a world she’s barely had the chance to see.
Elle Fanning has grown up in movies. In fact, she
says, “I can’t really remember my life without mov-
ies.” Fanning landed her first job at two years old on
the set of I Am Sam, starring her older sister, Dakota,
when the director needed someone to play the char-
acter in a flashback. “When I watch it now, it’s like
looking through old baby photos.” She then delivered
a series of her own small but virtuoso performances in
big-screen prestige pieces—The Door in the Floor, Babel,
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. (And in at least one
Smucker’s TV spot. “I had the best time on that com-
mercial,” she says. “I ate all those sandwiches.”) But
it was her first starring role, at age nine, as a girl with
Tourette’s syndrome in Phoebe in Wonderland, that made
critics take notice. Surrounded by indie heavyweights,
including Felicity Huffman and Patricia Clarkson, it
was Fanning who was praised as “mesmerizing.”
If she channels her characters—girls struggling as
much with their own adolescence as with their dra-
matic circumstances—with pitch-perfect authenticity,
it’s because she was never a typically precocious child
star. “I liked that she was a real kid, not a miniature
adult,” says Sofia Coppola, who cast Fanning as the
daughter of a half-present celebrity dad in 2010’s Some-
where. Coppola’s languid art-house style captured both
Fanning’s natural effervescence (that was really her
playing Guitar Hero) and her formidable wellspring
of emotion (during a pivotal scene in which Fanning’s
Cleo begins crying in her father’s Ferrari, Coppola
says she was surprised by how the girl “was able to be
so emotional for so long filming on a car rig”).
Fanning, 14, is in a studio outside London filming
Maleficent, the big-budget Sleeping Beauty tale told
from the perspective of the mother of all fairy-tale vil-
lains, played by Angelina Jolie. The complexities of the
production don’t faze Fanning: “There’s lots of green
screen, blue screen, every kind of screen you can think
of. You really have to use your imagination.” But how
does she feel about her costar? “She’s incredible,” says
Fanning, barely getting the words out before bursting
into gawky teen-girl laughter. “And she’s so beautiful.”
Super 8 writer-director J. J. Abrams is equally effu-
sive about Fanning, who played a sweet but rebellious
townie hunted by a mysterious otherworldly beast: “She
was the most believable, the most intelligent, the most
sophisticated, the easiest to give notes to. Just the right fit
for the part.” Pause. “The right fit for most parts.” (Hear
ye, casting agents.) But Fanning—who begins high
school in Los Angeles this year, and yes, she is nervous
about all that honors bio homework—would be the first
to tell you that it all takes keen effort. Before shooting
writer-director Sally Potter’s upcoming Ginger & Rosa,
in which Fanning plays the anxious teen antinuke pro-
tester, she says, “we talked a lot about the script. You
have to talk about the story and the characters and all
the complexities so that you understand them—100
percent, for sure, no questions, no doubts—before
you start filming. Then you can just go for it, play, and
change things up because you know the character.”
There’s a scene in Super 8 in which Fanning’s
Alice agrees to act in her schoolmates’ film project.
She floors the film-nerd pack (and us) with a soulful
performance and then snaps them out of it with a self-
conscious “Was that good?” Here, life doesn’t imitate
art: The real girl would never have to ask.—N.A.
Q Of all the industry heavyweights you’ve worked
with, who was the most intimidating? A I was on the
set of Somewhere in Las Vegas when Sofia [Coppola] said,
“My dad’s going to come to the set today!” I was like, Oh
my God, Francis Ford Coppola’s coming to the set. I was
very nervous to meet him. Now I feel like he’s a grandpa
to me. During Twixt [a festival-circuit film Fanning later
shot with Coppola Sr.], I stayed in Napa Valley with him.
We made pasta, and he showed me how to prepare to-
mato sauce. Q Is it hard to have a normal childhood in
Hollywood? A It’s no different, really. I make movies the
same way other kids play tennis or go to piano lessons. I’m
trying to get better at what I want to do, just like other kids
are trying to get better at what they want to do. Q You’ve
worked with some amazing actresses. What have you
learned from them? A It’s all about observing them. And
what I’ve seen is how they treat everyone else on set, how
they’re always so polite and so nice. Q Who is your Holly-
wood icon? A I saw The Seven Year Itch at about seven
years old. It’s part of what made me really want to be an
actress. That Halloween I was Marilyn Monroe in the white
dress, with the mole. I went to the vintage Levi’s store
in London yesterday, and they had denim from every
decade. The lady said that the ’50s jeans were the ones
Marilyn Monroe used to wear—not the actual jeans, but
the same style. They were high-waisted, and they tapered
at the calf. I’m still thinking about them. Maybe I’ll get
them for Christmas. Then I can look like Marilyn Monroe.
ELLE FANNING
She’s a globe-trotting, genre-hopping, expectation-defying
screen gem—and every director’s dream. What more could
Elle Fanning want? To finish her bio homework, for starters
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE STYLED BY PHOE BE ARNOL D
WATCH IT!
GINGER & ROSA, 2012 “It was
really interesting to hear about
the ’60s from [director] Sally
Potter. The film is set around the
Cuban missile crisis. I can’t even
imagine what it would be like if
with just one press of a button,
everything could be gone.”
SOMEWHERE, 2010 “We were in
Milan, in this huge hotel room
where [Sofia Coppola] actually
stayed with her dad when she
was young. In those scenes,
we got to order all the room
service—all the pastries and all
the cereal.”
SUPER 8, 2011 “We were all
supposed to be looking at the
spaceship blowing away. But we
were actually just looking at hot
pink gaffer tape on a pole—and
being all emotional toward this
piece of tape!”
PHOEBE IN WONDERLAND, 2009 “I
played Phoebe, so this was my
first big role. [Director] Daniel
Barnz is insanely creative.
Everything around you on set is
strategically placed; it all means
something. I just thought that
was so cool.”
THE CURIOUS CASE OF BENJAMIN
BUTTON, 2008 “I played Cate
Blanchett’s daughter in Babel, and
then a young Cate Blanchett in
this. I got to meet her one time on
set when we were both filming on
the same day. She glowed. Just…
glowed. I’ll never forget that.”
BABEL, 2006 “We shot this in
the desert in Tijuana. Adriana
[Barraza] had to carry me through
that heat—in heels. And I was a
tall child! I felt so bad. I had to
put all my weight on her, with my
legs dragging in the sand. But she
powered through every time.”
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WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: SPOTLIGHT
www. e l l e. c o m 349
Her own shirt
and jewelry.
350 www. e l l e. c o m
STEEL MAGNOLIAS, 1989 “Bonded
girlfriends still after 24 years”
I
n 1977, when 40 was definitely not the new 30, Shir-
ley MacLaine, 43, was anointed as the L-word in the
iconic Blackglama ad campaign: “What becomes a
Legend most?” Beneath the question stood the an-
swer, swathed in a short mink, kicking an endless silk-
stockinged leg high above her head, laughing, as if to
say, Thanks for the coat, but I’m not retiring.
Thirty-five years later the dancer, singer, actress,
author, and activist says, “All the stuff I’ve done in
my life, and my new identity is: Oh my God, I’m on
Downton Abbey!” The “stuff” includes 72 films, for
which she won six Academy Award nominations
(she took home the Oscar for 1983’s Terms of Endear-
ment); an Emmy (Gypsy in My Soul ); and winning a
precedent-setting lawsuit against 20th Century Fox
that led to a California Supreme Court ruling that
ended the old-school studio management of stars.
And to think she wanted to be a ballerina. “I could
do two pirouettes en pointe and all that, but I was feel-
ing the music and couldn’t repress my emotional ex-
pression. My teacher said, ‘You’re more of an actor
than a dancer.’ ” On Broadway at 19, MacLaine was
plucked from The Pajama Game and planted in Alfred
Hitchcock’s The Trouble With Harry. From there, her
strong suit became naive, pixie-haired, heart-tugging
hookers—in Some Came Running, Irma La Douce, Sweet
Charity…10 endearing variations on the archetype, in
all—precursors to Julia Roberts’ Pretty Woman.
The best of the bunch was Billy Wilder’s classic
The Apartment, with MacLaine as a gamine, elevator-
operating mistress of a company bigwig. “It’s a movie
from 1960, so there’s a stylistic acting thing going
on, but she has this realism that’s amazing,” says Ben
Stiller, who directed MacLaine as his character’s
mother in the upcoming remake of The Secret Life of
Walter Mitty. “It reminds me of when you watch Mar-
lon Brando in old movies—everybody else is acting
and he’s just, like, totally real and present and very
modern. Shirley had that from a very young age.”
After a five-year hiatus in the early ’70s, during
which time she joined her brother, the actor War-
ren Beatty, in campaigning for George McGovern
and began writing (ever ahead of the curve) the first
of her 10 best-selling self-exploratory new age books,
the actress was transformed when she returned to the
screen. “She transitioned from this wide-eyed, ‘What’s
happening to me?’ character into this sage,” says di-
rector Adam Shankman, a close friend. “It was bril-
liant. She outsmarted Hollywood.” The Turning Point,
Being There, Terms of Endearment, Steel Magnolias, and
Postcards From the Edge are Oscar-showered prestige
projects in which MacLaine is the emotional lodestar.
“All of her history is there with her,” observes Cam-
eron Diaz, MacLaine’s In Her Shoes costar. “You know
what you’re going to get with Shirley, in that you don’t
know what you’re going to get, but you know that
you’re going to get what you need. You can depend
on her. How wonderful is that?” Shankman speaks
for her huge audience when he says, “She’s become a
touchstone for me. I’m mad for her, just mad for her!”
Someone recently told MacLaine that she’s enter-
ing her Jessica Tandy phase. She liked that. “I’m hav-
ing a great time telling people how old I am,” says the
78-year-old. “I don’t guess there are too many more
walking upright who can work, anyway. I don’t com-
plain about a lack of roles, because for my age group, I
get them all.” Her favorite? Aurora Greenway, the con-
trolling, loving mother to a rebellious, dying daughter
in Terms of Endearment. It’s hard to believe MacLaine
was the last actress the film’s writer and director, James
L. Brooks, met for the part. “I cast her on the spot,” he
says. “I remember her looking down and saying, ‘This
could be important, this could be something.’
“Listen,” Brooks adds. “It’s so weird that some-
body’s a legitimately great person, so strange that
someone has lived a unique life and been that talent-
ed in so many different areas, and has—and is hav-
ing—one of the legendary acting careers. Where
everybody overstates everything, you can’t—there’s
no way to—overstate her.”—H.M.
Q You were married for 30 years. A I stayed married so
I wouldn’t marry my lovers. That was my strategy. I liked
[the marriage] I had. He was my best friend. He didn’t com-
plain. I didn’t complain about what he was doing. How can
it get better than that? Q You had on-set romances?
A Oh, come on! I fell in love with every costar except Larry
Harvey—I couldn’t stand him. Some, we had romance
and some, we didn’t. Listen, you sit on a film set getting
to know each other, while the cameraman takes his time,
and it’s a more intimate experience than sometimes even a
marriage. Q Who’s Larry Harvey? A He was some dumb
actor. [Editor’s note: Laurence Harvey was her costar
in 1961’s Two Loves.] Q Is Jack Nicholson sexy in per-
son? A I find him funny and highly intelligent. Do I want to
sleep with him? No. Q What’s sexy? A Mystery. Q What
films have roles you regret turning down? A Breakfast at
Tiffany’s and Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore. Q Is it true
you were the inspiration for Ellen Burstyn’s character in
The Exorcist? A [William Peter] Blatty wrote about some
of the channeling sessions that he and I and my daugh-
ter were having. We’d been interested in this otherworldly
stuff for years, and he went off and wrote The Exorcist.
Q What scares you? A Lightning. It would probably charge
me with an electricity that would make me understand all
truth. Then what would I do with that? A big part of my tal-
ent is my curiosity. Q You believe in reincarnation; you’ll
definitely come back. A Oh, I might be finished in this
world. I’m interested in other worlds, too, remember.
SHIRLEY MACLAINE
The secret to being soundly grounded and yet fabulously out
of this world? Infinite talent, a social conscience, and long legs
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE STYLED BY MEG GAL L AGHE R
WATCH IT!
BERNIE, 2011 “Jack [Black] and
I laughed, drank (no booze), ate
(no calories), and improvised
every day.”
TERMS OF ENDEARMENT, 1983
“Interpreters of the beginning of
Jim Brooks’ genius”
POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE,
1990 “Meryl, my daughter, my
protective friend, my breath
taker with her talent”
SWEET CHARITY, 1969 “Leaping
with joy for Bob Fosse…the
sixty-fourth take!”
THE APARTMENT, 1960 “I came in on
my days off to watch Jack [Lemmon]
and Billy Wilder work together.”
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WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD: LEGEND
www. e l l e. c o m 351
Find your perfect haircolor.
Download the iPhone App
or visit lorealparisusa.com/haircolor
Eva is wearing shade UL51 Sun-Kissed Caramels Hi-Lift Natural Brown.
lorealparis.com ©2012 L’Oréal USA, Inc.
“TURN ON THE LIGHT IN YOUR BRUNETTE.”
Eva Longoria
BRUNETTE ILLUMINATED
8 WEEKS OF
FADE-DEFYING
COLOR
LUMINOUS, LIT-FROM-WITHIN COLOR
FADE-DEFYING COLOR FOR UP TO 8 WEEKS
VOOTTEEDD ###1 HHOOME HHAAIRCCCOOOLOOOR
33 YYYEAARS IN AA RRROOWWW
BBY ALLLUUREE RE EEAAD DER RRS
Shadow fox, Finn raccoon,
and ostrich feather
collarless jacket, J. Mendel,
price on request, at
J. Mendel Boutique, NYC.
Net lace and chiffon top,
wool peplum (underneath),
knit Bermuda shorts, all,
Vera Wang Collection,
prices on request. Cranberry
quartz and clear topaz
earrings, Anzie, $3,500.
IN SHOCKING HUES AND
INNOVATIVE TEXTURES, THE
NEW FUR IS WILD AND WOOLLY,
OFFERING AN ECCENTRIC SPIN
ON TRADITIONAL LUXURY—
BEST WORN LIBERALLY
ACCESSORIZED BY AN ECLECTIC
CAST OF CHARACTERS
PHOTOGRAPHED BY T HOMAS WHI T E SI DE
STYLED BY JOE Z E E
PRISM
BREAK
354 www. e l l e. c o m
Dyed fox jacket, Carmen Marc Valvo,
$1,695, collection at select Fur Vault,
available at Macy’s stores. Poplin shirt,
Prada, price on request. Linen-blend
knit sweater, Burberry Prorsum, $1,295.
Vintage tights, Emilio Cavallini. Carved
ruby, emerald, and diamond earrings,
pearl strand necklace with carved
turquoise, tourmaline, and diamonds,
both, Madhya Farooqui, prices on
request. One-of-a-kind agate, turquoise,
and pearl brooch, onyx and moonstone
necklace, both, Tony Duquette, prices on
request. Coral and white enamel rings,
both, David Webb, prices on request.
Perforated leather tote, Bally, $1,395.
Canvas wedges, Stella McCartney,
$1,090. For details, see Shopping Guide.
www. e l l e. c o m 355
Dyed mink coat, J. Mendel,
price on request, at J. Mendel
Boutique, NYC. Denim shirt,
$970, denim Bermuda shorts,
$795, open-toe calfskin boots,
$3,350, all, Givenchy by Riccardo
Tisci. Sunglasses, Mykita, $472.
Cranberry quartz and clear topaz
earrings, Anzie, $3,500. Rubellite,
pearl, and diamond necklace, Van
Cleef & Arpels, price on request.
Ebony pendant with silver inlay,
Patricia von Musulin, $2,000.
356 www. e l l e. c o m
Fox jacket, brocade top, both, Michael
Kors, prices on request, at select Michael
Kors stores nationwide. Stretch shorts,
Vera Wang Collection, price on request.
Sunglasses, Prabal Gurung by Linda
Farrow Projects, $430. Mother-of-pearl
cameo earrings with diamonds, Bochic,
price on request. Lapis, ruby, and diamond
necklace with carved jade plaque, David
Webb, price on request. Ankle socks,
Pamela Mann, price on request. Printed
pumps, Manolo Blahnik, $1,025. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
www. e l l e. c o m 357
Alpaca coat with leather and suede details,
Tom Ford, price on request, call 212-359-
0300. Print turtleneck, Tracy Reese,
$218. Mohair-blend bicolored shirt, $1,180,
stretch pants, $1,860, both, Prada. Velour
felt hat, Lola Hats, $425. One-of-a-kind
coral, turquoise, amethyst, and peridot
earrings, amethyst and green amethyst
ring with pearls, cabochon jade ring with
tourmaline, all, Tony Duquette, prices on
request. White enamel ring with diamonds,
coral and diamond ring, both, David Webb,
prices on request. Blue enamel ring,
Solange Azagury-Partridge, $4,400.
Slippers, from Lexington Saree Palace,
NYC. For details, see Shopping Guide.
Beauty Secret: For a modern update
on matching, vary reds on lips and
nails. Try Infallible 8HR Le Gloss in
Red Fatale and Colour Riche Nail in
Red Tote, both by L’Oréal Paris.
358 www. e l l e. c o m
www. e l l e. c o m 359
Mink and fox vest, price on request,
silk dress, $1,990, beaded iPad
case, price on request, all, Fendi,
at Fendi, NYC. Cotton poplin shirt,
Prada, $855. Cotton lace skirt,
Stella McCartney, $1,530. Green
beryl, ruby, emerald, tsavorite, and
amethyst earrings, aquamarine,
sapphire, and diamond ring, all,
Dior Fine Jewelry, prices on
request. Cocobolo wood necklace
with silver inlay, Patricia von
Musulin, price on request. One-of-
a-kind tourmaline, turquoise, and
pearl brooch, Tony Duquette, price
on request. Tights, Pamela Mann,
price on request. Patent leather
shoes, Balenciaga by Nicolas
Ghesquière, $835.
360 www. e l l e. c o m
Mink jacket, Louis Vuitton,
price on request, at select Louis
Vuitton stores nationwide. Satin
jacket, $1,595, pants, $795, both,
Gucci. Cotton poplin shirt, Prada,
$695. Silk twill scarf, Hermès,
$410. Tie, Brooks Brothers,
$80. Sunglasses, Linda Farrow
Luxe, $740. Coral, lapis lazuli,
diamond, and ruby earrings,
Madhya Farooqui, $4,250. White
gold necklace with pink spinel,
aquamarine, diamonds, and
one cushion-cut aquamarine,
Van Cleef & Arpels, price on
request. Enamel blossom brooch
with sapphires, $950, enamel
magnolia blossom brooch with
sapphires and citrine, $850, both,
M.C.L by Matthew Campbell
Laurenza. Striped satin and PVC
shoes, Chanel, $1,050. For details,
see Shopping Guide.
www. e l l e. c o m 361
Tanuki-fur coat, Moncler Gamme
Rouge, price on request, at
Moncler boutiques nationwide.
Jacquard swimsuit, Bottega
Veneta, $940. Fox hat, Michael
Kors, $3,995. Carved ruby,
emerald, and diamond earrings,
Madhya Farooqui, price on
request. Yellow and green
sapphire necklace with diamonds,
Van Cleef & Arpels, price on
request. Sapphire and diamond
ring, amethyst and diamond ring,
both, Bulgari, prices on request.
Aquamarine and diamond ring,
Dior Fine Jewelry, price on
request. Dotted socks, Falke, $24.
Leather boots, Céline, $1,250.
362 www. e l l e. c o m
Colored Mongolian-goat-fur jacket,
Emporio Armani, $2,475, at Emporio
Armani boutiques nationwide. Silk shirt
with cotton poplin trim, Altuzarra,
$1,345. Silk georgette dress, Ralph
Lauren Collection, $2,598. Cotton lace
trousers, Stella McCartney, $1,545.
Emerald bead earrings with diamonds,
Bulgari, price on request. Pearl necklace
with carved green onyx pendant and
diamonds, Madhya Farooqui, price on
request. Crystal-trim Ayers snakeskin
bag, Chloé, $4,395. Leather boots,
Balenciaga by Nicolas Ghesquière,
$1,375. For details, see Shopping Guide.
Hair by Rolando Beauchamp for Bumble and
bumble at The Wall Group; makeup by Kabuki
for DiorShow at Kabukimagic.com; manicure
by Gina Edwards for Chanel at Kate Ryan
Inc.; prop styling by Juliet Jernigan for CLM;
produced on location by Jenny Landey at
JennyLandeyProductions.com; casting by
Anita Bitton at The Establishment; model:
Naty Chabanenko at Women Management NYC;
fashion assistant: Sarah Schussheim
www. e l l e. c o m 363
Linen toile blouse, $3,178, pants,
$1,333, both, Chanel, at select
Chanel boutiques nationwide.
Stretch Ponte overcoat,
Altuzarra, $2,849. Sunglasses,
Céline, $350. Silk scarf,
Burberry Prorsum, $325. Rose
gold stud bracelet, Hermès,
price on request. 18-karat-gold
watch, gold nail bracelet, both,
Cartier, prices on request.
Calfskin handbag, Derek Lam,
price on request. Alligator ankle
boots, Mauri, $600.
TAKE A BREAK FROM
FRILLY DRESSES AND
FUSSY EXTRAS WITH
THE SEASON’S ’70s-VIBE
MENSWEAR: SLOUCHY
PANTSUITS, SMART
SADDLE SHOES, AND
BOXY TRENCHES
PHOTOGRAPHED BY K T AUL E TA
STYLED BY K AT E L ANPHE AR
BIG
SIR
364 www. e l l e. c o m
Viscose jacket, $2,555, pants,
$1,300, both, Stella McCartney,
at Stella McCartney, NYC. Crepe
de chine blouse, Belstaff, $895.
Cotton gabardine trench coat,
Burberry London, $1,395.
Calfskin belt, Longchamp, $160.
Canvas handbag, Gucci, $1,750.
Rose gold stud bracelet, rose
gold link bracelet, both, Hermès,
prices on request. Silver and
gold ring, Gurhan, $525. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
www. e l l e. c o m 365
Wool gabardine trench
coat, $2,550, jacket, $2,100,
pants, $690, all, Bottega
Veneta, at Bottega Veneta
boutiques nationwide. Silk
shirt, Equipment, $248.
Sunglasses, Mykita, $472.
Silk scarf, Southpaw
Vintage, price on request.
Leather belt, Linea Pelle
Collection, $165.
366 www. e l l e. c o m
Sleeveless felt coat, price on request, chiffon
halter top, $595, stretch pants, $695, all,
Vera Wang Collection, at Vera Wang, West
Hollywood. Python trench coat, price on
request, python whipstitch belt, $1,490,
both, Salvatore Ferragamo. Python-print
viscose-blend turtleneck, Boss Orange,
$125. Oxidized silver necklace, Workhorse,
$343. Rose gold stud bracelet, rose gold link
bracelet, both, Hermès, prices on request.
Silver and gold bracelet with ruby accents,
Elizabeth and James, $1,150. Leather
strap watch, Burberry, $1,795. Rose gold
and diamond ring, Meira T, $1,725. Silver
signet ring, Mannin, $375. Silver and gold
ring, Gurhan, $525. Oxidized silver ring,
Workhorse, $136. Leather, linen, and python
clutch, Narciso Rodriguez, $1,700. Water-
snake oxfords, Pierre Hardy, $895. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
Beauty Secret: For a modern, matte finish,
shake Redken Powder Grip 03 into palms
and work through hair, starting at the root, to
create messy-cool volume and texture.
www. e l l e. c o m 367
Leather coat, $3,150, cotton-blend
pants, $395, both, Sportmax, at
Sportmax, NYC. Printed duchesse-
satin coat, Valentino, $4,290.
Cotton-blend blazer, Versace,
price on request. Silk scarf, Etro,
$400. Cobra handbag, Reed
Krakoff, $1,990. Alligator ankle
boots, Mauri, $600.
368 www. e l l e. c o m
Viscose twill trench coat, $2,495, viscose
trousers, $950, both, Donna Karan New
York, collection at Neiman Marcus stores
nationwide. Silk pajama jacket, 3.1 Phillip
Lim, $750. Linen vest (worn under jacket),
Ralph Lauren Blue Label, $298. Wool-
blend scarf, Diesel Black Gold, $140. Gold
pocket-watch pendant, $4,400, gold locket
pendant, price on request, both, Monica
Rich Kosann. Rose gold stud bracelet,
rose gold link bracelet, both, Hermès,
prices on request. Gold ring with diamonds,
Charlotte Bjorlin Delia, $1,050. Rose gold
and diamond ring, Meira T, $1,725. Silver
signet ring, Mannin, $375. Rose gold signet
ring, Zoë Chicco, $1,276. Silver and gold
ring, Gurhan, $525. Oxidized silver ring,
Workhorse, $136. Python handbag, Chloé,
$3,795. Water-snake oxfords, Pierre Hardy,
$895. For details, see Shopping Guide.
www. e l l e. c o m 369
Cotton twill trench coat, $3,250, sateen stretch-
cotton pants, $495, both, Belstaff, visit belstaff
.com. Silk shirt, Equipment, $228. Straw fedora,
Eugenia Kim, $295. Printed cotton scarf,
Burberry Prorsum, $325. Leather cross-body
bag, Burberry, $1,095. Honey quartz pocket-
watch pendant, Monica Rich Kosann, price
on request. Rose gold stud bracelet, rose gold
link bracelet, both, Hermès, prices on request.
18-karat-gold watch, Cartier, price on request.
Citrine and diamond bracelet, Beladora.com,
$3,550. Gold ring with diamonds, Charlotte
Bjorlin Delia, $1,050. Rose gold and diamond
ring, Meira T, $1,725. Silver signet ring, Mannin,
$375. Rose gold signet ring, Zoë Chicco, $1,276.
Leather oxfords, Muffy’s, $120.
370 www. e l l e. c o m
Stretch-cotton jacket, $1,390, silk
armure crepe pants, $950, both, Gucci,
at select Gucci stores nationwide. Wool
trench coat, Chloé, $2,595. Sunglasses,
Céline, $350. Printed silk scarf,
Burberry Prorsum, $325. Rose gold
signet ring, Zoë Chicco, $1,276. Citrine
and diamond bracelet, Beladora.com,
$3,550. Polished stainless-steel watch,
Tag Heuer, $2,600. Leather fringe bag,
Salvatore Ferragamo, $2,600. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
Hair by Yoichi Tomizawa for Shu Uemura at
Art-dept.com; makeup by Zenia Jaeger for YSL
at The Wall Group; manicure by Kim D’Amato for
PritiNYC at Rona Represents; plant styling by
Fox Fodder Farm; produced by Kate Kittredge
at Wildcat NYC; casting by Noah Shelley for
AM Casting (Streeters NY); model: Zuzanna
Stankiewicz at Supreme; fashion assistant:
Kristen Shirley
www. e l l e. c o m 371
Rashida Jones wears a
leather top, Calvin Klein
Collection, price on request,
at Calvin Klein Collection,
NYC. Felt hat, Dolce &
Gabbana, $595. Sterling
silver curb chain bracelet,
David Yurman, $950. Yellow
gold and diamond bangle,
Phillips House, $2,695.
372 www. e l l e. c o m
Brit Marling wears a jersey
halterdress, Calvin Klein
Collection, $1,295, at Calvin
Klein Collection, NYC.
Nylon-blend socks, Fogal,
$21. Patent leather flats, Dr.
Martens, $130. For details,
see Shopping Guide.
SICK OF ONE-DIMENSIONAL (OR SIMPLY
NO-DIMENSIONAL) FEMALE CHARACTERS,
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD ARE WRITING
THEIR OWN MOVIES AND GETTING THEM
MADE. RASHIDA JONES, ZOE KAZAN, AND
BRIT MARLING LEAD THE WRITERS’
BRIGADE. BY RACHEL ABRAMOWITZ
PHOTOGRAPHED BY BRUNO STAUB STYLED BY K AT E L ANPHE AR
THE
PLAYERS
www. e l l e. c o m 373
Zoe Kazan, Marling, and Jones
wear cotton poplin shirts, Calvin
Klein Collection, $550 each, at
Calvin Klein Collection, NYC. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
374 www. e l l e. c o m
www. e l l e. c o m 375
Kazan wears a knit cross-
back dress, Calvin Klein
Collection, $1,150, at Calvin
Klein Collection, NYC. For
details, see Shopping Guide.
Hair by Marcus Francis at The
Wall Group; makeup by Jeannia
Robinette for Tracey Mattingly;
manicure by Ashlie Johnson
for Chanel at The Wall Group;
shot at the Tower Rooftop at
Siren Studios Hollywood; fashion
assistant: Sarah Schussheim
376 www. e l l e. c o m
Z
oe Kazan was walking home from work one night in
Brooklyn when the writer and actress mistook a manne-
quin lying in a pile of trash for a live woman. “It scared me.
For some reason, I flashed on Pygmalion,” says Kazan, 29.
She went to sleep that night, let her subconscious work on
it, and woke up with the seeds of Ruby Sparks, her subver-
sive feminist take on the classic tale of a man trying to
craft the perfect woman—and the first movie Kazan has
written. “For a woman, that myth speaks in a different
way,” she says. “I felt that the experience of being in a re-
lationship and being put on a pedestal is lonely. You feel the love is
not about you, but an idealized you. It feels nothing like love at all.”
Kazan is telling a story of the roles that have been available for
women, written largely by men, in film: either on a pedestal, or as
“the one-dimensional, paper-thin girlfriend or wife,” as newcomer
Brit Marling puts it—or at the wrong end of a meat cleaver. Marling
was a recent Georgetown grad struggling to make it as an actress
when she finally landed a role in a horror film and had an existen-
tial crisis. “It was one of those torture-porn movies. Just empty, nihil-
ist stuff,” she says. “I [couldn’t] imagine some young girl watching it
and being remotely okay with all the imagery. I thought, Even if I’m
broke, I couldn’t do that.”
So Marling, like Kazan and Rashida Jones, all photographed
here, went off and wrote her own material. Jones, 36, a star of Parks
and Recreation, cowrote and stars in the summer’s rom-com-busting
Celeste and Jesse Forever. Marling, 30, cowrote and stars in not one but
two sci-fi explorations, Another Earth and Sound of My Voice, and most
recently cowrote and costars with Alexander Skarsgård in the up-
coming eco-terrorist thriller The East.
All are part of a wave of young women writer-directors reinvigo-
rating roles for women in Hollywood: Lynn Shelton wrote and di-
rected Your Sister’s Sister; Jennifer Westfeldt, Friends With Kids; Sarah
Polley, Take This Waltz; and Julie Delpy, 2 Days in New York (a sequel
to her riotous 2 Days in Paris). Beasts of the Southern Wild, possibly the
most sui generis movie in years and starring a six-year-old actress
plucked from the bayou, was based on a play by Lucy Alibar and
cowritten by her and director Benh Zeitlin. And yes, the summer
birthed two daughters of Bridesmaids: the comedies For a Good Time,
Call…, about a pair of frenemies who run a phone-sex business,
written by Katie Anne Naylon and Lauren Anne Miller (and star-
ring Miller and Ari Graynor); and Bachelorette, by playwright Les-
lye Headland, which explores the nastiness that can happen when
a group of grown up mean girls reunite for the wedding of the least
popular among them.
These women all seized the tools of production. This is a lot harder
to do than that sentence implies. “I had wanted to write for a long
time and had been too intimidated by the process of writing and the
title of ‘writer’ to actually do it,” says Jones. “It felt ridiculous to start
a new career in your thirties.” Still, she took the plunge, co writing
Celeste and Jesse with her friend Will McCormack. In the film (about
Celeste, who outgrows her husband, Jesse, played by Andy Sam-
berg), “We’re telling a story of a woman who is clearly not perfect
and may be a little unlikable,” Jones says. “It doesn’t have a Holly-
wood ending.”
Jones refused to simply sell the script to companies that wouldn’t
let her star in it. “I just pictured someone else doing it, and it made
me very sad, [so] I begged everyone I knew” to fund Celeste and Jesse.
She knew a lot of people—her father is mega-record-producer
Quincy Jones, and her mother is The Mod Squad icon Peggy Lipton.
But even so, she had to stump like many an indie aspirant for in-
vestors, and the budget for Celeste and Jesse was less than a million
dollars—tiny by Hollywood fanboy-spectacle standards. “We used
my clothes, my house, my car,” Jones says with a laugh. In Marling’s
Sound of My Voice, a tale about an investigation into a cult led by a
woman who claims to be from the future, the filmmakers didn’t even
have a professional movie camera. “It was shot on a Canon 5D. It’s a
[digital single-lens reflex] camera, and it has a video function,” says
Marling, who plays the cult leader. “I don’t think Canon thought
people were going to make a feature film using this camera.”
In an environment where a movie’s earnings at the box office
carry far more weight than if it’s actually good, and where big-
budget filmmaking remains stubbornly male-oriented, with a focus
on comic book fare or male-topped action adventures that perform
well internationally, these women have to be lauded—not just for
their talent, but for their tenacity and their frugality. Each movie on
the above list cost less than $10 million to make, and many were
made for under a million.
The dream may be Juno and Bridesmaids—the former by stripper
turned screenwriter Diablo Cody, shot for $7.5 million, grossing
$231 million worldwide, and winning Cody an Oscar; the latter
cowritten by Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo, grossing $287 mil-
lion, and earning Oscar nominations for Wiig and Mumolo and ac-
tress Melissa McCarthy. But even Kazan, who has been on Broad-
way, has appeared in such movies as Revolutionary Road and It’s
Complicated, and is the daughter of successful screenwriters and a
granddaughter of legendary director Elia Kazan, says, “I’ve been
told ‘no’ at the beginning of everything I’ve ever done.”
Ruby Sparks was no exception. When she’d finished the first 15
pages of her screenplay, she showed it to her boyfriend, actor Paul
Dano. “He asked if I was writing it for us,” recalls Kazan, who hadn’t
thought about it until that moment. “It suddenly seemed totally clear,
and from that point on, we were the only people I wanted to play
these roles.” When she and Dano convinced Valerie Faris and Jon-
athan Dayton, who codirected Little Miss Sunshine, to direct Ruby
Sparks, Kazan got what she wanted.
A
ll these new voices are emerging at a time when women auteurs
are definitely having a pop-culture moment.
Book authors J. K. Rowling, Stephenie Meyer, and Suzanne
Collins have launched Harry Potter, Twilight, and The Hunger Games,
global juggernauts all. Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift have sent mil-
lions of mostly female fans berserk. In TV (whose audience is dom-
inated by women), the past two years have been good to young
women creators, especially in comedy, where Tina Fey has blazed
a trail. The recent It Girls of the airwaves? Thirty-one-year-old Liz
Meriwether, creator of Fox’s New Girl, and 26-year-old Lena Dun-
ham, creator and star of the HBO series Girls.
What’s great about the technological and cultural advances of
the past few years is that women are no longer waiting for the per-
mission of a cabal of multinational corporations (i.e., the studios) to
make their films. The cable channels, and even major networks, are
open to female-oriented stories, and if you can fund your film via
private investors or even a friends-and-family plan, there are vari-
ous film festivals to go for—and, increasingly, video on demand.
Says Kazan, “Screenwriters like my mother [Robin Swicord, Mem-
oirs of a Geisha] and Nora Ephron and Callie Khouri, the women
who went before, all the way back to Ruth Gordon—they faced a lot
more sexism than we’ve had to face.” Ephron went out of her way
to praise and mentor Dunham, and conjuring one of their lunch
dates is like a window onto the evolution, diversity, and commer-
cial potential of narratives written by women.
That said, we’ve got a long way to go, baby. According to re-
search done by Martha Lauzen, PhD, a professor at San Diego State
University, women accounted for just 18 percent of the behind-the-
scenes talent (directors, writers, producers, cinematographers, and
editors) on last year’s 250 domestic top-grossing films. While the
percentage of female writers improved from 10 percent in 2010 to
14 percent a year later, the percentage of female directors (5 per-
cent) dropped to half of what it was in 1998. “I appreciate the fact
that there is a trend of the female-centric and of women writing in-
teresting, dynamic parts,” Jones says. “The more this phenomenon
can not be a trend, and just the new normal…” the better.
www. e l l e. c o m 377
378 www. e l l e. c o m
T
his is so great that we are in a mall!” exclaims Guillaume
Henry. The 33-year-old Paris-based designer has just walked
into a restaurant inside The Shops at Columbus Circle, a
sleek cluster of stores in the first few floors of Manhattan’s
megaluxe Time Warner Center skyscraper. It’s not exactly the
kind of place where you’d find a Contempo Casuals or a Cin-
nabon, but when Henry puts this spin on it—mall just sounds so
wrong in a French accent—suddenly this journalist is extremely
embarrassed by her choice of venue.
Then again, coming from Henry, a comment on a place’s
lack of exclusivity is likely meant as a sincere compliment: In
2009, when Henry took over as creative director of Carven,
a once-leading French couture house that had fallen almost
completely off the fashion map, his first order of business was
severing ties with France’s prestigious Chambre Syndicale de
la Haute Couture, where it’s not unheard of for members to
spend a week beading the train of a single dress. Henry’s new
vision for Carven—sporty French schoolgirl basics with just
a hint of irreverence (a kicky Peter Pan collar here, a flirty
peplum there)—took off, and, within just a few seasons, the
brand has become a favorite of fashion editors, an in-demand
commodity at department stores, and a hit with celebs such as
Beyoncé, Blake Lively, and Kaya Scodelario, alum of the Brit-
ish version of Skins (at left), whose fresh-faced insouciance is
a perfect complement to the clothes. “[Carven] is like a great
salad,” Henry says. “It shouldn’t have to be something that
takes nine hours to prepare; it can be just as delicious by get-
ting the best ingredients.”
That might seem like a complete departure for a house built
on custom-made designs, but Henry’s attitude is very much in
line with the spirit of the original Carven. It was founded in
1945 by Madame Carmen de Tommaso, a Parisian housewife
who was frustrated because she couldn’t find clothes to fit her
tiny 5'1" frame. Ready-to-wear as we know it didn’t exist, but
Mme Carven, as she was commonly known, found inventive
tactics to make her designs wearable, like using simple cotton
for evening dresses. “Carven wasn’t born out of fantasy; it was
born out of need,” says Henry. Over the following decades, the
house grew into a global success with a best-selling fragrance,
Ma Griffe. But in the late ’80s, the brand began to lose its way,
a process that only accelerated after Mme Carven sold the busi-
ness in 1994. (She’s a remarkable 103 today.)
Until, that is, a friend texted Henry, then a designer at Paule
Ka, with a supposedly innocuous question: What did he think
of Carven? “He could have asked me whether I liked a movie,”
he recalls. “I said, ‘They’re great; I love them, but they should
maybe stop haute couture and do [casual] dresses.’ ” Unbe-
knownst to Henry, his friend would show this response to Car-
ven’s CEO, businessman Henri Sebaoun, and the rest is history.
In person, Henry, who hails from a small village in north-
eastern France, is every inch the consummate Frenchman–the
dashing ’50s film version. He’s got dreamy blue eyes and a scarf
tied chicly around his neck, and he speaks in charmingly ac-
cented English. While Henry insists his upbringing was far
from fashionable—“Aside from my parents, my entire family
are farmers”—he says it was impossible not to be exposed to
design in a country where haute couture was covered on the
evening news. “In France, couture is like wine and cheese,” he
says. After graduating from secondary school, Henry studied
at Paris’ Institut Français de la Mode and worked at Givenchy,
before eventually landing at Paule Ka.
While most would describe Henry’s designs as classically
Gallic—one could imagine Françoise Hardy in one of his turtle-
neck minidresses—the designer begs to differ. “I have no idea
but apparently there is a Parisian style,” he says. Instead, Henry
describes the Carven customer as “the girl you want to talk to.
She isn’t too intimidating, and you shouldn’t be afraid of her.”
Carven’s fall collection includes cotton poplin button-down
blouses ($390) and long-sleeve violet crepe de chine dresses
($660). Not exactly cheap, but very reasonable compared with
peers like Proenza Schouler and Thakoon, whose separates
often go past the three-figure mark. “Sometimes I even think
Carven is too expensive,” Henry admits. “When I’m with the
commercial team, they tell me a dress is $1,000 retail, and I’m
superconfused because it’s so limited in terms of audience. I
don’t want to create any frustration.”
The only frustration so far, though, seems to be how to get
more of it. When Barneys Co-op opened its Brooklyn outpost
in 2010, Carven was one of the first lines to sell out. During a
speech at a fashion-industry dinner, Natalie Massenet, founder
of Net-a-Porter (one of the first retailers to carry Carven in the
U.S.), compared Henry to a young Yves Saint Laurent.
Though he deflects that kind of praise (“I really appreciate it,
but let’s wait”), Henry clearly has big plans for the future. Al-
ready he has expanded into menswear and eyewear, is opening
his first U.S. boutique, in New York, early next year (there are
ones in Paris, Hong Kong, and Singapore), and says fragrance
plans are “in the air.” “Once you have the concept of the brand in
mind, you should be able to do anything,” says Henry. “I’d like
to create plates, cakes, I don’t care.” (In fact, Henry already has
the pastry part down—he teamed up with Ladurée on a line of
special-edition macarons in 2009.)
But first, says Henry, who after an hour is taking the last bites
of his mall meal, “I’d like to stop in J.Crew.”
FRENCH OPEN
In the three years since he was named creative director of Carven,
Guillaume Henry has revived the sleepy couture house into one of
fashion’s—and young Hollywood’s—most in-demand ready-to-wear
labels. But according to the designer, he’s just getting started.
By Amanda FitzSimons
PHOTOGRAPHED BY E RI C GUI L L E MAI N STYLED BY PHOE BE ARNOL D
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www. e l l e. c o m 379
THE DRUG WAR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 328
research results. “[Glaxo]* cancelled our proj-
ect 1059 (long-term panic disorder study).
Reason: the side effect data analysis was terri-
bly unfavorable to our favorite antidepressant.
And we hate when that happens!” Asked for
comment, Glaxo did not respond.
In a switch pharmaceutical companies
have lobbied for, the letter categories will
soon be dropped. Instead of seeing, for exam-
ple, a Category D on Paxil’s label, doctors will
find a long summary of the medical literature.
Critics of the new system fear that physicians
will be overwhelmed by the mountain of de-
tail and simply won’t read the new statements,
but FDA official Lisa Mathis, MD, (who has
since left the FDA) defends the change as a
means to “increase the judicious use of medi-
cation.”
A
mong those arguing that SSRIs are rela-
tively harmless to unborn children—and
depression quite pernicious—are a fair
number of doctors who are paid by phar-
maceutical companies to act as consultants,
conduct clinical trials, and serve on speakers’
bureaus. Drug companies refer to the physi-
cians they tap for such roles as “thought lead-
ers” or “key opinion leaders” (KOLs), and the
management of the discourse around a drug
is important enough to the industry that just
under a third of their marketing budgets are
spent on so-called KOLs, according to a 2004
study of the 15 largest pharmaceutical makers.
Such ties between drug companies and
physicians, which have attracted increas-
ing suspicion and criticism in recent years,
also complicate the risk-benefit analysis of
taking an SSRI during pregnancy. JAMA,
for instance, was forced to print a correction
to the study that found a higher depression-
relapse rate among women who stopped tak-
ing antidepressants during pregnancy versus
those who didn’t after discovering that seven
of its 13 authors, including lead author Lee S.
Cohen, had failed to disclose that they were
funded in some capacity by the pharmaceuti-
cal industry (including Glaxo and other mak-
ers of SSRIs)—in this case, there were more
than 60 unreported conflicts.
When I called the main expert witness for
Glaxo in Lyam’s case, Anthony Scialli, MD,
to ask him how he saw his connections to the
drug industries, he quickly replied, “Well, I
don’t have any connections to the drug indus-
tries. I only prescribe generic drugs, which are
not promoted, and I don’t meet with drug reps
and I don’t read drug advertising and I don’t
go to pharmaceutical-company-sponsored
programs. So I suppose I could be influenced,
but it would be kind of hard. They’d probably
have to put a billboard up outside my apart-
ment.”
Scialli runs a popular online database
called Reprotox that health-care providers
can consult to see if a particular substance is
harmful to the fetus. Reprotox’s take on the
impact of SSRIs is unalarmist: While the SSRIs
Paxil, Zoloft, and Prozac are associated with
“mild, transient” cases of neonatal syndrome,
none affect fetal brain development—“unlike
maternal depression,” the site warns. Con-
genital heart defects have been linked to Paxil
and Prozac, Reprotox continues, but incon-
sistently. (“Over the years,” Scialli testified at
Lyam’s trial, “I have presented to people the
evidence that has been available, and it has
been changing somewhat over the years, but
the evidence has always been inconsistent,
and so over the years I have been able to tell
people that the best evidence shows that Paxil
does not cause birth defects.”)
“I do consulting for drug companies on
the effects of drugs during pregnancy,” he
continued on the phone when I pressed him
about conflicts of interest in medicine. “The
drug company is coming to me asking that
question; they’re not coming to me saying,
‘Would you whitewash our drug?’ ” A for-
mer KOL, Scialli is a consultant for dozens of
pharmaceutical makers (“No idea,” he said,
when asked how many exactly). When I asked
him specifically about SSRIs, he told me he
couldn’t talk about it: “Because I’m involved
in litigation with SSRIs.”
Thomas Sadler, PhD, an adjunct professor
at the University of Utah, is far less sanguine
about drug industry clout. In fact, he left the
Teratology Society, the field’s professional or-
ganization, over the issue. A former editor of
the society’s journal, which front-line doctors
can consult for guidance about so-called tera-
togenic agents (everything from certain pre-
scription drugs to environmental toxins like
mercury), Sadler said drug companies were
relentless in their efforts to “inundate the jour-
nal with negative findings”—that is, to publish
studies showing that their products caused
no adverse impacts on pregnancy. “A fellow
scientist used to say, ‘How can a society who
goes to bed with the people who make the te-
ratogens actually do teratology?’ ” he recalled.
At one meeting in 1998 to determine the
direction of the Teratology Society, Sadler re-
members, a major “action point” was for the
organization to rid itself of pharmaceutical-
industry connections and become strictly
research oriented. “The leaders [at the time]
were people who had closer ties to the drug
companies,” he continued. “And they didn’t
want that.” The leaders prevailed, he said.
Sadler became interested in antidepres-
sants in the late ’80s through a fellow devel-
opmental biologist, Jean Lauder, PhD, who’d
been studying Prozac and the role of sero-
tonin on neurological development. “Lo and
behold, we started seeing some abnormalities
in our [mouse] embryos,” Sadler said. “No one
had ever published or talked about that fact,
so it kind of caught [Eli] Lilly by surprise.”
Sadler, with Lauder, was the first to present
findings at a Teratology Society meeting in-
dicating that SSRIs might cause birth defects.
Sadler acknowledges that the absolute risk
of birth defects is small, but he says it’s a “hard
thing,” because “at some point it starts to add
up. And then you think about 100,000 kids in
a state being born and 1,000 of them having
a heart birth defect, and then you introduce
SSRIs into the mix and you’ve got 1,500. And
this happens every year, so that in 10 years
there are an additional 5,000 kids with heart
defects that should not have them. When does
it get to mean something?” Sadler is refer-
ring to both lethal and nonlethal heart birth
defects, but he has a point: Even if the risk is
tiny for any one individual, for a population
it can add up, especially as more women take
the medication.
So what is an expectant mother to do?
Again, there’s really no question that women
with major depression should seriously con-
sider staying on their meds, or starting them
if need be. Pharmacological fixes for milder
cases are the rub, and a woman’s choice
ultimately depends on whose argument she
decides to credit. Koren says that depression
is a bear of an illness that threatens mother
and child, even when it’s not classified as ma-
jor. “[The mother’s] quality of life is very low.
She may not be thinking of taking her life, but
she may be very anxious.” Too much has been
made of the risks of SSRIs, he insists. “There’s
a lot of quackery in this field. It’s a national
sport to scare pregnant women.”
Even the Israeli researcher who coau-
thored the study showing a three- and fivefold
higher risk of heart defects among the babies
of women who took Paxil and Prozac seemed
to downplay the dangers to children exposed
to SSRIs. “Many heart anomalies can now be
treated,” he said after the study was released.
On the other side, Adam C. Urato, MD, a
maternal-fetal specialist at Tufts Medical Cen-
ter in Boston, rails against the ease with which
SSRI prescriptions are handed out to expect-
ant mothers. “The conventional wisdom has
been that depression is like diabetes and de-
pressed pregnant women need to stay on their
antidepressants just like pregnant diabetics
need to take their insulin,” he wrote in Com-
monHealth. “And this counseling gets repeated
on a daily basis in doctors’ offices around the
globe and in news reports on this topic. The
problem is that it just isn’t true.”
A particular irony for those opposed to
the proliferation of antidepressant use during
pregnancy: The scientific data seem to dem-
onstrate that SSRIs work to quell major de-
pression but they’re no better than a placebo
in mild to moderate cases.
L
yam is now six years old. He loves the scar
from the drainage tube that he has on his
chest because, as he told David, the three
slits make him “look like a shark.” Last win-
ter, David texted me to say that Lyam was back
in the hospital for a week because his aorta had
started to collapse and his surgeon had to in-
sert a stent. Doctors have warned her that af-
ter Lyam’s upcoming open-heart surgery, he
may lose the ability to identify letters and col-
ors, because the total bypass it requires slows
the brain. At his cardiologist’s office, David
saw the panicked expression on her son’s face
as his doctor spoke of surgery. “As a mom, even
if your kid just bumps their leg…” David said,
trailing off as she started to cry again. “I’d be
terrified if I had to have open-heart surgery.”
Lyam may need to have a fourth surgery
around the time he turns 18, but his doc-
tor thinks it will be his last. He will need to
see a cardiologist regularly for the rest of his
life, and he won’t be able to play soccer and
contact sports, but otherwise he should live a
normal life.
David still has mild anxiety, but she now re-
lies on meditation to cope with it. She wishes
she’d been told about the risks of SSRIs and
believes that stronger warnings are impera-
tive. “In terms of a risk versus benefit, I don’t
think [Paxil] was effective,” she told me. “I had
a lot more anxiety after my son was born.”
This article was reported in partnership with The
Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute.
*At the time, the drug was manufactured by Glaxo’s predecessor in interest, SmithKline Beecham.
380 www. e l l e. c o m
ELLE
COVERS
On Sarah Jessica Parker: Viscose crepe dress by Calvin Klein
Collection, price on request, at Calvin Klein Collection (NYC),
call 212-292-9000. Swarovski crystal, stone, and mother-of-pearl
necklace from House of Lavande, Palm Beach, $2,300, at House of
Lavande (Palm Beach). On Cate Blanchett: Top, $1,400, pants,
$1,600, by Céline, at Céline boutiques nationwide. On Octavia
Spencer: Jersey dress by Tadashi Shoji, $348, visit tadashishoji
.com. On Uma Thurman: Wool dress by Calvin Klein Collection,
$1,095, at Calvin Klein Collection (NYC), call 212-292-9000.
Her own ring. On Susan Sarandon: Leather coat by Valentino,
$9,980, at Valentino Boutique (NYC), call 212-772-6969.
Patent leather pumps by Tom Ford, $1,100, at Tom Ford (NYC).
Her own jewelry. On Kristen Wiig: V-neck tunic dress by T by
Alexander Wang, $360, at Alexander Wang (NYC). Rose gold
bangle, $4,200, yellow gold bangles, $3,940–$4,160, by Roberto
Coin, at select Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus stores
nationwide. Pavé diamond ring by David Yurman, $11,500, at
David Yurman Townhouse (NYC), call 212-752-4255. Her
own ring and Cartier bracelet. On Elle Fanning: Silk dress by
Calvin Klein Collection, $1,695, at Calvin Klein Collection
(NYC), call 212-292-9000.
THE LOOK
Page 155: Bag by Valentino Garavani, at Valentino boutiques
nationwide.
TRENDS AND ACCESSORIES
Page 156: Skirt, $6,500, boots, $6,000, jacket, bag, belts by
Salvatore Ferragamo, call 800-628-8916. Earrings by Kimberly
McDonald, $42,450, at Kimberly McDonald (West Hollywood).
Page 158: Bag by Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci, $7,690, collection
at Bergdorf Goodman (NYC). Necklace, bracelet by Kenzo,
visit kenzo.com. Page 160: Jacket, $19,288, shirt, trousers by
Balmain, visit balmain.com. Bracelet by Balenciaga by Nicolas
Ghesquière, at Balenciaga (NYC). Bag by Roger Vivier, at
Roger Vivier (NYC). Blouse, scarf by Sportmax, at Sportmax
(NYC). Ring by David Webb, $26,500, at David Webb (NYC,
Beverly Hills), call 310-858-8006. Wedge by Sergio Rossi, at
Sergio Rossi (Bal Harbour, FL). Bag by Chanel, $9,400, at
select Chanel boutiques nationwide. Page 164: Coat, pants,
belt by Michael Kors, at select Michael Kors stores nationwide.
Earrings by Gucci, at select Gucci stores nationwide. Sunglasses
by Anna-Karin Karlsson, collection at Gregory’s (Dallas,
Houston, Atlanta, L.A., Beverly Hills). Bag by Marchesa, visit
jimmysnewyork.com. Wedge by Donna Karan New York, at
Donna Karan New York stores nationwide, visit dkny.com.
Page 166: Sandal by Jimmy Choo, at Jimmy Choo boutiques
nationwide, call 866-524-6687. Pump by Nicholas Kirkwood,
at Nicholas Kirkwood (NYC). Scarf by Louis Vuitton, at select
Louis Vuitton stores nationwide, visit louisvuitton.com. Bag by
Valentino Garavani, at select Valentino boutiques nationwide.
Page 170: Vest, pants, tunic, visor by Louis Vuitton, at select Louis
Vuitton stores nationwide, visit louisvuitton.com. Bag by
Valentino Garavani, visit valentino.com. Sandals by Marc Jacobs,
at Marc Jacobs (NYC), call 212-343-1490 or visit marcjacobs
.com. Page 172: Dress, hat, necklace, belt by Gucci, at select
Gucci stores nationwide. Bag, $9,100, sunglasses by Dior,
at Dior boutiques nationwide. Pump by Nicholas Kirkwood,
call 646-559-5239. Page 174: Sandal by Jimmy Choo, call
866-524-6687 or visit jimmychoo.com. Page 176: Boot by
Balmain, collection at Barneys New York. Page 178: Necklace
by Cartier, call 800-CARTIER or visit cartier.com. Boot by
Dolce & Gabbana, call 877-70-DG-USA or visit dolcegabbana
.com. Clutch by Chanel, call 800-550-0005. Page 184: Boot by
Giuseppe Zanotti Design, at Giuseppe Zanotti Design boutiques
nationwide, call 310-858-1990 or visit giuseppezanottidesign
.com. Page 186: Sandal by Salvatore Ferragamo, call 800-628-
8916. Bag by Tod’s, $8,175, call 800-457-TODS or visit tods
.com. Page 188: Sandal by Louis Vuitton, call 866-VUITTON
or visit louisvuitton.com. Bag by Gucci, at select Gucci stores
nationwide. Necklace by Tom Ford, call 212-359-0300. Page
192: Jewelry by Louis Vuitton, at select Louis Vuitton stores
nationwide, call 866-VUITTON or visit louisvuitton.com.
Page 194: Watches by Ebel, $25,500–$28,500, visit ebel.com.
Necklace by Harry Winston, visit harrywinston.com.
WORKBOOK: OFF SCRIPT
Page 196: Shorts by 3.1 Phillip Lim, call 212-334-1160 or visit
31philliplim.com. Pumps by Jimmy Choo, call 866-524-6687 or
visit jimmychoo.com. Sandal, shirt by Gucci, at select Gucci
stores nationwide, visit gucci.com. Page 198: Jacket by Jason
Wu, visit jasonwustudio.com. Jacket by 2b Bebe, at 2b Bebe
stores nationwide. Sandal by Stuart Weitzman, call 212-750-
2555. Top by Nicole Miller Artelier, at Nicole Miller boutiques
nationwide. Pants by Bebe, visit bebe.com.
ELLE SHOPS
Page 216: Items by Balmain, collection at Bergdorf Goodman
(NYC), Maxfield (L.A.), select Barneys New York, Neiman
Marcus stores nationwide. Page 218: Items by Marc Jacobs, at Marc
Jacobs (NYC), call 212-343-1490 or visit marcjacobs.com. Page
220: Items by Akris, collection at Akris boutiques nationwide,
select Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus stores nationwide.
Page 222: Items by Marni, at Marni boutiques nationwide,
select Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Nordstrom stores
nationwide. Page 224: Items by Michael Kors, at select Michael
Kors stores, call 866-709-KORS or visit michaelkors.com.
Page 226: Items by Vera Wang Collection, at Vera Wang (NYC,
West Hollywood), select Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus
stores nationwide. Page 228: Items by Stella McCartney, at Stella
McCartney (NYC), visit stellamccartney.com.
WOMEN IN HOLLYWOOD
Page 334: Dress by Alexander McQueen, $16,350, at Alexander
McQueen (NYC). Sandals by Casadei, visit amazon.com. Page
340: Blazer, pants by Calvin Klein Collection, call 212-292-9000.
T-shirt by Calvin Klein Underwear, visit calvinklein.com. Page
342: Bandeau, skirt by Calvin Klein Collection, call 212-292-
9000. Ring by Ippolita, visit ippolita.com. Her own Tiffany &
Co. bracelet. Page 344: Coat by Valentino, $9,980, call 212-
772-6969. Pumps by Tom Ford, at Tom Ford (NYC). Her own
jewelry. Page 348: Top, pants by Calvin Klein Collection, call
212-292-9000.
PRISM BREAK
Page 354: Jacket by J. Mendel, $6,590, call 800-J-MENDEL or
visit jmendel.com. Top, peplum, shorts by Vera Wang Collection,
at Vera Wang (NYC), call 212-382-2184. Earrings by Anzie,
collection at select Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide,
call 888-341-2604 or visit anzie.com. Page 355: Shirt by
Prada, at select Prada boutiques nationwide, visit prada.com.
Sweater by Burberry Prorsum, visit burberry.com. Tights by
Emilio Cavallini, visit emiliocavallini.com. Earrings, $25,550,
necklace, $25,750, by Madyha Farooqui, visit madyhafarooqui
.com. Brooch, $21,000, necklace, $60,000, by Tony Duquette,
at select Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide, call 310-
271-4688 or visit tonyduquette.com. Rings by David Webb,
$26,500–$27,000, at David Webb (NYC, Beverly Hills),
call 310-858-8006 or visit davidwebb.com. Tote by Bally, at
select Bally boutiques nationwide, visit bally.com. Wedges
by Stella McCartney, at Stella McCartney (NYC, L.A.), call
212-255-1556. Page 356: Coat by J. Mendel, $27,500, call
800-J-MENDEL or visit jmendel.com. Shirt, shorts, boots
by Givenchy by Riccardo Tisci, collection at Maxfield (L.A.).
Sunglasses by Mykita, at Robert Marc (NYC), call 212-343-
8300. Earrings by Anzie, collection at select Saks Fifth Avenue
stores nationwide, call 888-341-2604 or visit anzie.com.
Necklace by Van Cleef & Arpels, call 877-VAN-CLEEF or visit
vancleef-arpels.com. Pendant by Patricia von Musulin, call 212-
206-8345 or visit patriciavonmusulin.com. Page 357: Jacket,
$10,000, top, $5,995, by Michael Kors, call 866-709-KORS
or visit michaelkors.com. Shorts by Vera Wang Collection, at
Vera Wang (NYC), call 212-382-2184. Sunglasses by Prabal
Gurung by Linda Farrow Projects, visit lindafarrowgallery.com.
Earrings by Bochic, $13,550, call 212-632-1700 or visit bochic
.com. Necklace by David Webb, $135,000, at David Webb
(NYC, Beverly Hills), call 310-858-8006 or visit davidwebb
.com. Socks by Pamela Mann, visit pamelamann.co.uk.
Pumps by Manolo Blahnik, collection at Ikram (Chicago), call
312-587-1000. Pages 358–359: Turtleneck by Tracy Reese, at
The New York Look (NYC). Shirt, pants by Prada, at select
Prada boutiques nationwide, visit prada.com. Hat by Lola
Hats, visit lolahats.com. Earrings, $21,000, amethyst ring,
$21,000, jade ring, $33,000, by Tony Duquette, at select Saks
Fifth Avenue stores nationwide, call 310-271-4688 or visit
tonyduquette.com. Enamel ring, $24,500, coral ring, $36,000,
by David Webb, at David Webb (NYC, Beverly Hills), call
310-858-8006 or visit davidwebb.com. Ring by Solange
Azagury-Partridge, at Solange Azagury-Partridge (NYC),
call 212-879-9100. Page 360: Vest, $19,800, dress, iPad case,
$5,880, by Fendi, call 212-759-4646. Shirt by Prada, at select
Prada boutiques nationwide, visit prada.com. Skirt by Stella
McCartney, at Stella McCartney (NYC, L.A.), call 212-255-
1556. Earrings, $94,000, ring, $97,000, by Dior Fine Jewelry,
at Dior boutiques nationwide, call 800-929-DIOR. Necklace
by Patricia von Musulin, $7,000, call 212-206-8345 or visit
patriciavonmusulin.com. Brooch by Tony Duquette, $28,000,
at select Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide, call 310-271-
4688 or visit tonyduquette.com. Tights by Pamela Mann, visit
pamelamann.co.uk. Mules by Balenciaga by Nicolas Ghesquière,
similar styles at Balenciaga (NYC), call 212-206-0872. Page
361: Jacket by Louis Vuitton, $32,300, call 866-VUITTON or
visit louisvuitton.com. Jacket, pants by Gucci, at select Gucci
stores nationwide, visit gucci.com. Shirt by Prada, at select
Prada boutiques nationwide, visit prada.com. Scarf by Hermès,
at Hermès stores nationwide, call 800-441-4488 or visit
hermes.com. Tie by Brooks Brothers, at Brooks Brothers stores
nationwide, call 800-274-1815 or visit brooksbrothers.com.
Sunglasses by Linda Farrow Luxe, visit lindafarrowgallery
.com. Earrings by Madyha Farooqui, visit madyhafarooqui
.com. Necklace by Van Cleef & Arpels, call 877-VAN-CLEEF
or visit vancleef-arpels.com. Brooches by M.C.L by Matthew
Campbell Laurenza, collection at select Neiman Marcus stores
nationwide, visit mcldesign.net. Shoes by Chanel, at select
Chanel boutiques nationwide, call 800-550-0005. Page 362:
Coat by Moncler Gamme Rouge, visit moncler.com. Swimsuit by
Bottega Veneta, at Bottega Veneta boutiques nationwide, call
212-371-5511 or visit bottegaveneta.com. Hat by Michael Kors,
at select Michael Kors stores nationwide, call 866-709-KORS.
Earrings by Madyha Farooqui, $19,750, visit madyhafarooqui
.com. Necklace by Van Cleef & Arpels, call 877-VAN-CLEEF
or visit vancleef-arpels.com. Rings by Bulgari, at Bulgari stores
nationwide, call 800-BULGARI or visit bulgari.com. Ring
by Dior Fine Jewelry, $56,000, at Dior boutiques nationwide,
call 800-929-DIOR. Socks by Falke, at The Sock Hop (NYC).
Boots by Céline, collection at Barneys New York. Page 363:
Shirt by Altuzarra, collection at select Barneys New York,
Neiman Marcus stores nationwide. Dress by Ralph Lauren
Collection, at select Ralph Lauren stores nationwide, visit
ralphlaurencollection.com. Trousers by Stella McCartney, at
Stella McCartney (NYC, L.A.), call 212-255-1556. Earrings
by Bulgari, at Bulgari stores nationwide, call 800-BULGARI
or visit bulgari.com. Necklace by Madyha Farooqui, $22,750,
visit madyhafarooqui.com. Bag by Chloé, at Chloé boutiques
nationwide. Boots by Balenciaga by Nicolas Ghesquière, at
Balenciaga (NYC), call 212-206-0872.
BIG SIR
Page 364: Top, pants by Chanel, call 800-550-0005. Coat by
Altuzarra, at Forty Five Ten (Dallas). Scarf by Burberry Prorsum,
visit burberry.com. Sunglasses by Céline, at Céline (NYC).
Bracelet by Hermès, $7,250, at Hermès stores nationwide, call
800-441-4488 or visit hermes.com. Watch, $29,500, bracelet,
$6,250, by Cartier, at Cartier boutiques nationwide, call
800-CARTIER or visit cartier.com. Bag by Derek Lam, at
Derek Lam stores nationwide. Boots by Mauri, at Cellini Uomo
(NYC). Page 365: Jacket, trousers by Stella McCartney, call 212-
255-1556. Blouse by Belstaff, visit belstaff.com. Coat by Burberry
London, visit burberry.com. Belt by Longchamp, visit longchamp
.com. Bag by Gucci, at select Gucci stores nationwide, visit
gucci.com. Bracelets by Hermès, $6,800–$7,250, at Hermès
stores nationwide, call 800-441-4488 or visit hermes.com. Ring
by Gurhan, at select Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide. Page
366: Trench, jacket, pants by Bottega Veneta, call 212-371-5511
or visit bottegaveneta.com. Shirt by Equipment, at Equipment
(NYC), call 646-371-9703. Sunglasses by Mykita, visit mykita
.com. Scarf by Southpaw Vintage, at Southpaw Vintage
(NYC). Belt by Linea Pelle Collection, visit lineapelle.com.
Page 367: Coat, top, pants by Vera Wang Collection, call 323-
602-0174. Coat, $14,300, belt, $1,490, by Salvatore Ferragamo,
at Salvatore Ferragamo boutiques nationwide, call 800-628-
8916. Turtleneck by Boss Orange, visit hugoboss.com. Necklace
by Workhorse, visit workhorsejewelry.com. Bracelets by Hermès,
$6,800–$7,250, at Hermès stores nationwide, call 800-441-
4488 or visit hermes.com. Watch by Burberry, visit burberry
.com. Bracelet by Elizabeth and James, visit saksfifthavenue
.com. Ring by Meira T, visit meiratboutique.com. Ring by
Mannin, call 323-987-5023 or visit manninfinejewelry.com.
Ring by Gurhan, at Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide. Clutch
by Narciso Rodriguez, at Barneys New York stores. Oxfords by
Pierre Hardy, visit pierrehardy.com. Page 368: Coat, pants by
Sportmax, call 212-674-1817. Coat by Valentino, at Valentino
boutiques nationwide, visit valentino.com. Blazer by Versace, at
select Versace boutiques nationwide, call 888-721-7219. Shawl
by Etro, at select Etro boutiques nationwide, visit etro.com.
Bag by Reed Krakoff, visit reedkrakoff.com. Boots by Mauri,
at Cellini Uomo (NYC), call 212-219-8657. Page 369: Trench,
trousers by Donna Karan New York, at Donna Karan New York
stores nationwide. Jacket by 3.1 Phillip Lim, at Kirna Zabête
(NYC), visit 31philliplim.com. Vest by Ralph Lauren Blue Label,
at select Ralph Lauren stores nationwide, visit ralphlauren
.com. Scarf by Diesel Black Gold, visit diesel.com. Bracelets by
Hermès, $6,800–$7,250, at Hermès stores nationwide, call
800-441-4488 or visit hermes.com. Ring by Charlotte Bjorlin
Delia, visit store.charlottebjorlindelia.com. Ring by Zoë Chicco,
visit zoechicco.com. Ring by Mannin, call 323-987-5023 or visit
manninfinejewelry.com. Ring by Meira T, visit meiratboutique
.com. Ring by Gurhan, at select Saks Fifth Avenue stores
nationwide. Ring by Workhorse, visit workhorsejewelry.com.
Bag by Chloé, to special order at Chloé boutiques nationwide.
Oxfords by Pierre Hardy, visit pierrehardy.com. Page 370:
Trousers by Belstaff, at select Neiman Marcus stores nationwide.
Shirt by Equipment, visit equipmentfr.com. Hat by Eugenia Kim,
visit eugeniakim.com. Scarf by Burberry Prorsum, visit burberry
.com. Bag by Burberry, visit burberry.com. Necklace by Monica
Rich Kosann, $6,500, at Monica Rich Kosann at Bergdorf
Goodman (NYC), call 212-872-2570. Watch by Cartier, at
Cartier boutiques nationwide, call 800-CARTIER or visit
cartier.com. Bracelet from Beladora.com, call 800-680-9569.
Ring by Charlotte Bjorlin Delia, visit store.charlottebjorlindelia
.com. Ring by Zoë Chicco, visit zoechicco.com. Ring by Mannin,
call 323-987-5023 or visit manninfinejewelry.com. Ring by
Meira T, visit meiratboutique.com. Ring by Gurhan, at select
Saks Fifth Avenue stores nationwide. Shoes by Muffy’s, call
866-524-5050 or visit muffys.com. Page 371: Jacket, pants
by Gucci, visit gucci.com. Coat by Chloé, at Chloé boutiques
nationwide. Sunglasses by Céline, at Céline (NYC). Scarf
by Burberry Prorsum, visit burberry.com. Bag by Salvatore
Ferragamo, at Salvatore Ferragamo boutiques nationwide, call
800-628-8916. Bracelet from Beladora.com, call 800-680-9569.
Watch by Tag Heuer, at Tag Heuer boutiques nationwide, call
+41-32-919-8000 or visit tagheuer.com. Ring by Zoë Chicco,
visit zoechicco.com.
THE PLAYERS
Page 372: Top by Calvin Klein Collection, call 212-292-9000.
Hat by Dolce & Gabbana, at select Dolce & Gabbana boutiques
nationwide, call 877-70-DG-USA or visit dolcegabbana.com.
Bracelet by David Yurman, at David Yurman Townhouse
(NYC), call 212-752-4255. Bangle by Phillips House, at
Elements (Chicago). Page 373: Dress by Calvin Klein Collection,
call 212-292-9000. Socks by Fogal, at Fogal (NYC), visit fogal
.com. Flats by Dr. Martens, visit drmartens.com. Pages 374–375:
Shirts by Calvin Klein Collection, call 212-292-9000. Page 376:
Dress by Calvin Klein Collection, call 212-292-9000.
Prices are approximate. ELLE recommends that merchandise
availability be checked with local stores.
ELLE SHOPPING GUIDE
www. e l l e. c o m 381
ELLE HOROSCOPE
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22–Dec 21)
The month starts with you rededicating
yourself to health and fitness goals—
certainly a good idea before the
holidays—following a particularly
exhausting full moon on October 29th.
For an extra boost of motivation, look
to the solar eclipse on the 13th, which
will also inspire more self-confidence
and optimism. For single Sagittarians,
such positivity will go a long way
toward meeting someone new during
November’s first week, when Venus
tours your social-friendship sector.
At the same time, Mars in your sign
gives added luster, and starting on the
21st, the Sun lovingly favors you for
four weeks. If coupled, the 28th’s full-
moon lunar eclipse will appear in your
opposite sign of Gemini and bring the
need for a decision about your closest
partner. Don’t be concerned, though,
for Jupiter is conjoined, so chances are
this will be a time of excitement.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22–Jan 19)
You’ve worked hard in your career lately,
and with Mercury set to retrograde from
the 6th to the 26th, it’s time to relax and
have fun instead of trying to advance
projects and initiatives. Focus on romance,
which will surely beckon. This loving and
social trend will intensify at the new-moon
solar eclipse on the 13th, when you’ll find
yourself in new places among new people,
a few of whom you’ll definitely want to
know better. And they’ll want to know
you, for when Mars moves into Capricorn
on the 16th, you’ll shine brightly as you
start to notice your life becoming more
gratifying and exciting. Sit back and
observe these changing conditions, since
reflecting will be more beneficial than
reacting. At the lunar eclipse on the 28th,
you’ll pick up a plum client or coveted
assignment at work that will require a lot
of attention. Focus all you’ve got there.
AQUARIUS (Jan 20–Feb 18)
October 29th’s full moon brought with
it a decision about a living situation,
and if you’re still dealing with that as
November dawns, know that it will settle
soon. Saturn is now in your professional
sector, meaning you’ll buckle down with
work responsibilities. By the solar eclipse
on the 13th, you’ll not only excel with
assignments but also be appropriately
rewarded for your efforts, since Neptune,
going direct on the 11th, will continue
to work to get you what you deserve.
But be wary of offers or contracts, as
Mercury is retrograde from the 6th to
the 26th. In romance, the month will be
quiet until you’re gobsmacked by the
lunar eclipse on the 28th. Conjoined with
Jupiter, it will set your true-love house
ablaze, and you may either crystallize
your feelings in a new relationship
or, if you haven’t been dating, meet
someone with exciting potential. How
rapidly and intensely it all happens will
surprise but also entirely delight you.
PISCES (Feb 19–Mar 20)
Mars is still touring your house of
fame and honors, a trend that started
on October 6th and continues until
November 15th. You can get the attention
of VIPs, but you must show your
intent now. Still, mind that Mercury is
ELLE HOROSCOPE
SCORPIO (Oct 23–Nov 21)
With Neptune, Mercury, the Sun, and a new-moon eclipse on the
13th all in Scorpio, you’ll be a formidable force in November, ready
to attack any and all endeavors with gusto. First up will be making a
commitment either in love—you could move in together or promise
exclusivity—or in a professional sense, when you form a partnership
or engage in project-oriented collaborations. As exciting as either
seems, remember, Mercury is retrograde from the 6th to the
26th, so avoid firm agreements until this month’s two eclipses are
over. The 13th’s will open a door to a new opportunity that will light
various areas of your life—private and public. Don’t be surprised if
you find yourself setting off in an adventurous new direction. The
second, a lunar full moon on the 28th, may bring generous financial
news, thanks to Jupiter’s prominence. In romance, Neptune, ruler
of your love house, will go direct on the 11th, bringing some long-
needed oomph to your dating life, and Venus’ tour of Scorpio on
the 22nd and later meeting with Mars on the 29th will prove that,
yes, you are the sexiest sign of the zodiac.
*YOUR YEAR AHEAD: You’re in a
six-month eclipse cycle that will inspire
personal transformation, but, more
important, Saturn is now in Scorpio for
three years, and, although he’ll have
much to teach you, you could also reach
your highest achievements. In finances,
you’ll do extraordinarily well, and if you
need to negotiate any deals, close them
before June 25th, when Jupiter moves
into Cancer and you begin to travel far
and wide. Romantically, Christmastime
glitters, and March 11th’s new moon will
be equally blessed. May 9th to 11th could
bring an engagement or wedding, but on
or around November 3, 2013, you can
easily get any desires pushed through,
especially when it comes to marriage.
Mercury may slow things down a bit this month, but
two active—and happy—eclipses will maintain a steady
pace toward the holiday season. By Susan Miller
Shailene Woodley
November 15, 1991
382 www. e l l e. c o m
retrograde from the 6th to the 26th, so
be eager with discussions—Neptune’s
direct turn on the 11th will energize you,
and the eclipse on the 13th sharpens
your communication skills—but hesitant
to accept offers. Romance improves
dramatically after the 16th, when there
will be less pressure on your career and
more focus on your private life, including
home, fun, love, and friendships. Mars
will enliven your social sector from the
16th to December 24th, and Venus in
Scorpio will bolster your confidence when
it comes to meeting someone new. The
29th is your most exciting day, so circle
it in red. One final note: Keep the 28th’s
lunar eclipse on your radar. It will bring
big changes in your home life, the effects
of which you’ll notice for weeks to come.
ARIES (Mar 21–Apr 19)
Money has been a strong focus for you
since the difficult full moon on October
29th, but you’ll see strong aspects on
the 8th and 9th, when Venus contacts
Jupiter, and at the 13th’s new-moon solar
eclipse. Also on your mind: career. Mars
is moving through this sector from the
16th until December 24th, and you’ll
have better professional opportunities
than any you’ve seen in the past two
years. Prep your résumé or creative
portfolio immediately. However, hang
back on the 22nd, when Mars is in hard
angle to Uranus. In fact, slow your pace
with everything this month, as Mercury
is retrograde from the 6th to 26th.
With friends and loved ones, listen to
what’s actually being said, and when it
comes to expressing yourself, let Venus
at your side guide conversations with
your partner. You have a spectacular
weekend for a romantic getaway at the
24th–25th, so don’t waste it with conflict.
TAURUS (Apr 20–May 20)
The full moon in Taurus—heavily active
with Saturn—from October 29th may
have brought a question of unusual
importance to your attention that, if not
already settled, will still be on your mind
as November starts. If not this matter,
finances will certainly be at the forefront,
but with Mercury retrograde from the
6th to the 26th, don’t sign off on any
fiscal decisions. Saturn is now pushing
a relationship into high relief, causing
you to see the state of this union clearly.
A close partner in love, marriage, or
business seems to be either a comforting
rock or a thorn in your side. By the
29th, after a friendly solar eclipse on the
13th, you’ll know where it stands and
be relieved by the resolution. Romance
for single Taureans will have to wait
until the 29th, when Mars flirts with
Venus, sparking a surge of passion just
in time for the approaching holidays.
GEMINI (May 21–June 21)
With Venus in Libra from the 1st to
the 20th, the first three weeks of the
month will brim with romance. Take
note of the 8th and 9th—either night
could be one to remember. However,
with Mercury retrograde from the 6th
to the 26th, other areas of your life will
be stop-and-go. Stay focused, because
a plum new project is likely to appear
mere weeks after the friendly solar
eclipse on the 13th. This eclipse will
also emphasize health, so bolster your
fitness and health routines. Cash will
come in this month, but your expenses
will also be high, especially after Mars
enters Capricorn and your house of other
people’s money. By the 27th, though,
Mars and Pluto will work together to
give you clout in any fiscal-related talks.
Finally, at the important lunar eclipse
on the 28th, you’ll finally receive a long
overdue—and very exciting—answer
to a question you’ve been grappling
with, and a payout could be part of it.
CANCER (June 22–July 22)
You’ll be in high spirits thanks to the full
moon on October 29th, which may have
heralded a wonderful social affair that
brought a romantic encounter along with
it. Indeed, you’re ready for love, and you
may generate more attention this month
than you ever thought possible. First, the
solar eclipse on the 13th will bring
opportunities times three; then, starting
on the 17th, you’ll have a gold-star
weekend. Next, Venus brings out your
charms after moving into fellow water sign
Scorpio on the 22nd. Finally, on the 29th,
Venus flirts with Mars, who’s nestled in
your commitment sector. Despite your
focus on love, you’ll need to address career
concerns on the 22nd. The 26th, when
Mercury leaves retrograde, looks to be a
much better day for professional progress,
but be prepared at the lunar eclipse on the
28th, when some hidden information—
either something you’re keeping or being
kept from—will be made public.
LEO (July 23–Aug 22)
October 29th brought developments in
your career, and more, possibly thrilling,
news is due by November 8th. Also,
expect an increase in projects starting on
the 16th, when Mars tours your workaday
sector. Your home will be a big focus now
that Saturn has moved into this area. The
new-moon eclipse on the 13th will help
you continue to see progress in domestic
matters, but if you find your professional
and household lives at odds, know that it’s
likely due to Mercury in retrograde from
the 6th to the 26th. Mercury will right
itself after this phase, and the eclipse on
the 28th will help you realign priorities
for the better. Romantically, you’ll enjoy
November, for Mars, the action planet,
will energize your love sector from the
1st to the 17th. Venus will also be in
perfect position to Libra, so travel would
be full of delicious, spontaneous fun.
VIRGO (Aug 23–Sept 22)
Mercury, your ruling planet, will be
retrograde from the 6th to the 26th,
so avoid starting any new projects or
signing contracts. Instead, use this
period to review prior affairs, root out
problems, and solve them. At the new-
moon solar eclipse on the 13th, you’ll
become a virtual sponge, soaking up
information that will help you stay on
track and also make you the go-to for
aid and inspiration. In love, you’ll have
Mars lighting your house of romance
and fun from the 21st until December
13th—all in time for the coming holidays.
Mars will be in a supremely compatible
sign, so you must circulate. By month’s
end, near the lunar eclipse on the
28th, expect exciting developments
in your career. It could manifest in a
promotion, an offer for a new position,
or an honor or award, ensuring your
reputation reaches new heights.
LIBRA (Sept 23–Oct 22)
As you begin November, you’ll find
yourself nearly obsessed with money—
how to manage it, get more of it, and
appropriate it. This is largely due to
the full moon of October 29th, but
after the solar eclipse on the 13th,
you’ll see a sudden opportunity to
persuade a higher-up for a raise, or to
work on winning a new professional
position. With Mars in Capricorn, you
could also make gains through a real-
estate venture. On a related note, you
may be attempting to improve your
living situation. It could be a move or
just a change in aesthetic, but in any
case, the 28th will be a wonder day
for advancement. All you’ll do this
month will contribute to the sense of
balance you’re creating, with travel
at the center of this endeavor. The
8th and 9th are dazzling days to get
away, thanks to Venus, your ruler,
in a harmonious angle to Jupiter.
At the eclipse on the 28th, you may
be on the road again, more likely
for career, as you’ll be all business
once Venus moves close to Saturn.
more? For your full astrological forecast from Susan Miller, visit astrologyzone.com. And for your daily horoscope, go to elle.com/horoscopes www. e l l e. c o m 383
THE NEW FACE
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ELLE CHERCHEZ LA FEMME
A
ll it took was one quote from the Bible,
Ezekiel 25:17, to turn a journeyman
actor like Samuel L. Jackson into a
global movie star. The film was 1994’s
Pulp Fiction, and his Jules was a slick hit
man, the kind of antihero we could all
root for. That year, he was nominated for
a Best Supporting Actor Oscar, and from
that point on he seemed to have his pick of
projects. Judging by Jackson’s filmography,
he took them all. The result is a Guinness
Book of World Records entry (he’s the highest-
grossing actor of all time) and a CV rife
with the good (The Avengers), the bad (The
51st State), and the culty (Snakes on a Plane).
For the variety he’s shown on-screen, the
64-year-old actor has kept the home front
remarkably stable: He married his col-
lege sweetheart, actress LaTanya Richard-
son, in 1980, and they’re still at it, having
weathered both his addiction to drugs and
a schedule that requires him to be on loca-
tion nine months out of the year—most re-
cently for Django Unchained, next month’s
revenge fantasy that reteams him with
Quentin Tarantino. Here, Jackson talks
marital strife, his famous work ethic, and,
yes, his days as a cheerleader.
ELLE: You were raised by a single mother
in Chattanooga, Tennessee, but spent a
lot of time with your grandfather. What
did he teach you about women?
SAMUEL L. JACKSON: He told me not to
talk back! [Laughs] There’s only one way
to have an argument—and that’s if two
people are having it.
ELLE: Has a woman ever made you cry?
SLJ: Tons of them.
ELLE: Really?
SLJ: I guess there was one woman
in particular. I had my major adult
heartbreak when I was about 19 or 20
years old. I’d gotten kicked out of school,
and I came to Los Angeles and worked
for the bureau of public assistance. I was
seeing this older woman—she was 33
or 34—and at a certain point she told
me she loved me but she had needs I
couldn’t meet. I couldn’t afford her.
ELLE: She should have waited a few years.
SLJ: I’d drive by her house to see if her
car was there. I stood behind palm trees
in the rain listening to James Taylor sing
“I’ve seen fire and I’ve seen rain.” It was
pathetic. But success is the best revenge.
ELLE: You were a cheerleader in college.
I assume you did this to meet women?
SLJ: Morehouse was an all-male school.
Spelman was all women. For the guy who
was the cheerleader, all of a sudden it was
like, “You’re in charge.” I got to pick the
girls. I got to travel to other historically
black colleges; I was hanging out with the
basketball and football teams, meeting
girls. [Laughs] It wasn’t about school spirit.
ELLE: You and your wife moved to New
York in 1976 and broke into the theater
scene. Did you hope to conquer the world
together?
SLJ: It was an artistically fertile time,
especially for young black actors. In
college, we thought we were going to be
the black Liz Taylor and Richard Burton.
ELLE: She recently told The New York
Times that the secret to a long marriage
was “amnesia.” Why did she say that?
SLJ: Because you need to forget some of
the shit you do to each other. If you’ve
been together as long as we’ve been
together.… We know how to hurt each
other like nobody else can hurt us.
ELLE: You once joked that she “puts
herself on the cross,” complaining that
she sacrificed her career for you and
motherhood. Is that true?
SLJ: If you ask her, it is.
ELLE: You don’t see it that way?
SLJ: No. We moved to California because
she had a TV show, not because I had a
TV show. They shot episodes at CBS in
the Valley. We got a house in Encino so
she could be close to her job. Now, they
only shot three of those motherfuckers.
But once we were in California, shit
broke. And it happened for me. She
constantly says, “Why you and not me?”
ELLE: Ouf. It’s tough for two actors to be
together.
SLJ: It’s not that difficult. I’ve never taken
a job from her! But people haven’t seen
enough of what she can do and how
talented she really is.
ELLE: You’ve been accused of being a
workaholic. People say workaholics don’t
want to be home.
SLJ: No, I like being home. It just so
happens that they don’t make movies in
L.A. I go where the jobs are.
ELLE: You struggled with addiction and
got sober in 1990, just before Jungle Fever.
Did you have to make amends to any
women? Was that part of your process?
SLJ: It is for some people. I never made
amends. I didn’t do the Steps in that way.
I got sober and decided every day not to
have a drink or use a drug. I didn’t need
to go back and clean up everybody’s life
that I had fucked over.
ELLE: You’re a big-time golfer, and you do
an iPhone commercial where you tell Siri
to cancel golf because it’s date night. Do
you schedule date nights?
SLJ: No, but we go to the movies together.
We do things.
ELLE: You’ve played some rounds with
Bill Clinton. Can you understand why
women are so hot for him?
SLJ: Listen, I watched him charm my
wife one night. He’d just had [quadruple-
bypass] surgery and we were at a fundraiser
in Hollywood. She asked him how he
was feeling, and he started explaining the
whole procedure to her and how his life had
changed. And he was holding her hand and
kind of rubbing her upper arm. And she
was mesmerized! As soon as he left, I was
like, “So, you want to go home with him
now or what?” She’s like, “He had me. I was
done. I get it now.” He just rocked her.
ELLE: You two are friends. What did you
say to him?
SLJ: There’s nothing to say! Other than
“Nice to see you.”
SAM’S TOWN
In Hollywood, only one man can build a résumé this long and a marriage that’s
lasted even longer. Samuel L. Jackson teaches Mickey Rapkin a thing or two
J
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