Grace

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Grace Page 25

by Grace Coddington


  I never had an actual birthday party when I was a child. As with any other social happening, it was the sort of thing that made me far too nervous. Sure, there would be cake and a few presents, but a noisy gathering of friends and balloons? That just couldn’t happen. Whatever anxieties I felt at seven, however, were magnified tenfold when I reached seventy and people started to mention the possibility of a large-scale birthday celebration.

  As the day approached in the spring of 2011, Anna said, “Your big birthday is coming up, and I’m going to give you a party. Have it where you like and however many people you like.” (Funny how she likes celebrating other people’s birthdays but ignores her own.) Twenty years had come and gone since she had organized my fiftieth at the restaurant Indochine during our early days at Vogue, when we could laugh about retiring together.

  Anna approached Didier and said she would like to host the party with him, possibly because she knew it was the only guaranteed way of getting him to show up. I designed the menu, the cake, and the invitation, the cover of which was a cartoon-like pen drawing of Anna wearing Prada and Didier wearing a suit. I was compelled to add some sketches of our cats dressed in their party finest, with Bart in a suit like Didier’s and Pumpkin wearing Balenciaga. Which, coincidentally, turned out to be the same dress Anna wore to the festivities.

  At the office Anna said she hoped I didn’t mind, but I would have to celebrate my birthday a week early because she didn’t want my event to clash with that of the annual Costume Institute gala at the Met. She didn’t want there to be “two big parties back to back.” I agreed, of course. But I started to get anxious. Exactly how big was she expecting my party to be?

  Everyone kept suggesting very new restaurants. Some might not have been new enough, because Anna likes nothing more than to take over a place that hasn’t opened yet. But finally, just as it had years before, it came down to Indochine. The restaurant was experiencing a big revival and the food was great.

  The party was a roaring success. Everyone came, including Condé Nast’s proprietor, S. I. Newhouse; Carey Mulligan, an actress I adore; Helmut Lang, who rarely leaves his home on Long Island; my old boss Calvin Klein; Seth Meyers, who had made me laugh so much on a shoot once that my sides ached; Arthur Elgort; Bruce Weber; Craig McDean; tons of designers from New York and Europe; all my favorite models; everyone from the fashion and art departments; and ten of my former assistants from British and American Vogue. I was so overwhelmed, it all went kind of blurry, as it does every time I’m the center of attention.

  Hamish Bowles and the model-turned-singer Karen Elson sang “Happy Birthday.” Bruce, Marc Jacobs, Didier, and Jessica Diehl (one of my ex-assistants) all said a kind word. Didier made some drily amusing comments about me, telling everyone, “It took a long time for me to be acknowledged by her.” And “Grace is always right, as her many friends and assistants will attest.”

  Naturally, Anna made a speech. “Grace,” she jokingly began, “this is going to be your favorite part of the evening, when we all get to talk about you.” Then she continued, “To me you will always be the heart and soul of the magazine, its guardian at the gate, its beacon of excellence. For about as long as I have edited Vogue, one person, Grace Coddington, has made me excited to come into the office every day.…”

  Menu, invitation, and place cards for my seventieth birthday party, 2011

  I was speechless. This from a woman who normally never pays you a compliment to your face! How could I possibly respond? I could click my heels in the air or turn cartwheels, but my regular sessions of Pilates were not quite that effective. I could laugh and cry at the thought that so many painstaking years of toil were held in such esteem. I could shimmy across the dance floor knowing I still had some life in me yet.

  While these thoughts were running through my head, I looked at the many photographers, hairstylists, makeup artists, art directors, fellow editors, and ex-assistants around me, and realized I don’t really have a single friend who isn’t in the business. Which is perfectly fine by me.

  So am I still that completely fascinated by fashion? In many ways, yes. Having worked in it for over fifty years, I gratefully accept that my world has expanded with time, not contracted. Fashion has opened up many opportunities for me beyond the printed page, and the future is alive with diverse possibilities: illustrations (I had so much fun drawing the pages for this book); a chance to make an animated feature based on my cat sketches; directing a series of documentaries (and yes, it most likely would be about fashion.)

  Whatever it is, I would hope my work will always be created with the personal touch that several modern aspects of being a fashion editor no longer afford me. For instance, I was recently involved in a photo shoot where the subject was to be replaced by a stand-in. Only the real subject’s head would be featured, grafted onto the stand-in’s shoulders thanks to the science-fiction wonders of Photoshop. Unbelievably shocking.

  But I’ve grown to realize that life doesn’t stand still and it’s no good being sad about it. For me, one of the most important aspects of my work is to give people something to dream about, just as I used to dream all those years ago as a child looking at beautiful photographs. I still weave dreams, finding inspiration wherever I can and looking for romance in the real, not the digital, world.

  All I know is that if I continue in fashion, no matter what, my head will always remain firmly attached to my body.

  SELECTED WORK

  BRITISH VOGUE

  1968—1987

  1. Norman Parkinson, 1973

  2. Norman Parkinson, 1973

  3. Norman Parkinson, 1971

  4. Norman Parkinson, 1971

  5. Guy Bourdin, 1972

  6. Guy Bourdin, 1975

  7. Guy Bourdin, 1971

  8. Guy Bourdin, 1977

  9. Helmut Newton, 1974

  10. Helmut Newton, 1974

  11. Helmut Newton, 1973

  12. Helmut Newton, 1973

  13. Alex Chatelain, 1979

  14. Alex Chatelain, 1979

  15. Barry Lategan, 1983

  16. Barry Lategan, 1983

  17. Bruce Weber, 1984

  18. Bruce Weber, 1984

  19. Bruce Weber, 1981

  20. Bruce Weber, 1981

  AMERICAN VOGUE

  1988—2012

  21. Arthur Elgort, 1991

  22. Arthur Elgort, 1995

  23. Arthur Elgort, 2001

  24. Arthur Elgort, 1995

  25. Steven Meisel, 1992

  26. Steven Meisel, 1992

  27. Steven Meisel, 1993

  28. Steven Meisel, 2009

  29. Ellen von Unwerth, 1992

  30. Ellen von Unwerth, 1994

  31. Ellen von Unwerth, 1990

  32. Ellen von Unwerth, 1993

  33. Peter Lindbergh, 1991

  34. Peter Lindbergh, 2011

  35. Peter Lindbergh, 2010

  36. Peter Lindbergh, 2011

  37. Annie Leibovitz, 2003

  38. Annie Leibovitz, 2003

  39. Annie Leibovitz, 2005

  40. Annie Leibovitz, 2005

  41. Annie Leibovitz, 2001

  42. Annie Leibovitz, 1999

  43. Annie Leibovitz, 2009

  44. Annie Leibovitz, 2010

  45. Bruce Weber, 1989

  46. Bruce Weber, 1989

  47. Bruce Weber, 1990

  48. Bruce Weber, 1991

  49. Mario Testino, 1997

  50. Mario Testino, 1998

  51. Mario Testino, 2007

  52. Mario Testino, 2009

  53. Steven Klein, 2003

  54. Steven Klein, 2003

  55. Steven Klein, 2003

  56. Steven Klein, 2003

  57. Mert & Marcus, 2009

  58. Mert & Marcus, 2009

  59. Mert & Marcus, 2010

  60. Mert & Marcus, 2010

  61. David Sims, 2010

  62. David Sims, 2011

  63. David Sims, 2007

  64.
David Sims, 2010

  65. Craig McDean, 2007

  66. Craig McDean, 2002

  67. Craig McDean, 2012

  68. Craig McDean, 2012

  INFORMATION

  BRITISH VOGUE

  Norman Parkinson

  1. Barbados 1973, Apollonia van Ravenstein

  2. Barbados 1973, Apollonia van Ravenstein

  3. Seychelles 1971, Apollonia van Ravenstein

  4. Seychelles 1971, Apollonia van Ravenstein

  © Norman Parkinson Limited/courtesy Norman Parkinson Archive

  Guy Bourdin

  5. Paris, 1972, Aija. Hair: Didier Malige

  6. Normandie, 1975, Carrie Nygren, Kathy Quirk

  6a. Normandie, 1975, Carrie Nygren, Kathy Quirk, with Grace Coddington

  7. London, 1971, Sue Baloo. Hair: Oliver Bond

  8. France 1977, Kathy Quirk, Audrey, Carrie Nygren. Hair: Valentin. Makeup: Heidi Morawetz

  Helmut Newton

  9. France, 1974, Kathy Quirk with Julie Kavanagh. Hair: Bruce Libre

  10. France, 1974, Kathy Quirk. Hair: Bruce Libre

  11. France, 1973, Danielle Poe and models, with Grace Coddington. Hair: Jean Louis David

  12. France, 1973, Danielle Poe and models, with Grace Coddington. Hair: Jean Louis David

  Alex Chatelain

  13. China, 1979, Esmé. Hair: Kerry Warn

  14. China, 1979, Esmé. Hair: Kerry Warn

  Barry Lategan

  15. Venice, 1983, Elisabetta Ramella. Hair: Didier Malige

  16. Venice, 1983, Elisabetta Ramella. Hair: Didier Malige

  Bruce Weber

  17. England, 1984, Victoria Lockwood. Hair: Didier Malige

  18. England, 1984, Victoria Lockwood. Hair: Didier Malige

  19. New Mexico, 1981, Jon Wiedemann, Sloane Condren. Hair: Howard Fugler

  20. New Mexico, 1981, Jon Wiedemann, Sloane Condren. Hair: Howard Fugler

  Courtesy of Vogue © The Condé Nast Publications Ltd

  Arthur Elgort

  21. Scottland, 1991, Linda Evangelista. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Sonia Kashuk

  22. Long Island, 1995, Stella Tennant. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Sonia Kashuk

  23. California, 2001, Stella Tennant. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  24. England, 1995, Donovan Leitch and Kirsty Hume. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Mary Greenwell

  Steven Meisel

  25. Paris, 1992, Linda Evangelista, Kristen McMenamy. Hair: Garren. Makeup: François Nars

  26. USA, 1992, Kristen McMenamy, Nadja Auermann. Hair: Garren. Makeup: Denise Markey

  27. Paris, 1993, Jean Paul Gaultier Group: Nadja Auermann, Daniel Baylock, Nadege, Amber Valletta, Kristen McMenamy, Linda Evangelista, David Boals, Shalom Harlow, Naomi Campbell, Jay Littlewood, Christy Turlington. Hair: Orlando Pita. Makeup: Denise Markey

  28. New York, 2009, Models: Sasha Pivaverova, Karen Elson. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Pat McGrath

  Ellen von Unwerth

  29. Morocco, 1992, Nadja Auermann. Hair: Oribe. Makeup: Laurie Starrett

  30. Jamaica, 1994, Debbie Deitering with Rebecca Forteau. Hair: Peter Savic. Makeup: Laurie Starrett

  31. France, 1990, Christy Turlington with Stéphane Ferrara. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Laurie Starrett

  32. USA, 1993, Christy Turlington, Jaime Rishar, Keith Martin. Hair: Peter Savic

  Peter Lindbergh

  33. Brooklyn, 1991, Helena Christensen, Stephanie Seymour, Karen Mulder, Naomi Campbell, Claudia Schiffer, Cindy Crawford. Hair: Odile Gilbert. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  34. Palmdale, 2011, Daria Werbowy with David Strathairn. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  35. Long Island, 2010, Natalia Vodianova with Ewan McGregor. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  36. Los Angeles, 2011, Lara Stone with Alexander Skarsgård. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  Annie Leibovitz

  37. France, 2003, Natalia Vodianova with Stephen Jones and Christian Lacroix. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  38. France, 2003, Natalia Vodianova with Viktor Horsting and Rolf Snoeren. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  39. USA, 2005, Keira Knightley with Brice Marden. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  40. USA, 2005, Keira Knightley with John Currin. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  41. Paris, 2001, Stella Tennant, Jacquetta Wheeler, with Ben Stiller. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  42. Paris, 1999, Kate Moss with Diddy. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Diane Kendal

  43. New York, 2009, Lily Cole with Andrew Garfield, Lady Gaga. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  44. Nashville, 2010, Karen Elson with Mark Watrous, Jackson Smith, Rachelle Garniez, Olivia Jean, and Marc Fellis. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  Bruce Weber

  45. USA, 1989, Naomi Campbell with Mike Tyson and Don King. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Francois Nars

  46. USA, 1989, Naomi Campbell with Mike Tyson. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Francois Nars

  47. USA 1990, B.B. King, Nadege. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Bonnie Maller

  48. Bellport, N.Y., 1991, Beverly Peele with Another Bad Creation. Hair: Didier Malige. Makeup: Denise Markey

  Mario Testino

  49. Italy, 1998, Gisele Bündchen, Fernanda Tavares, Frankie Rayder. Hair: Marc Lopez. Makeup: Kay Montano

  50. Rio de Janeiro, 1997, Amber Valletta. Hair: Orlando Pita. Makeup: Tom Pecheux

  51. New York, 2007, Daria Werbowy with George Condo. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  52. New York, 2009, Daria Werbowy with Jimmy Fallon. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Linda Cantello

  Steven Klein

  53. New York, 2003, Liya Kebede, Natalia Vodianova, Elise Crombez, Eugenia Volodina. Hair: Orlando Pita. Makeup: Polly Osmond

  54. New York, 2003, Liya Kebede and Natalia Vodianova. Hair: Orlando Pita. Makeup: Polly Osmond

  55. New York, 2003, Natalia Vodianova with Justin Portman. Hair: Luigi Murenu. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  56. New York, 2003, Natalia Vodianova with her son Lucas. Hair: Luigi Murenu. Makeup: Gucci Westman

  Mert & Marcus

  57. England, 2009, Natalia Vodianova. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Charlotte Tilbury

  58. England, 2009, Natalia Vodianova. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Charlotte Tilbury

  59. New Jersey, 2010, Lara Stone. Hair: Luigi Murenu. Makeup: Lucia Peroni

  60. New Jersey, 2010, Lara Stone. Hair: Luigi Murenu. Makeup: Lucia Peroni

  David Sims

  61. Cornwall, 2010, Stella Tennant. Hair: Guido. Makeup: Diane Kendal

  62. Cornwall, 2011, Arizona Muse with Jeremy Irvine. Hair: Guido. Makeup: Diane Kendal

  63. Paris, 2007, Raquel Zimmermann. Hair: Guido. Makeup: Peter Philips

  64. Jamaica, 2010, Daria Werbowy. Hair: Guido. Makeup: Diane Kendal

  Craig McDean

  65. New York, 2007, Raquel Zimmermann. Hair: Eugene Souleiman. Makeup: Peter Philips

  66. Paris, 2002, Maggie Rizer. Hair: Luigi Murenu. Makeup: Diane Kendal

  67. Toulon, 2012, Natalia Vodianova. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  68. Toulon, 2012, Natalia Vodianova with Michael Fassbender. Hair: Julien d’Ys. Makeup: Stephane Marais

  Courtesy of Vogue © The Condé Nast Publications Ltd

  Still lifes of magazine spreads by Tim Hout

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Given that I’ve barely read two books in my life that aren’t picture books, no one is more surprised than me that I have produced a memoir. For that, I owe a debt to R. J. Cutler for getting anyone intrigued enough in me to read it because of his film The September Issue, and to my publishers, Susan Kamil and Clara Farmer, for the leap of faith they made in commissioning it. After listening to me for so many years, my former assistant Tina Chai convinced me that I have had a life worth talking about, and pushed me to go forward. I thank her for her
friendship and encouragement—and also for being my companion to all the movies that have given me so much inspiration.

 

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