Beloved ‘Vogue’ editor-at-large and style afficionado Andre Leon Talley has died at 73. Here are 5 things to know about the trailblazer in the fashion industry.
Andre Leon Talley, a beloved figure in the fashion world has reportedly died at age 73, according to TMZ. The former creative director for Vogue, judge on America’s Next Top Model, and singular voice in fashion was a true force to be reckoned with in the industry, pushing boundaries and always bringing a certain joie de vivre to his work.
Here we break down five things to know about the so-called “godfather” of fashion who inspired many and paved the way for people of color in the fashion industry.
He Grew Up in Jim Crow South
Andre was born on October 16, 1948 in Washington, D.C. and was raised by his grandmother, Binnie Francis Davis, who worked as a cleaning lady at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. In his memoir, The Chiffon Trenches, Andre detailed his difficulties growing up within that context, considering his large size (he was 6’6″) as a black man and his penchant for luxury fashion.
In the documentary The Gospel According to Andre, the writer describes his life growing up as a tall, gay black man in the south and how he was taunted and even got rocks thrown at him. He didn’t let those setbacks, however, hold him back from his big dreams. “I had to move on,” he stated in the documentary. “I had to get on with my career.”
He Ran With the Studio 54 Crowd
Andre Leon Talley gets stylish in the front row (Kristin Callahan/Shutterstock).Through connections he made as a student at North Carolina Central University and Brown University (where he earned a B.A. and M.A. in French Literature, respectively), Andre came to New York City in the early ’70s and fell into the glowing hot center of Manhattan glamour and art. He first apprenticed for former Vogue editor-in-chief Diana Vreeland who then served as a Special Consultant for the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Diana was so impressed with her new apprentice’s skills she then connected him to Andy Warhol, granting him a job at Interview magazine. From there, the style obsessive went on to work for Women’s Wear Daily, further utilizing his French skills by becoming the publication’s Paris bureau chief.
Due to his involvement with those circles, Andre indulged in the golden age of Manhattan nightlife, frequenting the over-the-top parties at Studio 54 during the late ’70s with Warhol, Vreeland, and other staples like designers Diane Von Furstenberg, Halston, and Karl Lagerfeld, singers Diana Ross and Grace Jones, and more.
He Was a Singular Voice at ‘Vogue’ Magazine
Anna Wintour and Andre Leon Talley sit front row at a fashion show (Matt Baron/BEI/Shutterstock).After working for Interview, WWD, W magazine, and The New York Times, Andre transitioned to Vogue magazine, first working as Fashion News Director from 1983 to 1987 and Creative Director from 1988 to 1995. There he established a close relationship to editor-in-chief Anna Wintour. Although he moved on to working with W in 1995, he did return to Vogue as a contributing editor and then editor-at-large, writing columns that brought a different vision and charismatic voice to the forefront.
“What moves him is that idea [of] just do it, think it, wear it — there is not hesitation,” designer Marc Jacobs stated of Andre and his living-out-loud ethos which undoubtedly influenced the magazine’s outlook on fashion.
He Served as an Advisor to Michelle Obama
Much like his mentor Diana Vreeland, who advised First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Andre served as an advisor to the Obama family on fashion in 2008. He was famous for introducing Michelle Obama to Taiwanese-Canadian designer Jason Wu, from whom she bought many dresses — including the one she for the inauguration.
Moreover, although he leaned politically liberal, he still live-blogged the Trump inauguration with New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, writing commentary on First Lady Melania Trump‘s fashion which he praised.
He Was a Trailblazer in the Fashion World
“As an African American man born in the United States of America, it was important for me to show the building blocks of my story, from my childhood to today,” Andre told TIME in May 2020, after the release of his memoir The Chiffon Trenches. “It’s simply a part of the fabric of society in America. Racism is always there, boiling on the front burners, evidenced during this pandemic in the terrible tragedy of Ahmaud Arbery, shot in Georgia in daylight.
The journalist was most certainly shaped by his Southern background and experiences in the industry where he dealt with racism, but never let that defeat his relentless pursuit of his dreams. “You don’t get up and say, ‘I’m black and I’m proud,’ you just do it and somehow it impacts the culture,” Andre stated in the documentary The Gospel According to Andre.