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Arts & Entertainment

Fashion Journalist And Icon André Leon Talley Has Died At 73

A close-up of Andre Leon Talley with a vibrant outfit holding a microphone. He has a wide smile and is looking off to the side.
Andre Leon Talley attends "The Gospel According To Andre" premiere and Q&A at BMCC Tribeca PAC on April 25, 2018 in New York City.
(
Roy Rochlin
/
Getty Images for Tribeca Film Festival
)

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Fashion journalist and icon André Leon Talley died at a hospital in White Plains, New York, Tuesday. He was 73.

For decades, he was the larger-than-life creative director and editor-at-large of Vogue magazine, considered the fashion bible.

At 6' 6", Talley held court in the world of high fashion. Wearing dapper bespoke suits, robes, capes and caftans, he was regal presence. "You can be aristocratic without having been born into an aristocratic family," he would say.

In his memoir The Chiffon Trenches, released in May 2020, Talley wrote about being raised by his grandmother in segregated Durham, North Carolina. He said going to church with her sparked his passion for fashion.

"I saw style in church," he told NPR's Karen Grigsby Bates that same month. "I saw style in my grandmother's sisters. They were all beautifully dressed. Church was the nucleus of our lives church. Church-going was pivotal to our existence."

He also told NPR that when he was young, he was abused by at least one man in his neighborhood. "I did not want to tell my grandmother because I knew, whatever it was, it was very dark, it was wrong — but that I would be blamed for it," he said. "And the other person, the perpetrators, would not."

Talley kept quiet about that, and went on with his studies. He majored in French literature at North Carolina Central University, then earned a masters' degree from Brown. After grad school, he headed to New York to apprentice at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. With a letter of introduction from a classmate's father, he met the legendary fashion editor Diana Vreeland. She then introduced Talley to Andy Warhol, and that's how be began working for Interview Magazine. He also worked at W, The New York Times and Women's Wear Daily, where he was its Paris bureau chief.

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That was before his long reign at Vogue. Talley's final official Instagram post noted he'd been a close confident to other fashion icons: Yves Saint Laurent, Karl Lagerfeld, Paloma Picasso, Diane von Furstenberg, who wrote a social media tribute: "Goodbye darling André. No one saw the world in a more glamorous way than you did. No one was grander and more soulful than you were. The world will be less joyful. I have loved you and laughed with you for 45 years... I miss your loud screams... I love you soooo much."

Talley was also a major figure in the LGBTQ+ community, but something of a unicorn in the fashion industry. He told NPR his presence confounded some: "I was smart, and I showed it," he said. "It goes back to when people can't figure out who you are and are afraid of you — and as you boldly, with confidence, show who you are to the world, certain people just have the fear of seeing someone tall and Black suddenly come on the surface."

Talley said he endured racial slurs, but he held his head high. "You don't make a loud noise. You don't scream. You don't get up and say, look: Hey, I'm loud. I'm black, and I'm proud. You just do it. And then it's recognized, and somehow it impacts the culture."

His impact was felt at Met galas, where he was a red carpet correspondent, and on America's Next Top Model, where he was a judge. His impact was felt at Vogue, where he wrote about Michelle Obama and the first Black photographer to shoot a Vogue cover. Talley's impact was also felt on the fashion runways, where he pushed to include more Black designers and models.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit npr.org.

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