The Liz Smith Column | 07/16/2009 11:00 pm
Liz Smith: Gloria Vanderbilt – Obsessed? Erotic? Happy at Last?
Also from Our Gossip Girl, a note on the other Liz Smith.

Gloria Vanderbilt © Getty Images
"Old age is a shipwreck!" said Charles de Gaulle. Well, not always!
Went down to Diane von Fürstenberg’s big splashy party for the 80-odd-year-old Gloria Vanderbilt’s latest novel, Obsession: An Erotic Tale. There –circulating in a crowd that included Barry Diller, Barbara Walters, Tina Brown, Andre Leon Talley, Harry Evans, Fran Lebowitz, Sheila Nevins and others equally curious – sat Gloria, autographing her books and looking like $10 million. She was as beautiful and serene as she has always been and could easily pass for 40.
Gloria has been in the news since she was a mere child involved in a custody fight between her mother and her aunt. (The Whitneys and the Vanderbilts at their worst and best!)
Then she was the pale, beautiful, glamorous debutante and married a Hollywood agent, Pasquale DiCicco, for a minute. Though Truman Capote wrote years later that on meeting him again, she didn’t remember him – well, we know how Truman loved to stretch the truth.
She then made a much-talked-about marriage to a considerably older famous man, the conductor, Leopold Stokowski. She divorced him finally after two sons and went through her acting and theater phase, going out with Frank Sinatra and eventually marrying the New York movie director Sidney Lumet. At the time, she published poetry of a serene and yet unquiet nature.
At last, she married a young Southern writer named Wyatt Cooper and they had two sons. (How well I recall that marriage! In Wyatt’s Mississippi hometown, the headline over his wedding news read WYATT COOPER MARRIES NEW YORK GIRL. It was the only time he got top billing!)
Gloria embarked on a fashion career and made her mark with blue jeans. She had her ups and downs with trademarks and bad managers who stole from her. Meanwhile, she had lifelong friendships with two other famous women – Oona O’Neill Chaplin and Carol Saroyan Matthau. These loyalties eventually foundered late in life on unfortunate misunderstandings. She embarked on a brief romance with the controversial Hollywood agent, David Begelman.
Now the still-great-looking Gloria, who has literally survived almost everything in a long lifetime (including the death of her son, Carter Cooper) has become a passionate, imaginative and sexy fictionalist. The light of her life, her other son by Wyatt – Anderson Cooper, has made his mark at CNN and is the pride of her very youthful old age.
***
I have written my favorite Gloria Vanderbilt story many times, but I’ll tell it again. When she was involved in theater, she invited an old friend, the Broadway director Burt Shevelove to come see her one afternoon in her Gracie Square apartment with its all-white vinyl living room floor dotted with actual black bear skins.
"It’s so hot, let’s have a banana split!" enthused Gloria, and Burt rose up to take her out for one. But no, she clapped her hands and a butler came. "Bring the banana split things!" said Gloria. And sure enough, soon on a tray arrived split bananas, cherries, three ice creams, sauces and whipped cream. As Gloria talked animatedly to Burt, she put together the splits and, suddenly, from a big spoon, dropped a great dollop of whipped cream into one of the bearskin rugs. "Oh, dear!" said Gloria never looking down at the mess. "Burt, let’s go into the library." Without another word, they rose and left the living room.
Settled in the library, Gloria clapped her hands. The butler came. "Bring the banana split things in here," commanded Gloria with no mention of any mishap or care for having had one.
Burt said later, "It was the most glamorous gesture I ever saw. It was grace and grandeur in action. I never got over it. What a woman!"
Mr. Shevelove has gone to his heavenly reward. I wonder what he would think of Gloria’s octogenarian, freewheeling approach to a sex novel. Never mind. She is keeping on keeping on and that’s what really matters. And the book? Let’s just say it will put hair on your chest!
Went down to Diane von Fürstenberg’s big splashy party for the 80-odd-year-old Gloria Vanderbilt’s latest novel, Obsession: An Erotic Tale. There –circulating in a crowd that included Barry Diller, Barbara Walters, Tina Brown, Andre Leon Talley, Harry Evans, Fran Lebowitz, Sheila Nevins and others equally curious – sat Gloria, autographing her books and looking like $10 million. She was as beautiful and serene as she has always been and could easily pass for 40.
Gloria has been in the news since she was a mere child involved in a custody fight between her mother and her aunt. (The Whitneys and the Vanderbilts at their worst and best!)
Then she was the pale, beautiful, glamorous debutante and married a Hollywood agent, Pasquale DiCicco, for a minute. Though Truman Capote wrote years later that on meeting him again, she didn’t remember him – well, we know how Truman loved to stretch the truth.
She then made a much-talked-about marriage to a considerably older famous man, the conductor, Leopold Stokowski. She divorced him finally after two sons and went through her acting and theater phase, going out with Frank Sinatra and eventually marrying the New York movie director Sidney Lumet. At the time, she published poetry of a serene and yet unquiet nature.
At last, she married a young Southern writer named Wyatt Cooper and they had two sons. (How well I recall that marriage! In Wyatt’s Mississippi hometown, the headline over his wedding news read WYATT COOPER MARRIES NEW YORK GIRL. It was the only time he got top billing!)
Gloria embarked on a fashion career and made her mark with blue jeans. She had her ups and downs with trademarks and bad managers who stole from her. Meanwhile, she had lifelong friendships with two other famous women – Oona O’Neill Chaplin and Carol Saroyan Matthau. These loyalties eventually foundered late in life on unfortunate misunderstandings. She embarked on a brief romance with the controversial Hollywood agent, David Begelman.
Now the still-great-looking Gloria, who has literally survived almost everything in a long lifetime (including the death of her son, Carter Cooper) has become a passionate, imaginative and sexy fictionalist. The light of her life, her other son by Wyatt – Anderson Cooper, has made his mark at CNN and is the pride of her very youthful old age.
***
I have written my favorite Gloria Vanderbilt story many times, but I’ll tell it again. When she was involved in theater, she invited an old friend, the Broadway director Burt Shevelove to come see her one afternoon in her Gracie Square apartment with its all-white vinyl living room floor dotted with actual black bear skins.
"It’s so hot, let’s have a banana split!" enthused Gloria, and Burt rose up to take her out for one. But no, she clapped her hands and a butler came. "Bring the banana split things!" said Gloria. And sure enough, soon on a tray arrived split bananas, cherries, three ice creams, sauces and whipped cream. As Gloria talked animatedly to Burt, she put together the splits and, suddenly, from a big spoon, dropped a great dollop of whipped cream into one of the bearskin rugs. "Oh, dear!" said Gloria never looking down at the mess. "Burt, let’s go into the library." Without another word, they rose and left the living room.
Settled in the library, Gloria clapped her hands. The butler came. "Bring the banana split things in here," commanded Gloria with no mention of any mishap or care for having had one.
Burt said later, "It was the most glamorous gesture I ever saw. It was grace and grandeur in action. I never got over it. What a woman!"
Mr. Shevelove has gone to his heavenly reward. I wonder what he would think of Gloria’s octogenarian, freewheeling approach to a sex novel. Never mind. She is keeping on keeping on and that’s what really matters. And the book? Let’s just say it will put hair on your chest!
Read more about: Anderson Cooper, Andre Leon Talley, Barbara Walters, Barry Diller, BBC, Books, Burt Shevelove, Carol Saroyan Matthau, Carter Cooper, Celebrities, Charles de Gaulle, David Begelman, Diane von Furstenberg, Elizabeth Taylor, Fran Lebowitz, Frank Sinatra, Gloria Vanderbilt, Gossip, Harry Evans, Leopold Stokowski, Liz Smith, Marriage, Meryl Streep, News, Oona O’Neill Chaplin, Pasquale DiCicco, Relationships, Sheila Nevins, Sidney Lumet, The Liz Smith Column, Tina Brown, Truman Capote
























35 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Gloria Vanderbilt looks great!
Why is there no mention of Bobby Short (Vocalist/Pianist)? Bobby Short was the headliner at the Carlyle for years. Bobby Short and Gloria Vanderbilt had a steamy romance for a number of years! … Suddenly he’s completely shoved under the rug! … Why? For a period of time they were the news, seen everywhere together. Were they just friends socializing and she was a beard for him? I hope it’s not the same old scenario. Mama loves eating chocolate yet denies even eating one piece.
she was with him for a long time if i recall!
Correction. Bobby Short was gay. Gloria and Bobby were good friends. Perhaps you are confusing Short with famed African American photographer Gordon Parks who were involved romantically for many years. Short was never shoved under the rug. He was a classy, private guy, and close friend of GV, but he was totally gay. Where you get your disinformation from would be interesting. I knew Short for over 40 years.
Gloria SHOULD look fabulous.
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Hedda Hopper
Hilarious response and great avatar!
As we all know [except you] is that money does not equate with taste, style, looks, or talent.
These are innate. Money cannot give anyone these qualities.
de Gaulle also said. "Treaties are a lot like roses and pretty young girls; they last while they last."
The dollop of whipped cream on the rug and the clapping for a servant says a lot about this woman who once had a picture of Little Orphan Annie on the white wall of her studio foyer with whom she said she identified. Gloria’s life long struggle with a "sense of belonging" had this to say:
I think that strength of belief comes from knowing and understanding yourself and your uniqueness. I always felt incomplete because I sensed my mother felt incomplete. She felt incomplete because her mother felt incomplete, and so on. That chain of dissatisfaction is endless. 1979
And I can’t help wondering how long it took before that servant who appeared on a clap discovered the dollop on the carpet.
Liz - is there a GOOD book about Gloria Vanderbilt’s life?
I love how she just keeps "doing". All the different phases of her life. Very interesting….