The Liz Smith Column | 08/31/2009 11:00 pm
Liz Smith: Understanding Anna Wintour – She's Really Not the 'Devil'
Also, wOw celebrates Joan Juliet Buck … and Our Gossip Girl was there

Anna Wintour © Getty Images
"All charming people have something to conceal, usually their total dependence on the appreciation of others," wrote Cyril Connolly.
***
Well, I wasn’t going to say more about the R. J. Cutler documentary "The September Issue," but I have to go back on my word to myself. I saw this documentary and think it’s a work of modern art. The film about the inner workings of Vogue magazine is beautiful and dazzling, just as high fashion is. You are sorry when it ends for what it shows you about haute couture, editorial decisions at the top and the army of talents that it takes to put a magazine "up on the wall in storyboards" and then bring it to the public. It’s like a war and it’s quite amazing.
This is what I learned watching this dynamic film. Anna Wintour does not come off as an ogre, at least not in my view. But the film sometimes stuns one as it shows Anna’s comprehension of herself as – not the devil who wears Prada – but an engaged, mystifying, uncertain woman who acts all too certain in her job. She smiles, she laughs and she is much more charming and engaging than her usual public appearances. She is especially interesting discussing how her very bright, well-connected siblings view her job. The camera catches Anna with wrinkles, lines and sags, but she remains quite appealing here. She is more real than when encountered in real life.
The famed $50,000 photo shoot that Anna turns down seemed to me to have been a mistake. I found it ravishingly beautiful. And so the real hero of "The September Issue" is Grace Coddington, a fashion veteran with flaming and irrepressible red hair who speaks her mind, tells the truth and urges the viewer to join in her intellectual and cultural rebellion. She emerges as "the" personality of the film; and of Vogue. There are others – André Leon Talley, a huge endearing presence, trying to play tennis and lose weight by Anna Wintour’s direction. Anna’s daughter, Bee Shaffer, is beautiful, frank, outspoken without being outlandish and shows remarkable common sense in a somewhat nonsensical world.
I was sorry when "The September Issue" came to an end. I watched it like a snake watches a bird. It’s simply irresistible. Mr. R. J. Cutler has made his documentary high water mark!
***
Went to a "mah-velous party" as Noel Coward once opined. This was a lunch at the male-dominated Four Seasons Grill hosted by Joni Evans, the petite and powerful CEO of wowOwow.com. This gathering was in honor of Women on the Web’s cohort – the excellent Joan Juliet Buck.

Joan Juliet Buck/Image: © Robin Platzer, Twin Images
We were saluting Joan for her splendid all-too-brief appearance in the Nora Ephron movie "Julie and Julia," wherein she plays the hard-hearted French woman who runs the Cordon Bleu in Paris and tells Julia Child that she’ll never make it. Joan just happens to actually be French, so when screenwriter-director Nora was casting the Meryl Streep-Amy Adams movie, she thought of her longtime acquaintance, Joan, and called her in to audition.
Nora prefaced this with very few words. She sent Joan Buck a message asking, "Can you act?" Joan smartly answered, "Yes, I can." The rest was history. As Nora tells it, Joan read for three separate parts. In the first she has one line in French, in the second a few more uttered wisdoms á la Francais, and then they just up and gave her the role of the villainous and very mean enemy of Julia Child. It worked so beautifully that Joan Buck is off to the Deauville Film Festival now to represent "Julie and Julia." And in the meantime, she has been to Venezuela to act in another film.
***
Well, I wasn’t going to say more about the R. J. Cutler documentary "The September Issue," but I have to go back on my word to myself. I saw this documentary and think it’s a work of modern art. The film about the inner workings of Vogue magazine is beautiful and dazzling, just as high fashion is. You are sorry when it ends for what it shows you about haute couture, editorial decisions at the top and the army of talents that it takes to put a magazine "up on the wall in storyboards" and then bring it to the public. It’s like a war and it’s quite amazing.
This is what I learned watching this dynamic film. Anna Wintour does not come off as an ogre, at least not in my view. But the film sometimes stuns one as it shows Anna’s comprehension of herself as – not the devil who wears Prada – but an engaged, mystifying, uncertain woman who acts all too certain in her job. She smiles, she laughs and she is much more charming and engaging than her usual public appearances. She is especially interesting discussing how her very bright, well-connected siblings view her job. The camera catches Anna with wrinkles, lines and sags, but she remains quite appealing here. She is more real than when encountered in real life.
The famed $50,000 photo shoot that Anna turns down seemed to me to have been a mistake. I found it ravishingly beautiful. And so the real hero of "The September Issue" is Grace Coddington, a fashion veteran with flaming and irrepressible red hair who speaks her mind, tells the truth and urges the viewer to join in her intellectual and cultural rebellion. She emerges as "the" personality of the film; and of Vogue. There are others – André Leon Talley, a huge endearing presence, trying to play tennis and lose weight by Anna Wintour’s direction. Anna’s daughter, Bee Shaffer, is beautiful, frank, outspoken without being outlandish and shows remarkable common sense in a somewhat nonsensical world.
I was sorry when "The September Issue" came to an end. I watched it like a snake watches a bird. It’s simply irresistible. Mr. R. J. Cutler has made his documentary high water mark!
***
Went to a "mah-velous party" as Noel Coward once opined. This was a lunch at the male-dominated Four Seasons Grill hosted by Joni Evans, the petite and powerful CEO of wowOwow.com. This gathering was in honor of Women on the Web’s cohort – the excellent Joan Juliet Buck.

Joan Juliet Buck/Image: © Robin Platzer, Twin Images
We were saluting Joan for her splendid all-too-brief appearance in the Nora Ephron movie "Julie and Julia," wherein she plays the hard-hearted French woman who runs the Cordon Bleu in Paris and tells Julia Child that she’ll never make it. Joan just happens to actually be French, so when screenwriter-director Nora was casting the Meryl Streep-Amy Adams movie, she thought of her longtime acquaintance, Joan, and called her in to audition.
Nora prefaced this with very few words. She sent Joan Buck a message asking, "Can you act?" Joan smartly answered, "Yes, I can." The rest was history. As Nora tells it, Joan read for three separate parts. In the first she has one line in French, in the second a few more uttered wisdoms á la Francais, and then they just up and gave her the role of the villainous and very mean enemy of Julia Child. It worked so beautifully that Joan Buck is off to the Deauville Film Festival now to represent "Julie and Julia." And in the meantime, she has been to Venezuela to act in another film.
Read more about: Amy Adams, Anna Wintour, Bee Shaffer, Celebrities, Cynthia McFadden, Cyril Connolly, Four Seasons, Gossip, Grace Coddington, Joan Juliet Buck, Joni Evans, Julia Child, Julia Reed, Julie & Julia, Lesley Stahl, Liz Smith, Love, Loss and What I Wore, Marie Brenner, Meryl Streep, News, Noel Coward, Nora Ephron, R. J. Cutler, Sheila Nevins, The Liz Smith Column, The September Issue, Vogue
























10 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment
Cookbooks ‘gobbled up’, oh, Liz. You’re the best.
peace and grace
My only problem with Anna Wintour is a past issue of Hello! Canada in which she really dissed the Late Diana, Princess of Wales by saying that at last Prince Charles had found his soulmate in Camilla, Duchess of York of whatever she’s the Duchess of.
Prince Charles and Princess Diana, was a marriage of necessity and convenience because of his age and his mother, whom he calls the Queen, felt it was time he got married. His real love was Camilla Parker-Bowles, married at the time just as Prince Charles was and she got involved with Prince Charles while being married and so did Charles and Princess Diana would often refer to Camilla as the "third party" in their marriage and I thought Prince Charles a total jerk for cheating on her and wondered if the Queen even knew about it.
Anna Wintour thinks Camilla Parker-Bowles is absolutely wonderful for Prince Charles and if that’s how she feels, so be it. But, in writing her piece for Hello! Canada, she gave the clear impression that the Princess of Wales was all wrong for him and during an interview at Buckingham Castle, the interviewer ask Prince Charles about love and he answered basically, what is love? She was in love with Charles, but he definitely wasn’t in love with Diana Spencer she got a raw deal in her marriage. Princess of Wales, and…how much! she suffered being married to Prince Charles. That is why I have no time for Anna Wintour despite glowing reports of how nice she is even though she runs her magazine with an iron fist.