Andre Leon Talley: Former Vogue creative director dies aged 73

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Andre Leon Talley with Naomi Campbell in 2006Image source, Reuters
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Andre Leon Talley with model Naomi Campbell in 2006

Vogue's former creative director and editor-at-large Andre Leon Talley has died at the age of 73.

The fashion journalist, whose career spanned five decades, died on Tuesday in New York, his representatives said.

A statement on his Instagram page confirmed his death "with great sadness" and described Talley as a "larger-than-life" figure.

Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour remembered him fondly as "magnificent and erudite and wickedly funny".

In a statement shared by the magazine, external, she said Talley, who was also a judge on TV show a judge on America's Next Top Model, had "inspired" generations of people to work in the fashion industry.

She signed off by calling him a "brilliant and compassionate man who was a generous and loving friend to me and to my family for many, many years".

Other fashion figures, including designers and models, have also paid tribute.

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US designer Marc Jacobs said he was "in shock" over the news. "You championed me and you have been my friend since my beginning," he posted online.

"You and your passions were larger than life."

Belgian designer Diane von Furstenberg said no-one was "grander and more soulful", adding: "The world will be less joyful."

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Andre Leon Talley has been described as having been "larger than life"

Actress and supermodel Milla Jovovich described Talley as, external a "force of nature".

She said: "Andre Leon Talley was such an incredible artist, but he was also one of the most genuinely wonderful humans I've ever met.

"Always there with the most beautiful smile and open arms, he was so sweet and kind, always so gracious and I imagine the term 'fierce' was coined after meeting him."

She added that she felt "so lucky to have been embraced in his warm glow so many times in my career, because good people are few and far between in this business".

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Andre Leon Talley and Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour in 2009

Born in Washington DC and raised by his grandmother in North Carolina, Talley studied French literature before becoming an apprentice at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1974.

He went on to work as a fashion journalist at Women's Wear Daily and Vogue, attending regular fashion shows in New York and around Europe.

The kaftan-wearing journalist became creative director and editor-at-large at Vogue and was usually seen at events next to Wintour.

In his time there, Talley became a close confidant of big-name designers like Yves Saint Laurent, Karl Lagerfeld and Paloma Picasso; and his representatives noted his "penchant for discovering, nurturing and celebrating young designers".

Talley also wrote for Vanity Fair, HG and Interview, and he was the editor of Numero Russia.

He also a major figure in the LGBT community, describing himself as "fluid".

Talley was widely credited with getting more black models into the fashion industry.

He also served as a stylist for former US President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama.

Last year, Talley was awarded France's Chevalier de l'ordre des Arts et des Lettres honor - recognising people who have made significant contributions to the arts.

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Talley with actress Whoopi Goldberg in 2010

In 2020 he released his memoir, entitled The Chiffon Trenches, and told BBC Hard Talk's Stephen Sackur that the title was inspired by his time spent in an industry that was almost devoid of senior black men.

"I have I fought many battles," he told the BBC World Service. "I've been in trenches all my life, as an African-American black man, a descendant of the enslaved people who were brought to this country 401 years ago, my daily existence is an uphill battle of survival.

"Every black man has to wake up and realise that he is black in a country that promises him all the equality, equal justice for everyone... and it's not.

"So therefore my life is a constant survival in the trenches: I get knocked down, I get up, I get shot down, I get up - not only in my personal life, but in my professional life as well as in my professional life when I was in Paris and in New York."

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Andre Leon Talley and TV host Gayle King at Keep A Child Alive's 10th Annual Black Ball in New York in 2013

Costume designer Arianne Phillips, who worked on films such as Once Upon A Time In Hollywood, said Talley was a "larger than life icon". "Andre Leon Talley trailblazer, dapper gentleman, fashion editor, writer, journalist with a singular voice - his witty repartee, larger than life icon," she wrote.

"Always so kind and funny, his contribution to fashion and culture is one for the history books."

US actress Kerry Washington, external declared on Instagram that "the whole afterlife is going to be just too fabulous now" with Talley up there. "You blessed us with your charm and wit and your taste for the exceptional," she added.

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