On a balmy New York evening last spring, Ralph Lauren held his Fall/Holiday 2024 show at his Madison Avenue design studio. Leave it to Ralph to install country-clubby mahogany paneling and handsome leather upholstery in a modern, all-glass Manhattan office building. I was interviewing the legendary Glenn Close backstage, and I mentioned we were marking more than a half-century of Ralph Lauren.
"This September, I will have been a working actress for 50 years," she replied wistfully. She put her hands up to make air quotes and smiled. "Thank God!" Then, transforming into Sunset Boulevard's Norma Desmond, she turned to the production folks filming our chat and asked if they could switch the cameras to highlight her good side (her right) and improve her lighting.
"I'm sorry," she implored, then declared, "Actually, no, I'm not." Truly iconic.
But then, that's Glenn. Her work has spanned five decades across stage and screen and has earned her three Tonys, three Emmys, and a trio of Golden Globe awards.
(She's been nominated for eight Oscars but has not won. Yet.) As a tween, I fell in love with her devilish and stylish Cruella de Vil in 1996's 101 Dalmatians. In high school, I went to Blockbuster to rent her older films, like The Big Chill (1983) and Fatal Attraction (1987), to watch on my parents' sofa on Friday nights and relish her dramatic range. (The term "bunny boiler" is still in the lexicon.) In 2017, I took my mom to see Glenn in Sunset Boulevard on Broadway for her birthday. We waited at the stage door for her to sign copies of Playbill-mother-gayson bonding at its finest. Give this woman the lighting she deserves, people!
Months after Ralph's show, I caught up with Glenn at Sydmonton Court, a grand English estate in Basingstoke and Deane.
This story is from the September 2024 edition of Harper's BAZAAR - US.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the September 2024 edition of Harper's BAZAAR - US.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
REPAIR Your HAIR
THE ART and SCIENCE of LOOKING and FEELING Your Best
How I Learned to STOP WORRYING and LOVE the BOT
After my HUSBAND LEFT ME, I brought an AI BOYFRIEND to our couples resort vacation to STAVE OFF GRIEF. Then I learned many WOMEN are using AI to SUPPORT the heavy lifting of INVISIBLE and EMOTIONAL labor in their DAILY RELATIONSHIPS.
PETER LINDBERGH, MARCH 2007
FASHION OFTEN LIKES to draw on the past, returning to the mood board of reliably revolutionary ideas and inspirations-the ones that thrilled us when we first saw them and never fail to deliver that familiar jolt of excitement when they resurface on the runways, in the culture, and in our feeds and lives.
VIVA Las Vegas
DEREK C. BLASBERG talks to filmmaker GIA COPPOLA and the one and only PAMELA ANDERSON about how destiny (and Coppola's determination) brought them together for their new movie, THE LAST SHOWGIRL
Team WORK
FENDI and RED WING have JOINED FORCES to CREATE the season's most luxe UTILITY BOOT
TURKISH Delights
Let artist LAILA GOHAR be your GUIDE to ISTANBUL's countless WONDERS
Don't Call It a COMEBACK
LOUIS VUITTON x Murakami is back and brighter than ever.
BUCKLE Up
The ACCESSORY is no longer just for HOLDING your PANTS UP. Sometimes it's NOT EVEN for PANTS at all.
TOUR de FORCE
ZOE SALDAÑAhas lit up some of the mostOTHERWORLDLY sci-fi epicsof our time. But with herPERFORMANCE in the musicalEMILIA PÉREZ, she finally getsto REVEAL the very HUMANSOURCE of that POWER.
THE PEOPLE and IDEAS SHAPING the CULTURE POLITICS of GRACE
Representative SARAH MCBRIDE, the first openly TRANS MEMBER of CONGRESS, reflects on how her experience with LOVE and LOSS taught her to pursue CHANGE from a PLACE of COMPASSION