Food Fight

The beloved and creative London restaurateur Jeremy King (co-owner of my favorite UK eatery, The Wolseley) found himself at war last week with a Thai hospitality conglomerate, with Richard Caring, who cooks up restaurant takeovers, and has gobbled up restaurants formerly owned by King and partner Chris Corbin, as well as the late Mark Birley’s […]
Epstein, Maxwell, Brunel: The Never-Ending Scandal

With the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell over her role–if any–in Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual predation providing more dirty details daily, Epstein’s other alleged rabbateur, model agent Jean-Luc Brunel, still in French custody as the criminal case against him proceeds, and multiple documentaries in production about Brunel, his Elite Models counterparts Gerald Marie (target of a civil […]
There’s Life in Print Yet, Pt. 1

Just when I thought the well had run dry, I found my byline on the cover of a new-ish magazine, Park. Its second issue includes an excerpt from 740 Park and a newly-penned appreciation of photographer Ron Gallela.
Diana, Panned

The reviews are in and they are uniformly lousy, comparing those responsible for Broadway’s Diana, the Musical, to the papparazzi who killed the People’s Princess. Which reminded me of “The Princess and the Jackals,” written just after the death of the Princess of Wales. Click each page below to read it.
“Nothing is worse than the movie business,” said Alec Baldwin

In 1997, I spent several days with Alec Baldwin for a cover story in New York magazine on his political ambitions, then said to be running hot. Baldwin’s political opinions continued to run hot, even if his path to a career in politics went nowhere. Now, with his movie career disrupted by the shooting death […]
Radical Lovers

The New Yorker has released an alternately loving and profane documentary on the late (and unexpectedly potty-mouthed) radical lawyer Michael Kennedy and his wife and trial consultant Eleanora Kennedy. Its tight focus is their youthful radicalism. For a lot of the rest of the story (and there’s a lot), here’s my 1991 cover story on […]
Resto a Go-Go

This week’s terrific New York Magazine profile of Balathazar/Pastis/Morandi impresario Keith McNally–which includes an account of his breakup with his once-upon-a-time partner in London’s Balthazar, the former garmento Richard Caring, reminded me of my 2015 Departures (R.I.P.) story on the food fight between Caring and his beloved rival Jeremy King, the creator of many of […]
Model: Coming to Your TV

In Sunday’s Daily News, Richard Johnson reveals that Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women is in development as a TV series. Click the image to read the item.
Vanderbilt Genes: “I don’t talk about it,” says Anderson Cooper

In Fall 2004, I conducted an interview with Gloria Vanderbilt and her son Anderson Cooper for Bergdorf Goodman Magazine. In honor of Cooper’s just-published book (co-authored by Katherine Howe) on his mother’s family, here is that conversation: Gloria Laura Vanderbilt, a great-great-great grand-daughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt, aka The Commodore, first entered the public eye as […]
How Did We Get Here? The Rise and Fall of the Met’s Costume Ball

This exclusive excerpt adapted from the 2009 book, Rogues’ Gallery: The Secret History of the Moguls and the Money That Made the Metropolitan Museum, tells the story of the museum’s annual costume party. The 2021 edition of the event will be held tomorrow night. The Party of the Year, as it was originaly known, was […]