Co-editor | David Bailey, David Litchfield |
---|---|
Categories | fashion, gossip and celebrity |
Frequency | monthly |
Publisher | David Bailey, David Litchfield |
Founded | 1976 |
First issue | December 1976 |
Final issue | 1997 |
Company | Bailey Litchfield Productions Ltd |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
ISSN | 0144-7416 |
Ritz Newspaper, colloquially Ritz Magazine, sometimes simply Ritz, was a British magazine focusing on gossip, celebrity and fashion. [1] It was launched in 1976 by David Bailey and David Litchfield, who acted as co-editors. The magazine folded in 1997. [2]
The first issue of Ritz was published in December 1976. [3] Published on newsprint and described by Litchfield as "the Lou Reed of publishing", it sold 25,000 copies a month at its peak in 1981. [1] It ran for fifteen years, though at the beginning of the 1990s it lost readership to glossy titles such as Tatler . It closed temporarily in 1983 [3] and in October 1988. [1] Redesigned in A4 format on matte art stock paper by art director Tony Judge, it relaunched early in 1989 with funding from the property developer Neville Roberts, [1] finally closing in 1997.
The founder gossip columnists covering the London social scene were Nicholas Haslam, [4] Frances Lynn, [5] [6] Stephen Lavers and Amanda Lear.
Haslam, an Old Etonian society decorator, wrote about his British aristocratic and Hollywood movie star friends under the pen name Paul Parsons. Lynn wrote the 'Bitch' gossip column about café society. Lavers, who moonlighted as Head of Films at A&M Records was the Music and Media columnist. Lear gossiped about the international glitterati. Lavers [7] and Lear [8] even interviewed each other. Richard Young [9] [10] was initially hired as Lynn's photographer, but eventually took photographs for all the columns. The four gossip columnists sometimes attended the same parties and wrote about each other. Haslam invited Lynn to all the parties he organised for his celebrity friends like Andy Warhol, [11] so that she could report about them in her column.
Film producer Cat Villiers [12] (then known as Catkin Villiers) began her career on the staff of the periodical.
Although Ritz Newspaper's policy was to avoid paying their contributing editors, including photojournalist Clement Barclay, established writers like Clive James [13] and Peter York [14] contributed to the magazine, as occasionally did established pop and rock stars such as George Michael. [15]
Ritz Newspaper was a showcase for fashion photography. David Bailey took the pictures. His wife, Marie Helvin, [16] and other celebrity fashion models modelled, and Patrick Lichfield [17] and other top photographers, worked for Ritz.
The majority of the celebrity interviews were in question and answer format, and included David Cassidy [15] (interviewed by George Michael), Sammy Davis, Jr., [18] Gore Vidal, [19] Paul McCartney [20] and Frank Zappa. [5]
Ritz Newspaper specialised in celebrity advertising campaigns. Olympus Cameras, [21] Leonard [22] the society hairdresser, and Manolo Blahnik [23] all took out regular campaigns. Schumi [24] advertised in every issue of Ritz, except for the first issue.
A gossip columnist is someone who writes a gossip column in a newspaper or magazine, especially in a gossip magazine. Gossip columns are written in a light, informal style, and relate opinions about the personal lives or conduct of celebrities from show business, politicians, professional sports stars, and other wealthy people or public figures. Some gossip columnists broadcast segments on radio and television.
Sarah Miles is a retired English actress. She is known for her roles in films The Servant (1963), Blowup (1966), Ryan's Daughter (1970), The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing (1973), White Mischief (1987) and Hope and Glory (1987). For her performance in Ryan's Daughter, Miles received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress.
David Royston Bailey is an English photographer and director, most widely known for his fashion photography and portraiture, and role in shaping the image of the Swinging Sixties.
Janet Vera Street-Porter is an English broadcaster, journalist, writer, producer, and media personality. She began her career as a fashion writer and columnist at the Daily Mail and was later appointed fashion editor of the Evening Standard in 1971. In 1973, she co-presented a mid-morning radio show with Paul Callan on LBC.
Manuel "Manolo" Blahnik Rodríguez is a Spanish fashion designer and founder of the eponymous high-end shoe brand.
Amanda Lear is a French singer, songwriter, painter, television presenter, actress, and former model.
Mary Hart is an American television personality. She was the host (1982–2011) of the syndicated gossip and entertainment round-up television program Entertainment Tonight. She was Miss South Dakota 1970.
Jean Rosemary Shrimpton is an English model and actress. She was an icon of Swinging London and is considered to be one of the world's first supermodels. She appeared on numerous magazine covers including Vogue,Harper's Bazaar,Vanity Fair,Glamour,Elle,Ladies' Home Journal,Newsweek, and Time. In 2009, Harper's Bazaar named Shrimpton one of the 26 best models of all time, and in 2012, Time named her one of the 100 most influential fashion icons of all time. She starred alongside Paul Jones in the film Privilege (1967).
Marie Helvin is a British-based American former fashion model, who worked extensively with David Bailey, to whom she was married between 1975 and 1985. In the 1970s and 1980s, she appeared in many fashion stories for British Vogue and posed for a series of nude photographs made by Bailey, which were published in his 1980 book Trouble and Strife. They would collaborate on four more photographic books and continued to work on multiple stories for the British, French and Italian editions of Vogue.
Amanda Lear discography consists of eighteen full-length studio albums, thirty-eight compilation albums, two extended plays and seventy-three singles. She has also released one video album and numerous music videos.
Heart is a studio album by French singer Amanda Lear, first released in 2001 by Le Marais Prod.
Frances Lynn is an English journalist and author.
Nicholas Ponsonby Haslam is an English interior designer and socialite, and founder of the London-based interior design firm, Nicky Haslam Studio.
Peter Golding is an English fashion designer who created the first "designer jean" in 1970, opened his clothing store ACE on London's King's Road Chelsea in 1974 and created the first stretch denim jean in 1978. He was the first fashion designer to be invited to join what is now known as the Chartered Society of Designers, and in 2004 was invited by The Queen to Buckingham Palace in recognition of his contribution to British design. He was described by Fashion Weekly as "the Eric Clapton of denim".
The Sunday Times Magazine is a magazine included with The Sunday Times. In 1962 it became the first colour supplement to be published as a supplement to a UK newspaper, and its arrival "broke the mould of weekend newspaper publishing".
Richard Young is an English society and celebrity photographer. His photography career started in 1974 and since then, he has photographed personalities such as Diana, Princess of Wales, Elizabeth Taylor, and Mick Jagger.
"Fashion Pack" is a song by French singer Amanda Lear from her third album Never Trust a Pretty Face, released in 1979 by Ariola Records.
Lucy Bailey is a British theatre director, known for productions such as Baby Doll at Britain's National Theatre and a notorious Titus Andronicus, described by a critic as "all eye-catchingly visceral but there’s little depth". Bailey founded the Gogmagogs theatre-music group (1995–2006) and was Artistic Director and joint founder of the Print Room theatre in West London (2010-2012). She has worked extensively with Bunny Christie and other leading stage designers, including her husband William Dudley.
Philippa Elaine Fanti Bennett-Warner is a British actress. She began her career as a child actress, playing young Nala in the original West End production of The Lion King (1999). She went on to earn WhatsOnStage and Ian Charleson Award nominations for her roles in the musical Caroline, or Change (2006) and Michael Grandage's King Lear (2010) respectively.
My Life with Dalí is an autobiography by French singer Amanda Lear, first released in 1984, which tells about her relationship with Spanish surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. The book, which had Dalí's full approval, gave detailed insights into the lives of both the artist and his muse.
In the 1970s he was Paul Parsons in Ritz and Sam Hopper in Vogue . Today, his playful, punning, name- and place-dropping pieces appear in a variety of newspapers and magazines; he also files erudite book reviews for Literary Review and The Spectator , in which he often also writes the diary. Wherever possible, these informative bits of journalism are accompanied by a winking, leering, picture of Haslam himself.
Francis Lynne (Franny to the few friends she has left) wins my accolade as the bitchiest gossip writer in town. As high-priestess of the single-entendre, she has assassinated everybody who is anybody in her two-page column in the bi-monthly magazine, Ritz. Her list of victims includes people like Elkie brooks, Roman Polanski, Diana Rigg, Yves St. Laurent, Elton John and The Eagles. I would like to give some examples of her killing technique - but I can't in case I get into trouble. Asked if she had, in fact, received any writs lately she replied demurely: "Of course not. In a more familiar vein, she added: 'If I had, I wouldn't tell you, dahling."
Perhaps you should be killed in a car crash soon .
When I wrote for Ritz I knew exactly what they wanted. People want to read a lot of gossip that is as evil as you dare print it about famous or infamous, or slightly notorious people around London.
When Young sold his first celebrity photograph (of Paul Getty Jr) in 1974, newspapers didn't want celebrity photographers, because they didn't think their readers wanted celebrities. Wild rock'n'roll parties held by the Beatles and the Stones mostly went unrecorded. "It's a crying shame," says Young now, "because there'd have been great stuff to shoot then. Those parties were wild." It took the photographer David Bailey and his writer friend David Litchfield, founders of the magazine Ritz, to invent celebrity publishing. The magazine was full of society figures, of parties and launches, and Young was their "social photographer" from the mid-1970s up until 1983. The celebrity world as we know it now was beginning. And Young had a front-row position.[ dead link ]
It was a crazy time," says Young. "I was working for David Bailey's magazine Ritz back then, which led the way on coverage of the London social scene. David was using the bar there like an office so I was always in there. Everyone used to come in. And I'm talking about proper celebrities. People like Sinatra, Brando, Robert De Niro. I even photographed Princess Grace coming out of there once in The Independent.
I gave a lunch for him at the Ritz, for 40 people. Everybody signed it. I gave a dinner for him, in the Casserole, [a defunct King's Road restaurant]. I gave a ball for him, when Regine's opened in London...
Villiers began her career in magazine journalism, serving as assistant editor at Ritz Newspaper...
Anna Ford no longer gives interviews if she can help it.
Oh well the last interview I had he was a Linda Ronstadt fan-we're going up in the world ...
The interview between DAVID and GEORGE first took place over lunch at Pier 31 Restaurant, at which they both got rather inebriated...
Now, let's get this straight. Why don't I get paid when I work for you?
Actually, I make more money in two weeks than the President does in a year...
When did I start writing? Oh, at the age of about eight or nine. And by the time I was nineteen I had started four novels and nearly finished one, and then it must have been my fifth novel, I did finish when I was nineteen
For a start when I sign my name it's a very personal thing. That mark is me, it's part of me and I don't want to give it away.
The official Ritz Newspaper online archive]