Monday, 31 July 2023
Sunday, 30 July 2023
Monday, March 14, 2022 / Remembering the closure of Sundog in Edgartown, Martha’s Vineyard.
Sundog, Main Street Anchor, Closes Its Doors
Aidan
Pollard
Monday,
March 14, 2022 - 7:08pm
https://vineyardgazette.com/news/2022/03/14/sundog-edgartown-main-street-anchor-closes-its-doors
A downtown
Edgartown staple for nearly half a century, the menswear store Sundog has
closed. But the shop’s wares won’t go down with its storefront, thanks to a
donation of the entire inventory to a nonprofit startup thrift store in
Vineyard Haven.
Originating
in Cambridge in 1970, Sundog moved to Martha’s Vineyard in 1976 and operated at
41 Main Street for 36 years, owner Frank Folts told the Gazette by phone
Monday.
The
business hopped around Edgartown in its first years on the Island, existing at
times where familiar businesses such as the Wharf Pub and Black Dog are now
located, before settling at 41 Main Street. For most of Mr. Folts’s time there,
the building was owned by Larry Levine, an Island businessman.
“The best
landlord I ever had,” Mr. Folts said.
Despite
problems with the building that occasionally interrupted business, Mr. Folts
said Mr. Levine was a good friend to him and to Sundog.
Mr. Levine
died in 2018 and his daughter Sarah Levine inherited the building. This year
Mr. Folts said he learned that he had lost his decades-long lease at the
property, forcing him to close the business.
“We’ve
pondered what to do,” he said. “This has been my life.”
With a
background in advertising, Mr. Folts ran a series of eye-catching ads in the
Gazette over the years, including the well-known Sundog countdown to spring
that began every winter.
He spoke about
the changing nature of Main street over time, with the arrival of more
franchised stores and fewer sole proprietor establishments.
“The
commercialization of the Island has been rather intense,” Mr. Folts said,
adding that he was unsure whether there was still time to reverse the trend.
“I think
it’s unfortunate what has happened,” he said.
Mr. Folts
had famously resisted holding sales at Sundog for years.
But in a
letter sent to the Gazette, he wrote that the business had planned to belatedly
commemorate Sundog’s 50th anniversary with a sale. First the sale was delayed
in 2020 and 2021 by the pandemic. Then came the lost lease, he wrote.
In the wake
of the Sundog closure, Mr. Folts has donated all the store’s inventory —
including its familiar decorations and window dressings — to Act Two Secondhand
Store, a startup nonprofit thrift shop on Main street Vineyard Haven.
The
donation is a tribute to the late Vineyard scrimshaw artists Don MacDonald and
Tom DeMont, Mr. Folts wrote, adding that he hoped it would help the Island and
also jump start Act Two’s mission to benefit arts and education on the Island.
Founded by Alissa Keenan and Kevin Ryan, the store was doing a brisk business
Monday afternoon. In his letter Mr. Folts said it will satisfy a need once met
by the Boys and Girls Club Second Hand Store, previously located in Edgartown.
“It was a
substantial monetary gift for all intents and purposes,” he told the Gazette,
speaking about the donation.
But he said
Sundog’s story may not end here.
“I’m still
considering relocating,” he said. Describing himself as a patient man, he said
he will wait to see which way the wind blows.
“It takes a
lot of energy,” he said, speaking about owning a business. “I am 88 years old —
and full of fire and vinegar, of course.”
Friday, 28 July 2023
A Closer Look: Jackie Kennedy’s Martha’s Vineyard Home - Red Gate Farm |
Red Gate Farm: Jackie Kennedy Onassis’ Summer House
https://scenetherapy.com/red-gate-farm-jackie-kennedy-onassis-summer-house/
Jacqueline
Kennedy had an extensive history with residences, including one of the most
famous houses in the land, but it was Red Gate Farm that she chose to live out
the final years of her life in the beautiful Martha’s Vineyard landscapes at
the water’s edge. After forty years Jackie Kennedy Onassis’ Summer House was
finally placed on the market in 2019 by her and JFK’s daughter, Caroline. The
estate has since sold with ambitious plans ahead, here is a peek around and a
look at what’s next for the estate:
Listed by
Christie’s Real Estate in 2019 for $65 million, Red Gate Farm is located at the
tip of Martha’s Vineyard on the Aquinnah waterfront. Originally a landholding
for sheep and with only one small hunting cabin, the 350 acre estate was bought
by Jackie Kennedy Onassis in 1979. Long-time friend and landscaping maestro,
Rachel “Bunny” Mellon was enlisted to design the gardens and landscapes, while
architect Hugh Newell Jacobson was taken with created a holiday home suitable
for Jackie, her two children, and the numerous close friends who would visit
over the years. Designed in true Cape Cod style, the two-storey main house is
constructed with cedar-shingle cladding and contrasting windows, all completed
in 1981.
The main
house comprises of a formal sitting room with fireplace, a drawing room, family
room, library, dining room and chef’s kitchen form the ground floor, along with
a den, 2 offices/art studios, 2 powder rooms and a laundry room, while upstairs
comprises of four large en-suite bedrooms with the master including a dressing
room. The fifth bedroom is located on the ground floor, which also acts as a
study. There is also a guest house featuring 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, a living
room, kitchen and laundry room. The listing notes:
Red Gate
Farm boasts over a mile of private Atlantic Ocean beachfront with dunes, and
two freshwater ponds, as well as a vegetable garden and blueberry patch, an
outdoor pool, tennis court, and a fairy treehouse, which Ms. Onassis built for
her grandchildren. Overlooking Squibnocket Pond is the original hunting cabin.
The ancillary structures include a three-bedroom caretaker’s house, a barn, two
garages (one with a two-bedroom apartment), a temperature-controlled storage
building, and a boathouse.
It was
later reported that part of the estate had sold, off market, for $27 million –
a drop of $38 million. The buyers were The Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank
Commission and the Sheriff’s Meadow Foundation, a pair of non-profit
organisations who plan to open stretches of the estate’s natural habitats to
the public, with the land designated for conservation. The Kennedy family chose
to keep 95 acres of the property, which include the homes, while the
non-profits purchased the existing 304 acres, which will be paid off in instalments
over the course of four years. The stretch of nature will be known as the
Squibnocket Pond Reservation and will be open to the public to enjoy the
Atlantic-fronted beaches, dunes, ponds, trails and meadows.
In a press
release, the Sheriff’s Meadow Foundation, the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank
Commission, and Red Gate Farm LLC announced their agreement to ‘conserve one of
the most important and ecologically diverse habitats in New England’. “Our
family has endeavored to be worthy stewards of this magnificent and fragile
natural habitat, and its sites of cultural significance,” explained Caroline
Kennedy. “We are excited to partner with two outstanding island organizations,
and for the entire island community and the general public to experience its
beauty. We look forward to many more happy years in Aquinnah.”
Thursday, 27 July 2023
Old as Adam, 33 Ceres Street , Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Old as Adam
33 Ceres
Street
Portsmouth,
New Hampshire
(603) 661-9373
Living the Dream: Adam Irish from Old As Adam
MAY 2, 2013
~ THEJUNKDRUNK
https://thejunkdrunk.wordpress.com/2013/05/02/living-the-dream-adam-irish-from-old-as-adam/
As some of
you may know, I have a small obsession with the picturesque seaside town of
Portsmouth, NH. With its amazing restaurants, coffee shops, and independent
bookstores paired with some fantastic colonial history and real estate – it’s
kind of a dream. There is also a nice little cluster of antique shops in the
surrounding area to explore. I took a day trip up to Portsmouth a couple weeks
ago, and stumbled upon a newer antique vender, Old as Adam run by Adam Irish,
right in downtown Portsmouth on Ceres Street. I was immediately impressed by
his aesthetic, as well as his collection of unusual finds. What’s more, he’s a
young proprietor in a stereotypically graying industry.
We were so
impressed that we asked Adam to share a bit about himself, his business and his
passion for antiques.
Adam Irish;
age 27
Proprietor
of Old as Adam
I’ve been
collecting since I was a kid. Bottle digging especially captured my imagination
as a boy; I found some amazing things digging on old farms and estates. For
better or for worse, I am almost entirely self taught and have hardly studied
antiques in any formal sense. My knowledge came from years hitting the yard
sales and antique shops every weekend, countless hours watching the hammer fall
at auctions, and many, many mistakes. My advice to someone interested in
antiques or the antique business is just do it. Unless you have a specific
interest (say eighteenth century American silver or turn-of-the-century art
pottery), books are of little use. Get up early for the flea market and stay
late at the auction. Don’t be intimidated. Buy what you like. Once you refine
your tastes, study away (I’m currently enmeshed in a tome about the evolution
of 20th century clothing labels).
How would you
describe your store, your aesthetic and your target client?
I describe
my store as a “Vintage Haberdasher & Cabinet of Curiosities.” I’ve always
loved the aesthetics of turn-of-the-century shops and the elaborate signage
that often festooned their storefronts. The sadly antiquated term “haberdasher”
also conjures the 19th century, and so I decided to make my shop in the spirit
of that era.
Old as Adam
specializes in vintage menswear, from top hats to overalls. I try to be
fastidious about keeping my stock true vintage, and have pieces dating from the
1960s back to the 18th century. Dapper is the word (although I stock the
humblest vintage workwear as well). Suits, ties, vests, hats – I try to revive
the great sartorial traditions of yesterday one sale at a time.
In the
store, I favor late Victorian and early 20th century pieces, of both high and
low origins (for example, you’ll currently find both a fine 19th century Parian
bust and a caged 1920s utility light in stock). I also have a penchant for the quirky
and strange, things that delight or dumbfound (in the past pieces of this
nature have included 1920s clown shoes and a Victorian child’s coffin fashioned
into a bookcase). I also favor fun and funky mid-20th century miscellany, but I
haven’t found that these things fit comfortably in the store.
Who is my
target client? That’s hard to say. I am always surprised at the variety of
folks who appreciate what I’m trying to do. The one thing they all have in
common is that they appreciate the past. They marvel at the quality of old
things. They wonder at the stories, the history, the people these objects can
embody. They share my joy in discovering something wonderful. That’s all you
need to enjoy and collect antiques.
How did you
start with your business?
I began
selling when I was 8 years old and since then, I’ve always nominally been in
the business (it supported me through college). Transitioning to full-time was
something else, however. I became much more serious about online sales, but did
most of my business while renting a space in an antique coop as well as selling
to other dealers and at shows. I still do all of these things in addition to
running the shop.
What do you
love most about running Old as Adam?
I love it
because it’s not work. It’s fun. I’d be doing all these things if I had
different job. Since this is my full-time gig, however, I get to do even more.
Sure, there are times when it’s painful to sit through a ten-hour auction, but
most of the time I’m having a ball (even when getting on the road at 3am for
the flea market).
What are
some of your recent picks?
I love this
pair of toy airships. I found them independently, but they look great together.
I recently
acquired this marvelous Victorian coffee grinder. It originally would have held
a place of honor in a general store.
Last week I
came upon a large collection of antique clockfaces belonging to clock tinkerer.
I find their weathered faces and fragmentary nature beautiful. In fact, I have a
large iron clock face on the door to the shop. For me, it symbolizes the
timeless nature of old good things and the illusory, consumption-driven idea
that the passage of time leaves in its wake only the outmoded and undesirable.
What is
your dream find, a specific item or elements of a favorite collection?
My dream
find is discovering an old family menswear shop that was shuttered, say, in the
1960s. I know one is out there. I came close a few weeks ago, but most of it
had been thrown out. In this case, they
still have a 1950s “Adam Hats” neon sign which I feel I am obligated to
acquire.
In reality,
however, I have no idea what my dream find is. I will come upon it one day at
the bottom of a dusty trunk or in some ramshackle barn. Discovery makes this
profession a constant pleasure. You never know what you’ll find next.
Most
importantly, how can our readers find you and your shop?
Old as Adam
33 Ceres
Street
Portsmouth,
New Hampshire
(603) 661-9373
Tuesday, 25 July 2023
George Cleverley Shoes
https://www.georgecleverley.com/the-history
George
Cleverley was born on the 10th of August 1898 into a shoemaking family in
London. George moved to Colchester in Essex with his parents when he was 2 and
spent his childhood selling bootlaces and polish. After finishing his
apprenticeship at 15, he was called up to the Royal British Army for World War
I and was then stationed in London before joining a British army boot factory in Calais, France. After
the war he joined Tuczec, a high society London shoemaker on Clifford Street,
Mayfair where he remained for 38 years. George left Tuczec in 1958 to start his
own business - G.J.Cleverley of Cork Street, Mayfair, London.
After
establishing G.J. Cleverley in London’s Mayfair not far from where the office
currently sits today, George served some of the world’s most illustrious names
spanning world leaders, industry titans and social figures and quickly became
known for making the Cleverley shape – a graceful, chisel-toed shoe which
became signature to his extraordinary craft. George died in 1991 at nearly 93
years of age and was still working, virtually, until he died.
CLEVERLEY TODAY
In 1978,
George Cleverley chose longtime pupils John Carnera and George Glasgow to
succeed him in the business given their shared high principles of shoemaking,
Between them, George and John have a shared experience of over 100 years in the
Bespoke shoemaking world.
Today, the
company is still a family business led by Mr. George Glasgow Snr (Chairman)
& Mr. George Glasgow Jr (CEO & Creative Director). Mr. Glasgow Snr
worked with Mr. Cleverley for over 20 years and is based in Mayfair with over
45 years of experience in shoemaking. Mr. George Glasgow Jr splits his time
between Los Angeles & London and has been working alongside George Snr for
over 20 years.
Sunday, 23 July 2023
Locals fear the Scottish village of Kenmore is becoming a 'playground' for American billionaires / 'It is literally a ghost town'
'It is literally a ghost town': Locals fear
Scottish village is becoming a 'playground' for American billionaires
Kenmore sits on the banks of the River Tay and is home
to around 100 residents. Arizona-based Investors Discovery Land Company has
snapped up a lot of real estate in the region, which is causing concerns among
the locals the area is becoming "hoarded by the elite".
Connor
Gillies
Scotland
correspondent @ConnorGillies
Saturday 22
July 2023 15:54, UK
There are
fears a peaceful Perthshire village is becoming a "ghost town" for
locals who claim American billionaires are taking over to create a
"playground" for the super-rich.
Kenmore
sits on the banks of the stunning River Tay and is home to about 100 residents.
Neighbouring
Taymouth Castle, built in 1842, and its vast swaths of land have been bought up
by an Arizona-based business which boasts of transforming the area into a plush
resort for the mega-wealthy.
Investors
Discovery Land Company (DLC) - which claims to be one of the most exclusive
residential real estate development companies in the world - has also snapped
up and subsequently closed the local hotel and post office.
The foreign
business empire has also bought several homes as concerns mount that the area
is becoming "hoarded by the elite".
It has been
reported DLC's clients include billionaires, CEOs, presidents and celebrities.
A recent
sales brochure from the US firm suggested the plans would include "a
community including 208 residential units and club suites" and is only
"30 minutes by helicopter" to Scotland's major cities.
The castle
restoration project was given planning permission by Perth and Kinross Council
in 2011.
Locals
suggest their surroundings are being strangled and have mounted a petition to
"fight back".
Campaigner
Rob Jamieson told Sky News: "In their other developments their homes range
from £3m to £50m. They are going to try and close this all off. They don't want
the great unwashed walking past their high-end homes.
"None
of us will ever set foot in it unless we want to tug a forelock. It is
everything that a rich person could ever want but they never have to leave the
confines of that estate. They are not going to be going out for tea and scones
to the local tearoom.
"It is
abhorrence to those of us who live around here."
Kenmore.
DLC
rejected numerous Sky News interview requests but insisted all regulations were
being followed, including Scottish legislation giving the public the right to
roam on paths surrounding the historic castle.
A
spokeswoman did not deny suggestions the area will become a gated community.
The company
website states the golf course and amenities will be "reserved" for
the owners.
Saturday, 22 July 2023
Is This the End of the Red Carpet?
UNBUTTONED
Is This the End of the Red Carpet?
The actor’s strike could have far-reaching
implications for how we watch and consume fashion.
Vanessa
Friedman
By Vanessa
Friedman
July 20,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/20/style/actors-strike-red-carpet-fashion.html
At first it
seemed impossible to imagine: No more red carpets! No more photos of movie
stars and names to watch in fabulous gowns blanketing the internet. Could
“Oppenheimer” and “Barbie” be the last gasp of that marketing Valhalla of
fashion and film that was the modern premiere — at least for the foreseeable
future?
At least,
that is, until the SAG-AFTRA actor’s strike, announced July 14, is resolved.
For the moment, actors, from the unknown to the most celebrated, are banned by
their union from engaging in any promotional activities. That means big
openings. That means magazine covers touting new movies. That means film
festivals with all their associated dressing and posing opportunities. That
means social media pics of them getting dressed for premieres.
And what
that means for fashion, an industry that has become increasingly intertwined
with the denizens of Lalaland in a mutually beneficial ecosystem of influence
and outfits — and as important, what it means for the public’s understanding of
fashion, much of which is received through the lens of celebrity — is
potentially enormous.
Actors sign
contracts that can be worth millions, negotiated by agents and managers, to be
brand ambassadors, appearing in some combination of advertisements, front rows,
store openings and red carpets, dressed by stylists, generating coverage,
desire and, most of all, publicity for everyone involved.
Their work
may form their substance, but fashion is the grease that sends them viral (and
that has bolstered their bank accounts at a time when the economics of movies
are shifting — part of the reason for the strike). Timothée Chalamet on the red
carpet in Venice in a crimson Haider Ackermann halter top and Florence Pugh in
a sheer pink Valentino “revenge dress” are images that put those actors and
those brands at the center of social media for days.
Alison
Bringé, the chief marketing officer at Launchmetrics, a data analytics and software
company, wrote in an email that Margot Robbie’s appearance in Schiaparelli at
the film’s Los Angeles premiere “generated over $2.1 million in media impact
value in just 24 hours, which is more than half of what Schiaparelli’s fall
2023 show amassed overall.”
With all of
that grinding to a halt, along with studio productions themselves, what
happens? And who are most at risk? Actors and studios are not the only ones
with a stake in this game.
At the
moment, agents and talent seem to be holding their breath and swiveling their
heads to see what everyone else is doing. The brands themselves are staying
mum. Louis Vuitton, whose ambassadors include Jennifer Connelly, Michelle
Williams and Ana de Armas, declined to comment. Versace, which works with Anne
Hathaway, ditto. Prada, ditto. Gucci, ditto. Dior did not respond to requests
for comment.
In theory,
all fashion promotional work (as opposed to movie promotional work) can
continue. Commercial appearances are not prohibited, according to the strike guidelines.
And there are myriad such opportunities that have nothing to do with premieres.
Recently Wimbledon turned into a catwalk of sorts for celebrities including
Emma Corrin and Brad Pitt.
Much has
been made of the fact that the first big red carpet victim will be the Venice
Film Festival, scheduled for Aug. 30 to Sept. 9, and the de facto start of
awards season, with all the fashion fanfare that implies.
This year
the films rumored to be showing star Zendaya, a Louis Vuitton ambassador (Luca
Guadagnino’s “Challengers”); Jessica Chastain, who works with Gucci (Michael
Franco’s “Memory”); Emma Stone, also a Louis Vuitton ambassador (Yorgos
Lanthimos’s “Poor Things”); and Penélope Cruz, who works with Chanel (Michael
Mann’s “Ferrari”). All of them will most likely be absent.
Yet, as it
happens, early September is also New York Fashion Week, and the start of the
whole fashion season. That’s four weeks of potential for appearances and
events.
Even more
pointedly, brands themselves have increasingly tiptoed into the content arena,
making short films, especially during the pandemic. What sorts of non-studio
videos could they cook up? Entirely independent films are allowed under strike
guidelines. YSL even has its own film production division. The studios would
look selfless — supporting talent — and the talent would look, well, good. When
given lemons. …
Indeed, the
strike may make brand relationships even more important, both as a source of
income and as a creative outlet. “The first writers strike, our teams were
busier than ever, because a lot of the actors had to do more promotional
appearances to subsidize for any slowing in their main vocation,” said Brooke
Wall, the founder of the Wall Group, a talent agency for stylists that is part
of the Endeavor group.
That’s one
way of looking at it. The issue is thornier, however, because of the morality
and optics involved. Even if SAG-AFTRA members are allowed by the rules to
continue their outside work, will it not seem gauche to do so? Given the glitz
and champagne associated with fashion, it could seem a bit like partying while
Rome burns.
Fran
Drescher, the SAG-AFTRA president and face of the strike, received vociferous
blowback when she attended the Dolce & Gabbana Alta Moda couture
extravaganza/junket in Puglia, Italy, just before the strike was announced,
even though a spokeswoman for the union told The Hollywood Reporter that it
knew about the trip, and it was fine. Add in the fact that it is often the most
boldface names in the industry who have snagged the biggest outside contracts —
exactly that layer of Hollywood that does not necessarily need work during a
stoppage — and the situation gets even more complicated.
On the
other hand, there is a whole substratum of talent who are not at the
negotiating table and yet are seriously affected by the red carpet suspension:
the stylists and hair and makeup artists who help create the image-making
magic, and whose salaries are generally paid for by the studios, not the
talent.
“There is
no work!” said Kate Young, a stylist whose work focuses on Hollywood.
The end of
movie promotion is a “massive issue,” according to the stylist Karla Welch, who
said she had had four premiere tours cut short or canceled already. “Basically
any stylist who works with celebs just saw all their jobs go away,” she said.
“The only thing celebs’ people can do are fashion jobs, and that’s the few
people who have celebs with brand deals.”
This may be
partly why there has been little noise thus far about suspending brand
appearances. There is a trickle-down effect at work that is not insignificant
when it comes to people’s livelihoods. Still, Ms. Wall said, “this is a whole
new world, so we shall see.”
Indeed,
there is a scenario in which the suspension of the red carpet has the
unintended but far-reaching consequence of decoupling fashion and Hollywood, or
at least significantly changing the balance of power. It could prove to brands
that they need celluloid celebrities less than they may think, ushering in a
new era of ambassadors focused on the rest of the world and talent that has
nothing to do with back lots or Oscar statuettes. Really, it has already begun.
Two names:
BTS and Beyoncé.
Vanessa
Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times
since 2014. In this role she covers global fashion for both The New York Times
and International New York Times. More about Vanessa Friedman
Thursday, 20 July 2023
Christy's Hats, LONDON / VIDEO: How to Measure Your Head for a Hat | Christys' London(Christys Hats)
Monday, 17 July 2023
The Hon. Desmond Guinness (1970) Whicker's World
SEE ALSO:
“Desmond Guiness, Mariga Von Urach, Leixlip Castle and
The Irish Georgian Society”
http://tweedlandthegentlemansclub.blogspot.com/2011/05/desmond-guiness-mariga-von-urach.html
Sunday, 16 July 2023
Jane Mallory Birkin, actor and singer, born 14 December 1946; died 16 July 2023
Obituary
Jane Birkin obituary
Singer and actor who duetted with Serge Gainsbourg on
Je T’aime … Moi Non Plus in 1969 and went on to a prolific film career
Ryan Gilbey
Sun 16 Jul
2023 14.35 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2023/jul/16/jane-birkin-obituary
The sultry
1969 hit single Je T’aime … Moi Non Plus was a four-and-a-half-minute distillation
of languid Gallic cool, in which a Frenchman, his voice coarsened by Gitanes,
is heard billing and cooing with an ecstatically sighing young Englishwoman
over the swirling motif of a baroque organ. That man was Serge Gainsbourg; his
companion was Jane Birkin, the actor and singer, who has died aged 76. Though
Birkin worked with some of the world’s finest film-makers, including Jacques
Rivette and Agnès Varda, she knew that Je T’aime … would be remembered above
everything else she did. “When I die, that’ll be the tune they play, as I go
out feet first,” she said.
Birkin was
21 when she and Gainsbourg met while starring together in the film Slogan
(1969). He was 40, and had previously recorded Je T’aime … as a duet with
Brigitte Bardot, only for the actor to withdraw permission for it to be
released. Birkin had already starred in a 1965 musical, Passion Flower Hotel,
scored by John Barry, whom she married that year at the age of 19 and from whom
she was divorced in 1968; he was the father of Kate, the first of Birkin’s
three daughters. But it was on the duet with Gainsbourg, she said, that for the
first time “somebody thought I had a pretty voice”.
She sang
her part an octave higher than Bardot. “It gave it a choirboy side that
[Gainsbourg] liked a lot,” she said. Rumours that the vocal track was recorded
under the covers during a moment of intimacy were untrue (the couple were
standing at separate microphones in a studio in central London) though they did
nothing to harm the mythology surrounding a song that was later condemned by
the Vatican. “I just remember thinking it was all terribly funny,” she said.
Among the
countries that refused to give the song airplay was Britain, where it became
the first banned single to reach the top of the charts, as well as the first
non-English-language No 1. It was also the lead track on the 1969 album Jane
Birkin/Serge Gainsbourg.
Birkin’s
life remained inextricably linked to his. They were together for 11 years, and
had a daughter, Charlotte, who became a successful singer and actor. Even after
they separated in 1980, he continued to write for her, and she went on
performing his songs for the rest of her life.
Far from
being an adjunct to Gainsbourg’s legend, she possessed her own style,
intelligence and attitude. Her wistful beauty was rendered unorthodox by an
eager, gap-toothed smile. Her voice was as bewitching as her face: though she
lived in France from 1969 onwards, and spoke French fluently, she never shed
her breathy, crisply English accent.
She was
born in London to Judy Campbell, an actor who had been a muse to Noël Coward,
and David Birkin, who was a lieutenant commander in the Royal Navy and a spy
during the second world war. His duties included taking British spies across
the Channel to France and bringing back stranded airmen and escaped prisoners
of war.
Jane was
educated at Upper Chine school on the Isle of Wight. At 17 she starred with
Ralph Richardson in Graham Greene’s play Carving a Statue; Greene himself had a
hand in casting her. Her screen acting career began with a walk-on part in The
Knack … and How to Get It (1965) and a controversial nude scene in Michelangelo
Antonioni’s Blow-Up, which she agreed to because Barry had told her she
wouldn’t dare.
She had a
small role in the Warren Beatty caper Kaleidoscope (also 1966), played a model
called Penny Lane in the psychedelic curiosity Wonderwall (1968) and starred
with Romy Schneider and Alain Delon in the psychological thriller La Piscine
(1969). She got on famously with Bardot when they starred together in Don Juan,
or If Don Juan Were a Woman (1973). Gainsbourg directed her in a 1976 film
named after their hit song; he cast her as a boyish woman who attracts the
attentions of a gay man, played by the Warhol regular Joe Dallesandro.
Birkin was
tremendous fun in two star-studded Agatha Christie thrillers, Death on the Nile
(1978) and Evil Under the Sun (1982). In the cryptic Love on the Ground (1984),
Rivette cast her and Geraldine Chaplin as actors drawn into a playwright’s
mysterious world. She appeared in two films, The Pirate (1984) and Comedy!
(1987), made by her then partner, Jacques Doillon, with whom she had her third
daughter, Lou, also a singer and actor. Jean-Luc Godard directed her in Keep
Your Right Up (also 1987), while for Varda she played a woman besotted with a
14-year-old boy in Kung-Fu Master! (1988); the film co-starred Charlotte and
featured Lou, and was inspired by an idea by Birkin herself.
In the same
year, Varda made her the subject of Jane B For Agnès V, in which the actor
performed a variety of specially scripted scenes (in one, she was a Stan Laurel
type, in another a cockney mother) interspersed with musings on her life. She
received the documentary treatment once again when her daughter directed Jane
By Charlotte (2021).
Her two
most impressive performances came in Bertrand Tavernier’s These Foolish Things,
aka Daddy Nostalgie (1990), in which she was moving as a woman trying to repair
her relationship with her dying father (Dirk Bogarde); and La Belle Noiseuse
(1991), Rivette’s spellbinding four-hour study of a painter (Michel Piccoli)
and his new muse (Emmanuelle Béart), in which Birkin played the artist’s wife
and former model, who must deal with the indignity of having her younger self
literally painted over.
Later films
included Alain Resnais’s musical On Connaît la Chanson (1997) and the
Merchant-Ivory coming-of-age story A Soldier’s Daughter Never Cries (1998).
In 2002
Birkin was diagnosed with leukaemia, but by 2006 she had made her directorial
debut with the autobiographical family drama Boxes, which she also wrote and
starred in, along with Chaplin, Piccoli, John Hurt and her daughter Lou. She
appeared in Rivette’s final film, Around a Small Mountain (2009), played
herself in Hong Sang-soo’s Nobody’s Daughter Haewon, and was reunited with
Tavernier for his comedy The French Minister (also 2013).
Her look
had been widely applauded in the 1960s, and seemed never to go out of date. In
the 80s Hermès introduced a large and exorbitantly priced leather bag, named
“the Birkin” in her honour. Fashion journalists in recent years could still be
heard celebrating the “Jane Birkin top”, referring to the white lace dress made
famous by her in the late 60s. “Real life was what I was best at,” she told
Vogue magazine in 2016. “I didn’t have confidence in movie cameras or on stage.
But I did have confidence in what I wanted in real life. If I wanted to be
barefoot and wear a mackintosh, I would do it. I didn’t give a hoot.”
It was at
40 that she finally discarded her youthful ingénue image and performed her
first live concert: “I cut my hair off like a boy, I wore men’s clothes. I only
wanted people to hear the music and words. It was fantastic. And it was so
frightening. Serge was there and he kept lighting his cigarette lighter to make
everybody put their lighters on.” That show was preserved on her 1987 album,
Jane Birkin au Bataclan. She continued singing and recording into her old age;
among her later albums is Birkin/Gainsbourg: Le Symphonique, from 2017, in
which the couple’s songs received new orchestral arrangements.
In 2020 she
published Munkey Diaries 1957-1982, containing diary entries addressed to her
favourite cuddly toy from childhood, which she can be seen clutching on the
cover of Gainsbourg’s 1971 album Histoire de Melody Nelson. She buried the toy
with him after his death in 1991.
She is
survived by Charlotte and Lou, and six grandchildren, and by her brother,
Andrew, and sister, Linda. Kate, a photographer, died in 2013.
Jane Mallory Birkin, actor and singer, born 14
December 1946; died 16 July 2023
Jane Birkin, Singer, Actress and Fashion Inspiration,
Dies at 76
She was a British-born “French icon” for years
associated with the singer Serge Gainsbourg. In the U.S., she was known for
lending her name to luxury handbags by Hermès.
Constant
Méheut
By Constant
Méheut
Reporting
from Paris
July 16,
2023
Updated
11:51 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/16/arts/music/jane-birkin-dead.html
Jane
Birkin, the British-French singer and actress whose collaboration with the
artist Serge Gainsbourg made her a defining figure of the 1970s and whose
personal style inspired a luxury handbag, died on Sunday in Paris. She was 76.
Her death
was confirmed by President Emmanuel Macron of France, who called her “a French
icon” in a message posted on Twitter. The French news media reported that Ms.
Birkin had been found dead at her home but that the cause was not immediately
known.
It was Ms.
Birkin’s personal and artistic relationship with Mr. Gainsbourg that made her
famous overseas, especially following their 1969 hit song “Je t’aime… moi non
plus” (“I Love You… Me Neither”). In America, Ms. Birkin was mostly known for
lending her name to the famous Hermès handbags, status symbols with a distinct
strap fastener and signature latch.
Jane
Mallory Birkin was born in London on Dec. 14, 1946, to the actress Judy
Campbell and Cmdr. David Birkin of the Royal Navy. But it was her years in
France that made her famous and established her as an embodiment of Parisian
chic.
Among her
first acting roles was The Blonde in Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1966 film
“Blow-Up.” It was two years later, on a film set, that Ms. Birkin met Mr.
Gainsbourg, beginning a love affair that would last 12 years and captivate
France.
Their
erotic duet “Je t’aime… moi non plus,” whose lyrics are punctuated by breathy
moans from Ms. Birkin, was seen as exemplifying the sexual revolution of the
1960s. It was condemned by the Vatican.
Following
the breakup of the Gainsbourg relationship in 1981, Ms. Birkin continued
singing and acting, including in films by Agnès Varda and Patrice Chéreau. In
1983, she released the album “Baby Alone in Babylone,” which included music and
lyrics by Mr. Gainsbourg.
Mr.
Gainsbourg, a director and composer whose music helped pioneer contemporary
French pop music, died at 62 in 1991.
“He wrote
for me from 1968 until the day he died,” Ms. Birkin said in an interview with
The New York Times in 2018. “Why he went on asking me to interpret the songs
that I had inspired I don’t know — but perhaps he knew that I’d be faithful at
least to that.”
Ms.
Birkin’s gamin looks and carefree bohemian manner transfixed generations of the
style-conscious and inspired the expensive and highly coveted Birkin bag from
Hermès.
“I would
love to have been a sort of neat person and wear a Kelly,’’ she said in a 2018
YouTube interview, referring to the ladylike handbag created and named for the
film star Grace Kelly. “But I never thought you could get enough in it.’’
The
collaboration with Hermès, the French luxury house, started after its chief
executive, Jean-Louis Dumas, saw Ms. Birkin struggling with a straw basket on a
flight to London, its contents overflowing onto the floor. Ms. Birkin said she
had not been able to find a leather bag she liked. Hermès devised the Birkin,
which was, as she requested, “four times the size of a Kelly.’'
Ms. Birkin
was additionally popular in France as an activist for women’s and L.G.B.T.Q.
rights and also for her British accent when speaking French, which the French
found endearing.
“The most
Parisian of the English has left us,” the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, wrote
in a message on Twitter. “We will never forget her songs, her laughs and her
incomparable accent which have always accompanied us.”
Ms. Birkin
suffered a mild stroke in 2021 and had recently canceled a series of concerts
because of health issues.
She is
survived by two daughters she had with Mr. Gainsbourg and the French film
director Jacques Doillon: the singer-actresses Charlotte Gainsbourg and Lou
Doillon, each of whom has, like their mother, inspired designers and followers
of fashion.
Guy Trebay
contributed reporting from New York.
Constant
Méheut has covered France from the Paris bureau of The Times since 2020. More
about Constant Méheut