Françoise de Langlade

Françoise de Langlade (1921 – June 17, 1983) was a magazine editor with Conde Nast Publications and the wife of fashion designer Oscar de la Renta.[1] She was named to the International Best Dressed List Hall of Fame in 1973.[2]

Françoise de Langlade
Born1921
Paris, France
DiedJune 17, 1983 (age 62)
Manhattan, New York, US
OccupationFashion magazine editor
Spouse(s)Jean Bruere (divorced)
Nicholas Bagenow (divorced)
Oscar de la Renta (1967-1983, her death)
Children1

Biography

De Langlade was born in Paris, the daughter of an insurance salesman from Bordeaux, France, and a mother from Martinique.[1] She was educated in Paris. She started her career in fashion with The House of Schiaparelli,[3] which she left to work at Harper's Bazaar. She joined French Vogue in 1951, where she served as Fashion Editor and Editor-in-Chief.[1] In 1967, she married Oscar de la Renta and moved to the United States. In 1968, she joined American Vogue where she served as Editor-at-Large. She also worked as a Fashion and Beauty Editor for Elizabeth Arden International.[1] She is credited with using her established network of contacts to help promote her husband's brand.[4]

Personal life

De Langlade married three times. Her first husband was French businessman Jean Bruere with whom she had one son, Jean Marc Bruere; the marriage ended in divorce. Her second husband was diplomat, Nicholas Bagenow; they also divorced. In 1967, she married Oscar de la Renta. The de la Rentas had homes in Manhattan, Kent, Connecticut, and Santo Domingo. She died of bone cancer in 1983.[5][6]

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gollark: Also, the implicit interfaces are terrible.
gollark: - lacking in generics - you have to use `interface{}`- public/private visibility is controlled by *capitalization* of all things- weird bodgey specialcasing instead of good generalizable solutions- you literally cannot express a `max` function which returns the largest of two of any type of number in a well-typed way
gollark: Go's syntax is kind of nicer but its awful type system (yes, worse than an untyped language's) is... not good.
gollark: You know, it very much might be.

References

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