Empress of Fashion (8 page)

Read Empress of Fashion Online

Authors: Amanda Mackenzie Stuart

BOOK: Empress of Fashion
2.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

(Oscar Wilde, had, of course, proposed an aesthetic ideal of the supremacy of art in every aspect of daily life.) Diana's Type still bore traces of Theda Bara, by now an Egyptianized Vamp after a
succès-fou
as Cleopatra. “She was simply crazy for anything Egyptian,” wrote Miss Dalziel of her creation. “In fact at times she saw herself only as Cleopatra, surrounded by leopards, black slaves & silver white peacocks. She seldom smoked . . . but could rarely resist a gold tip & always managed to have the trusty black enamel holder aloof.”

Unlike Theda Bara and her screen sisters, who were silent, the manner in which Diana's Type spoke—or chose not to—was most important: “She had taught herself to have quite a facility for words, but she seldom used it.” This Type “abhorred the woman who could not rely on herself to be smart & had to get their distinction by means of a Pekinese or chow chow.” In fact, wrote Diana, if you thought she was a woman with a lapdog you had missed the Type completely. Writing in the margin, a tin-eared teacher responded, “It's your fault if anyone misses the type at this point.” Yet again Diana received almost no encouragement for her efforts, and the essays came back with low marks and complaints about dashes, paragraph indentations, and monotonous sentence construction. However, a corrected version may have appeared in the school magazine as Diana's first published writing; and both Cleopatra and the “trusty black enamel holder” would reemerge later to great effect.

D
iana left Dongan Hall in June 1921, and Emily returned from Africa shortly afterward to preside over her debut, soon after Diana's eighteenth birthday on September 29. There was no question that finding a husband should not be Diana's next step; and the purpose of the debutante season was, of course, to bring together young women and men from the right background in a marriage market. The season began out of town with an annual ball for one hundred debutantes at Tuxedo Park, at the Tuxedo Club founded by the tobacco magnate Pierre Lorillard IV for New York's bluebloods in the 1880s. The “debutantes' first bow in town” followed at the Junior Assemblies at the Ritz-Carlton on December 2. Throughout the autumn each debutante's mother gave at least one tea, dinner, or dance for her daughter at a fashionable venue: the Colony Club, the Cosmopolitan Club, the Ritz-Carlton, the Plaza, or Sherry's. In Diana's case Emily gave a luncheon at the Colony Club on December 1. Forty-three young women attended this event, including several old school friends like Emily Billings.

In “coming out” in 1921, these young ladies were moving out of the schoolroom during a period of vertiginous change accelerated by the First World War. The late 1910s and early 1920s marked the moment when America finally metamorphosed from a land of farming and small towns into a nation of gleaming urban modernity, mass production, and mass consumption. Spared the ravages of war, America's economy raced ahead of its decimated European competitors after 1918, exploiting American technological advantage in automobiles, airplanes, and architecture. As the American economic engine roared into life, New York roared with it. Partly because there was so little space for heavy manufacturing in Manhattan, New York was a city where consumption, rather than production, predominated. “You might do the work of ‘making' outside the city, but you ‘made it' in New York, and everyone who was anyone knew it,” notes Ann Douglas. A beacon of American economic success, a city defined by consumption, and a great international port, New York was the place where changing American tastes and fashions first revealed themselves.

By the time Diana left Dongan Hall, New York's upper-class young women were embodying some of the sharpest changes in fashion of the period. A new generation of independent, confident females had emerged from the war effort. They were quite unlike anything American and European society had ever seen before. The vote was extended to them in 1920. In an underestimated but revolutionary change they were suddenly in charge of their own mobility—on foot, on public transportation, and increasingly in their own cars. They took full advantage of this brand-new freedom, emerging from the home to disport and display themselves in the public realm. They were constantly in motion. They smoked, long cigarette holders held “aloof,” to keep themselves slim as cigarettes began to be promoted as a slimming aid. Rebellion against the attitudes of the older generation, its mature body shapes, and its Victorian artistic taste (or lack of it) was given an extra piquancy by Prohibition in 1919, which drove the new syncopated jazz music and the new dances into a countercultural underground, reinforcing the clash. A young woman drinking in public was a new development. Drinking and dancing in illegal speakeasies was even more delightful. The older generation was predictably outraged, giving vent to frequent moral panics, which were often about sex—the predilection of the “New Woman” for “petting parties” was a particular source of consternation in 1921.

Fashionable young women, meanwhile, demanded ever greater choice over what they were wearing and how they looked. The slim, androgynous flapper, as popularly conceived, did not emerge fully with her short bob, short hemlines, and antiestablishment attitudes until later in the 1920s, but she was already evolving by the year of Diana's debut, in lighter-weight, corset-free fashions that allowed her to slide in and out of automobiles, jump on a bus, bound along sidewalks, and dance the night away. For the first time in history, young women would soon be wearing backless dresses and skirts above the knee. There was, of course, continuity as well as change in style; the influence of the Ballets Russes in terms of color, line, and silhouette lasted until the end of the decade. As important as any specific fashion, however, was the way in which a fashionable, affluent young woman could suddenly express her individuality like the “types” in Diana's essays: through consumption. The prevailing view was that consumption was uncomplicated, desirable, and even a patriotic duty. Shopping was perceived to be modern, and the driver of American economic success. There was a shift away from the idea of female fashion as a vehicle for displaying male wealth and power. Though this approach to getting dressed certainly did not disappear, booming American capitalism handed the New Woman the means to create her independent persona through shopping, and a range of services dedicated to adornment and the manner in which she styled herself. It was a phenomenon that fascinated male writers of the period, from Scott Fitzgerald in “Bernice Bobs Her Hair” to Michael Arlen in
The Green Hat
.

Even Emily, who used cosmetics well before they became widely acceptable, was taken aback by the way Diana adopted exaggerated makeup as a way of establishing her separate identity while she was still quite young—which was, of course, the point. “I adore artifice. I always have. I remember when I was thirteen or fourteen buying red lacquer in Chinatown for my fingernails. ‘What
is
that?' my mother said. ‘
Where
did you get it?
Why
did you get it?' ‘Because,' I said, ‘I want to be a Chinese princess.' ” If the corollary of this exciting approach to defining oneself was that advertisers pounced on women as a group and exploited new anxieties about their bodies, nobody seemed to care. “When cosmetics began to be seen as an ‘affordable indulgence,' beauty became a multimillion-dollar industry,” writes the historian Lucy Moore in
Anything Goes
. “In 1920 there were only 750 beauty salons in New York; that number had risen to 3,000 in 1925. . . . Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein were launching flourishing business empires capitalizing on the Flapper's obsession with her looks.”

E
mily's lunch for Diana at the Colony Club was followed by a ball at the Ritz-Carlton for Diana and Anne Kaufman, on December 21, 1921. New York's newspapers, which continued to report on society events in great detail throughout the 1920s, described the ball as “one of the largest coming-out parties of the Winter” and “a very jolly event.” Diana's preparations for her coming-out party were meticulous, if isolated: the family home was filling up with the heads of dead beasts, and no one, least of all Emily, took much interest in what she was doing. Diana had graduated from poring over picture catalogs and the
Woman's Home Companion
to following French fashion closely in the pages of
Vogue
. Her dress for her coming-out ball was copied in white satin from a Poiret design, and she remembered it in detail: “a fringed skirt to give it
un peu
de mouvement
and a pearl-and-diamond stomacher to hold the fringe back before it sprang. It looked like the South Sea Islands—like a hula skirt.”

At this point in her life, Diana was going through a phase of covering herself with calcimine (otherwise known as distemper and more commonly used for painting on drying plaster), with a view to looking like a lily. “I was always a little extreme. . . . On the night of my coming-out . . . was I calcimined
that
night. My dress was white, naturally. And then the reds were
something
. I had velvet slippers that were
lacquer
red.” She carried a bouquet of red camellias to the ball, sent by fast-talking showman J. Ringling North of the Ringling circus family. This time Emily did snap to attention, uncertain whether to be more appalled by the circus or the camellias. “ ‘
Circus people
. . . where did you ever meet
them
?' my mother wanted to know. I told her that for some reason J. Ringling North had taken a fancy to me and sent the red camellias.” Emily then delivered some mother-daughter information that suggests that the Dalziel household was not unduly afflicted by Victorian prudery. “ ‘You should know,' she said, ‘that red camellias are what the demimondaines of the nineteenth century carried when they had their periods and thus weren't available for their man. I don't think they're quite . . . suitable.' I carried the camellias anyway. They were so beautiful. I had to assume that no one else at the party knew what my mother knew.”

Thanks to the social convulsion of the postwar years, some of the debutantes at the ball were already leading lives very different from their mothers' at the same stage. Anita Damrosch, the daughter of the conductor Walter Damrosch, went to drama school that winter and became a professional actress. Others went on to make their mark in a more traditional manner, notably the Morgan twins, Thelma and Gloria, who would, respectively, become the mistress of Edward VIII and marry a Vanderbilt, but there was a remarkable degree of latent creativity on the guest list too. Jeanne Reynal, a great friend of Diana's while they were both debutantes, later had a pioneering role in the abstract expressionist movement in New York as a mosaic artist, before marrying Thomas Sills, an African American painter. Maud Cabot, a guest at Diana's debutante lunch, became a distinguished painter, exhibiting alongside Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko. She hated everything about being a debutante. “Since I was not interested in getting married, the entire structure of this social edifice was for me a hollow shell. I was a dismal failure.” Her mother's response was to send her off to shoot a moose, though it may have been emblematic of the changing times that Maud was allowed to go to college when this failed to work.

Maud Cabot's view of the season was emphatically not shared by Diana, who had been longing to find a husband for years so that she could get away from home. Her debutante year was a triumph. She attended Fokine's newly opened studio at 4 Riverside Drive; she was photographed playing tennis at Hot Springs, Virginia, and at the United Hunts Meet with her friend Barbara Brokaw at Belmont Park; she took part in amateur theatricals as a member of the Junior League; and she became an editor of a publication called
The Debutante Calendar
, which announced that she was “keenly interested in amateur journalism.” Diana also threw herself into the music, dances, and fashions of 1920s New York and the Harlem Renaissance. She adored the newly fashionable lowlife mistrusted—and unvisited—by the older generation, and sneaked off with her more daring friends to the Cotton Club in Harlem and to watch Josephine Baker perform on Broadway. She loved the idea of being thought “picturesquely depraved” for going to cabarets and nightclubs. One very good reason for frequenting such places was privacy: the purpose of going to nightclubs way downtown was “to avoid running into my mother and father—and doing what I loved to do best . . . dancing.” Like many of her fashionable contemporaries, Diana reacted against the sanitized Castle ballroom dances of the prewar era in favor of something more authentic, in an atmosphere where, at least temporarily, class distinctions meant little. “By the time I was seventeen, I knew what a snob was. I also knew that young snobs didn't
quite
get my number. I was much better with Mexican and Argentine gigolos (they weren't
really
gigolos—they were just odd ducks around town who liked to dance as much as I did). They were people who knew that I loved clothes, a certain nightlife, and that I
loved
to tango.”

In 1922 the press complimented Diana on her looks for the first time. Photographs show her favoring both the fashionable straight-line chemise, and the exoticism of Bakst. Diana was “one of the most attractive of this season's debutantes” and the “lovely daughter of Mrs. Frederick Dalziel.”
Vogue
, which started life as a New York society magazine and still covered the comings and goings of the city's fashionable elite in great detail in the early 1920s, described her as a “smart figure” and variously admired her way with her furs and a chic leather hat, “one of the new notes in millinery.” The only sour note was struck by a gossip columnist in Southampton who speculated that now that Miss Dalziel had enjoyed such glittering social success she would probably be deserting Southampton and going off to Newport with her elegant new friends. Three years after Diana first explored the idea in her diary, sheer determination, much thought about what constituted high style, and self-aware development of an alluring personality had brought her to the point where she had indeed become the Girl—and a young woman whose debut was as successful as her mother's in 1896. To onlookers who knew both of them, she seemed very like Emily—theatrical, stylish, articulate, amusing, full of energy, very made-up, with a host of admirers—but in the idiom of the modern young woman.

Other books

The Throwaway Year by Pace, Pepper
If Hooks Could Kill by Betty Hechtman
Little Bits of Baby by Patrick Gale
The Ballad of Aramei by J. A. Redmerski
Unwelcome by Michael Griffo
The Beach House by Paul Shepherd
Key Lime Pie Murder by Fluke, Joanne