When JFK Jr.'s George magazine launched in 1995, the consensus among many was that the pub's founder was of far more interest than most of the people featured in its pages.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex face a similar challenge, which Vanity Fair's Erin Vanderhoof lays bare in her annotated catalog of all of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry's creative projects. The biggest hits from their Archewell Productions have been focused on the couple, themselves, but the pair has also been involved with a surprising number of other ventures—and, no, I'm not even talking about the Duchess's (reportedly delicious!) jam.
But if you've already watched all of Meghan and Harry's documentary work, we have some alternatives. How about Morgan Neville's new film, Lorne, about the legendary SNL boss? Or perhaps the (using the term loosely) documentary shorts of OnlyFans, which is attracting fashion designers eager to build their brands in a fresh, new way.
|
|
|
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex founded Archewell Productions soon after their royal exit in 2020, and though their biggest hits have centered on their own stories, they have also helped to release an array of documentaries about other people.
|
|
|
The SNL boss is grudgingly thinking about legacy: “He wants people to understand that he created a culture that really means something,” says Morgan Neville, director of the new documentary Lorne.
|
|
|
The content-subscription platform has been hosting iconoclastic fashion designers. With sex back on the runway and an increasingly challenged retail landscape, is OnlyFans fashion’s next frontier? Louis Gabriel Nouchi, a Paris-based designer, tells Vanity Fair about his newly launched OnlyFans.
|
|
|
Solange Knowles, Aubrey Plaza, Grace Gummer, and more attended dinner at the late Donald Judd’s New York studio, hosted by Khaite and the Judd Foundation.
|
|
|
When Kyle de Rothschild Deschanel arrived in New York nightlife and venture fundraising circles a few years ago, he was an instant hit. Equal parts charm, enterprise, and fabulous family wealth, he seemed to live on a 24/7 carousel of mega-dollar deals and raucous parties. It was almost as if he had conjured his entire existence out of thin air. What if he had?
|
|
|
After allegedly scamming Manhattan as “Kyle Deschanel” in 2023, Aryeh Dodelson settled into a luxury building in South Beach—and resumed his old habits. But in late February of this year, he was arrested for allegedly strangling his fiancée, and got charged with a felony and a misdemeanor. How did he finally get caught?
|
|
|
This e-mail was sent to you by VANITY FAIR. To ensure delivery to your inbox (not bulk or junk folders), please add our e-mail address, vanityfair@newsletter.vf.com, to your address book.
View our Privacy Policy Unsubscribe
Copyright © Condé Nast 2026. One World Trade Center, New York, NY 10007. All rights reserved.
|
|
|
|
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home