Knowledge

Vanity Fair (American magazine 1913–1936)

Source 📝

173: 135: 38: 505: 203:, "the only periodical printed for the playgoer and player", published weekly by the "Standard and Vanity Fair Company, Inc", whose president was Harry Mountford, also General Director of the 55: 525: 17: 509: 102: 74: 81: 545: 88: 199:
and published four issues in 1913. Nast paid $ 3,000 for the right to use the title "Vanity Fair" in the United States, granted by the magazine
300:
and declining advertising revenues, although its circulation, at 90,000 copies, was at its peak. Condé Nast announced in December 1935 that
70: 535: 382:
1913-1922: HathiTrust has all issues through the end of 1922 in full view. (Some later volumes can be searched but not read online.)
550: 530: 95: 469: 244:, on the same West 44th Street block as Condé Nast's offices. Crowninshield attracted some of the best writers of the era. 267:
In 1915, it published more pages of advertisements than any other U.S. magazine. It continued to thrive into the 1920s.
121: 540: 451: 555: 59: 327: 411: 369: 392: 150:
was an American society magazine published from 1913 to 1936. It was highly successful until the
48: 317: 161: 186: 356: 237: 8: 484: 211: 229: 293: 297: 224: 156: 151: 348: 253: 289: 285: 241: 215: 172: 474: 280:
as the American establishment's top culture chronicle. It contained writing by
276: 257: 219: 176: 519: 245: 281: 261: 406: 249: 233: 134: 424: 204: 37: 296:
was its editor for some time. However, it became a casualty of the
228:, and was the staff drama critic. Benchley hired future playwright 504: 288:, theatre criticisms by Dorothy Parker, and photographs by 189:
began his empire by purchasing the men's fashion magazine
154:
led to its becoming unprofitable, and it was merged into
141:, cover art for the June 1914 issue. Digitally restored. 415:, where visitors are tempted with every worldly vanity. 482:"Conde Nast Publications To Combine Two Magazines", 330:
as a magazine of pop culture, fashion and politics.
210:
The magazine achieved great popularity under editor
62:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 308:(circulation 156,000) as of the March 1936 issue. 236:. The trio were among the original members of the 526:Defunct magazines published in the United States 517: 218:was tapped to become managing editor. He joined 71:"Vanity Fair" American magazine 1913–1936 346: 264:all appeared in a single issue, July 1923. 122:Learn how and when to remove this message 18:Vanity Fair (American magazine 1913-1936) 546:1913 establishments in the United States 171: 133: 470:"Vanity Fair Merged With Vogue by Nast" 333: 14: 518: 351:: 45 v. in 33 – via Hathi Trust. 347:Crowninshield, Frank (3 March 1966). 179:'s cover for the April 1921 issue of 27:American magazine published 1913–1936 449: 222:, who had come to the magazine from 60:adding citations to reliable sources 31: 405:Vanity Fair is a year-long fair in 24: 431:, New York: Scribner, 2000, p. 37. 25: 567: 510:Vanity Fair (US magazine 1913–36) 497: 232:, who had recently returned from 193:in 1913. He renamed the magazine 536:Magazines disestablished in 1936 503: 36: 478:, p. 21, December 30, 1935 311: 47:needs additional citations for 488:, p. 2, December 31, 1935 462: 443: 434: 418: 399: 385: 376: 340: 13: 1: 531:Magazines established in 1913 551:Defunct Condé Nast magazines 201:The Standard and Vanity Fair 7: 456:www.oldmagazinearticles.com 10: 572: 315: 167: 450:Articles, Old Magazine. 160:in 1936. In the 1980s, 452:"Old Magazine Articles" 328:Condé Nast Publications 541:Vanity Fair (magazine) 412:The Pilgrim's Progress 409:'s Christian allegory 393:"Vanity Fair archives" 364:Cite journal requires 318:Vanity Fair (magazine) 183: 142: 556:Algonquin Round Table 304:would be merged with 238:Algonquin Round Table 196:Dress and Vanity Fair 175: 137: 512:at Wikimedia Commons 440:Yagoda, 2000, p. 36. 334:Notes and references 56:improve this article 485:Wall Street Journal 240:, which met at the 212:Frank Crowninshield 284:, T. S. Eliot and 270:Starting in 1925, 230:Robert E. Sherwood 207:theatrical union. 184: 143: 508:Media related to 294:Clare Boothe Luce 132: 131: 124: 106: 16:(Redirected from 563: 507: 491: 489: 479: 466: 460: 459: 447: 441: 438: 432: 422: 416: 403: 397: 396: 389: 383: 380: 374: 373: 367: 362: 360: 352: 344: 298:Great Depression 152:Great Depression 127: 120: 116: 113: 107: 105: 64: 40: 32: 21: 571: 570: 566: 565: 564: 562: 561: 560: 516: 515: 500: 495: 494: 481: 480: 468: 467: 463: 448: 444: 439: 435: 423: 419: 404: 400: 391: 390: 386: 381: 377: 365: 363: 354: 353: 345: 341: 336: 326:was revived by 320: 314: 290:Edward Steichen 286:P. G. Wodehouse 242:Algonquin Hotel 216:Robert Benchley 170: 128: 117: 111: 108: 65: 63: 53: 41: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 569: 559: 558: 553: 548: 543: 538: 533: 528: 514: 513: 499: 498:External links 496: 493: 492: 475:New York Times 461: 442: 433: 417: 398: 384: 375: 366:|journal= 338: 337: 335: 332: 316:Main article: 313: 310: 277:The New Yorker 274:competed with 258:Gertrude Stein 220:Dorothy Parker 177:John Held, Jr. 169: 166: 130: 129: 44: 42: 35: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 568: 557: 554: 552: 549: 547: 544: 542: 539: 537: 534: 532: 529: 527: 524: 523: 521: 511: 506: 502: 501: 487: 486: 477: 476: 471: 465: 457: 453: 446: 437: 430: 426: 421: 414: 413: 408: 402: 394: 388: 379: 371: 358: 350: 349:"Vanity fair" 343: 339: 331: 329: 325: 319: 309: 307: 303: 299: 295: 291: 287: 283: 279: 278: 273: 268: 265: 263: 259: 255: 254:Ferenc Molnár 251: 247: 246:Aldous Huxley 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 226: 221: 217: 213: 208: 206: 202: 198: 197: 192: 188: 182: 178: 174: 165: 164:was revived. 163: 159: 158: 153: 149: 148: 140: 136: 126: 123: 115: 112:December 2018 104: 101: 97: 94: 90: 87: 83: 80: 76: 73: –  72: 68: 67:Find sources: 61: 57: 51: 50: 45:This article 43: 39: 34: 33: 30: 19: 483: 473: 464: 455: 445: 436: 428: 420: 410: 401: 387: 378: 357:cite journal 342: 323: 321: 312:1983 revival 305: 301: 282:Thomas Wolfe 275: 271: 269: 266: 262:Djuna Barnes 223: 209: 200: 195: 194: 190: 185: 181:Vanity Fair. 180: 155: 146: 145: 144: 138: 118: 109: 99: 92: 85: 78: 66: 54:Please help 49:verification 46: 29: 407:John Bunyan 324:Vanity Fair 302:Vanity Fair 272:Vanity Fair 250:T. S. Eliot 234:World War I 147:Vanity Fair 139:Vanity Fair 520:Categories 429:About Town 425:Ben Yagoda 214:. In 1919 205:White Rats 187:Condé Nast 82:newspapers 162:the title 322:In 1983 168:History 96:scholar 260:, and 98:  91:  84:  77:  69:  306:Vogue 225:Vogue 191:Dress 157:Vogue 103:JSTOR 89:books 370:help 75:news 58:by 522:: 472:, 454:. 427:, 361:: 359:}} 355:{{ 292:; 256:, 252:, 248:, 490:. 458:. 395:. 372:) 368:( 125:) 119:( 114:) 110:( 100:· 93:· 86:· 79:· 52:. 20:)

Index

Vanity Fair (American magazine 1913-1936)

verification
improve this article
adding citations to reliable sources
"Vanity Fair" American magazine 1913–1936
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Learn how and when to remove this message

Great Depression
Vogue
the title

John Held, Jr.
Condé Nast
White Rats
Frank Crowninshield
Robert Benchley
Dorothy Parker
Vogue
Robert E. Sherwood
World War I
Algonquin Round Table
Algonquin Hotel
Aldous Huxley
T. S. Eliot

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.