Heiress Gloria Vanderbilt dies in New York aged 95

‘Poor little rich girl’ who lived life to the full made a separate fortune with designer jeans label

Gloria Vanderbilt in 2009. The society heiress died on Monday at her home in Manhattan, aged 95. Photograph: Piotr Redlinski/The New York Times
Gloria Vanderbilt in 2009. The society heiress died on Monday at her home in Manhattan, aged 95. Photograph: Piotr Redlinski/The New York Times

Gloria Vanderbilt, the heiress, artist and romantic who began her life as the "poor little rich girl" of the Great Depression, has died at the age of 95.

Vanderbilt survived family tragedy and multiple marriages and reigned during the 1970s and 1980s as a designer jeans pioneer.

She was the great-great-granddaughter of financier Cornelius Vanderbilt and the mother of CNN news presenter Anderson Cooper, who announced her death via a first-person obituary that aired on the network.

Mr Cooper confirmed Ms Vanderbilt died at home with friends and family at her side.

READ SOME MORE

She had been suffering from advanced stomach cancer, he said.

“Gloria Vanderbilt was an extraordinary woman, who loved life, and lived it on her own terms,” Mr Cooper said.

“She was a painter, a writer and designer but also a remarkable mother, wife and friend. She was 95 years old, but ask anyone close to her, and they’d tell you, she was the youngest person they knew, the coolest and most modern.”

Her life was chronicled in sensational headlines from her childhood through four marriages and three divorces.

She married for the first time at 17, causing her aunt to disinherit her.

Husbands

Her husbands included Leopold Stokowski, the celebrated conductor, and Sidney Lumet, the award-winning film and television director.

In 1988, she witnessed the suicide of one of her four sons.

Vanderbilt was a talented painter and collagist who also acted on the stage, in The Time Of Your Life on Broadway, and television, in Playhouse 90, Studio One, Kraft Theatre and US Steel Hour.

She was a fabric designer who became an early enthusiast for designer denim.

The dark-haired, tall and ultra-thin Vanderbilt partnered with Mohan Murjani, who introduced a one million dollar advertising campaign in 1978 that turned the Gloria Vanderbilt brand with its signature white swan label into a sensation.

At its peak in 1980, it was generating more than 200 million dollars in sales, and decades later famous-name designer jeans – dressed up or down – remain a woman’s wardrobe staple.

Vanderbilt wrote several books, including the 2004 chronicle of her love life, It Seemed Important at the Time: A Romance Memoir, which drops such names as Errol Flynn, whom she dated as a teenager; Frank Sinatra, for whom she left Stokowski; Marlon Brando; and Howard Hughes.

She claimed her only happy marriage was to author Wyatt Cooper, which ended with his death in 1978 at the age of 50.

I always feel that something wonderful is going to happen. And it always does

Son Anderson Cooper called her memoir “a terrific book; it’s like an older Sex and the City”.

“I’ve had many, many loves,” Vanderbilt told the Associated Press in a 2004 interview.

“I always feel that something wonderful is going to happen. And it always does.”

‘Extraordinary father’

Noting her father’s death when she was an infant, she said: “If you don’t have a father, you don’t miss it, because you don’t know what it is. It was really only when I married Wyatt Cooper that I understood what it was like to have a father, because he was just an extraordinary father.”

In 2016, Ms Vanderbilt and Anderson Cooper appeared together in the HBO documentary Nothing Left Unsaid.

Gloria Laura Madeleine Sophie Vanderbilt was born in 1924, a century after her great-great-grandfather started the family fortune, first in steamships and later in railroads.

He left about $100 million when he died in 1877 at the age of 82.

Her father, Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt, was 43, a gambler and drinker dying of liver disease when he married Gloria Morgan (19) in 1923.

Their daughter was one when Vanderbilt died in 1925, having gone through $25 million in 14 years.

The beneficiary of a $5 million trust fund, Vanderbilt became the “poor little rich girl” in 1934 at the age of 10 as the object of a custody fight between her globe-trotting mother and matriarchal aunt.

The aunt, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (59), who controlled $78 million and founded the Whitney Museum of American Art, won custody of her niece.

A shocked judge had closed the trial when a maid accused the child’s mother of a lesbian affair with a member of the British royal family.

The fight was chronicled in the best-selling 1980 book Little Gloria ... Happy At Last, made into a TV miniseries in 1982, with Angela Lansbury playing Whitney.

Hollywood

After spending the next seven years on her aunt’s Long Island estate, Vanderbilt went to Hollywood.

She dated celebrities and declared she would marry Hughes.

Instead, the 17-year-old wed Hughes’s press agent, Pasquale di Cicco, prompting her aunt to cut Gloria out of her will.

Vanderbilt came into her own $5 million trust fund in 1945 at the age of 21.

She also divorced Di Cicco, whom she said had often beaten her, and the next day married the 63-year-old Stokowski.

After her marriage broke up, Vanderbilt found herself embroiled in another custody case, this time as the mother

The marriage to the conductor lasted 10 years and produced two sons, Stanislaus and Christopher.

After her marriage broke up, Vanderbilt found herself embroiled in another custody case, this time as the mother.

During the closed hearings, Stokowski accused Vanderbilt of spending too much time at parties and too little with the boys.

She accused him of tyrannising his sons and said he was really 85, and not 72 as he claimed.

Justice Edgar Nathan jnr gave Vanderbilt full-time custody.

But he commented that the court had wasted a month on “the resolution of problems which mature, intelligent parents should be able to work out for themselves”.

Vanderbilt married Lumet in 1956 and lived with him and her children in a 10-room penthouse on Gracie Square.

She divorced Lumet and married Cooper in 1963.

Son’s suicide

Their elder son, Carter, a Princeton graduate and editor at American Heritage, killed himself in 1988 at the age of 23, leaping from his mother’s 14th-floor apartment as she tried to stop him.

Police said he had been treated for depression and friends said he was despondent over a break-up with a girlfriend.

After her success in designer jeans, Vanderbilt branched out into other areas including shoes, scarves, table and bed linen and china through her company Gloria Concepts.

In 1988, Vanderbilt joined the designer fragrance market with her signature Glorious.

Her stretch jeans have been licensed through Jones Apparel, which acquired Gloria Vanderbilt Apparel in 2002 for $138m

By the late 1980s, Vanderbilt sold the name and licences for the brand name Gloria Vanderbilt to Gitano, who transferred it to a group of private investors in 1993.

More recently, her stretch jeans have been licensed through Jones Apparel Group, which acquired Gloria Vanderbilt Apparel in 2002 for $138 million.

Vanderbilt became the target of a swindle in the late 1970s and early 1980s when she made her psychiatrist and a lawyer associates in her business affairs.

A court held that the two had looted millions from Vanderbilt’s bank accounts.

Ms Vanderbilt also made headlines in 1980 when she filed, but later dropped, a discrimination complaint against the posh River House apartments, which had rejected her bid to buy a $1.1 million duplex.

She claimed the board was worried that black singer Bobby Short, who appeared with her on TV adverts, might marry her.

Erotic novel

In 2009, the 85-year-old penned a new novel, Obsession: An Erotic Tale, a graphic tale about an architect’s widow who discovers a cache of her husband’s letters that reveal his secret sex life.

In an interview with the New York Times, she said she was not embarrassed about the explicitness of her new book, saying: “I don’t think age has anything to do with what you write about. The only thing that would embarrass me is bad writing, and the only thing that really concerned me was my children. You know how children can be about their parents. But mine are very intelligent and supportive.” – AP