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Contributors
This month, contributing editor Marjorie Williams profiles conservative "It girl" Laura Ingraham. "She is one of those people who have a bigger vision of themselves than available models, and that's always fascinating to watch," says Williams, who wrote about another Washington oddity, Dick Morris, in November.
Charles Fleming hit the set of Adrian Lyne's racy adaptation of Lolita for this issue and found the scene surprisingly jolly: "Movie sets are mainly armies on the move. This one was like a garden party." Fleming is currently writing a biography of the late Don Simpson for Doubleday.
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While capturing Gianni Versace's singular New York town house, photographer Bruce Weber met the best-dressed man he's ever seen in his life: Cormac Creed, Versace's construction supervisor. "To have such a brilliantly dressed construction supervisor, it was just so Gianni!" Weber says. His new book, A House Is Not a Home (Little, Brown), is a retrospective of residences he has shot over the years.
Sally Bedell Smith has joined Vanity Fair as a contributing editor. Her new book, Reflected Glory: The Life of Pamela Churchill Harriman, was excerpted in the October issue.
"Goldie Hawn is one of the smartest people in Hollywood," says contributing editor Judy Bachrach of her subject this month. "She knows that this resurgence in her career is important—that it's now or never."
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