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Graydon Carter

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Occupation
  
Magazine editor

Name
  
Graydon Carter

Role
  
Journalist


Graydon Carter Graydon Carter EditorinChief Vanity Fair Interview 2015

Full Name
  
Edward Graydon Carter

Born
  
July 14, 1949 (age 74) (
1949-07-14
)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Title
  
Editor-in-chief, U.S. Vanity Fair

Books
  
Vanity Fair: The Portraits - A Century of Iconic Images

Spouse
  
Anna Scott (m. 2005), Cynthia Williamson (m. 1982–2000)

Education
  
Carleton University, University of Ottawa

Awards
  
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special, Raven Award

Movies
  
Arbitrage, The Kid Stays in the Picture, Gonzo: The Life and Work of D, Alfie, His Way

Similar People
  
Fran Lebowitz, David Friend, Christopher Hitchens, Alex Gibney, Brett Morgen

Bob iger and graydon carter discuss managing media in the digital age


Edward Graydon Carter, CM (born 14 July 1949) is a Canadian journalist and has served as the editor of Vanity Fair since 1992. He also co-founded, with Kurt Andersen and Tom Phillips, the satirical monthly magazine Spy in 1986.

Contents

Graydon Carter Graydon Carter photo 2 QuotationOf COM

Apple s jonathan ive in conversation with vanity fair s graydon carter


Career

Graydon Carter End of an Era Musto Leaves Voice Is Carter On Way Out o

After high school in Trenton, Ontario, Carter attended the University of Ottawa followed by Carleton University, but never graduated from either school. In 1973, Carter co-founded The Canadian Review, a monthly general interest magazine. By 1977, The Canadian Review had become award-winning and the third-largest circulating magazine in Canada. Despite its success, The Canadian Review was bankrupt by 1978.

Graydon Carter Steel Traps and Short Fingers Vanity Fair

In 1978, Carter moved to the United States and began working for Time as a writer-trainee, where he met Andersen. Carter spent five years writing for Time on the topics of business, law, and entertainment before moving to Life in 1983. In 1986, Carter and Andersen founded Spy, which ultimately ceased publication in 1998. Carter was then editor at the New York Observer before being invited to Vanity Fair to take over from Tina Brown, who left for The New Yorker. He has been the editor since July 1992, with successes during his tenure including winning 14 National Magazine Awards and being named to the Magazine Editors' Hall of Fame.

Graydon Carter Vanity Fair Editor Graydon Carter Stepping Down Timecom

Carter is the author of What We’ve Lost (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, September 2004), a comprehensive critical examination of the Bush administration.

Graydon Carter The Last Hurrah of Graydon Carter and His Special Kind of Vanity Fair

Carter's Vanity Fair has combined high-profile celebrity cover stories with serious journalism. His often idiosyncratic personal style was depicted in the book How to Lose Friends & Alienate People, a book by former Vanity Fair contributing editor Toby Young. Jeff Bridges played a character based on Carter in the 2008 film adaptation.

Graydon Carter Graydon Carter Vanity Fair editor set to relinquish magazine reins

Carter was a producer of I'll Eat You Last, a one-woman play starring Bette Midler, about legendary Hollywood talent agent Sue Mengers. The show, directed by Tony Award-winner Joe Mantello, opened at the Booth Theatre in New York City on April 2013, and at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles on December 3.

Graydon Carter Trump Attacks Vanity Fair Graydon Carter on Twitter After Scathing

Carter has co-produced two documentaries for HBO, Public Speaking (2010), directed by Martin Scorsese, which spotlights writer Fran Lebowitz, and His Way (2011), about Hollywood producer Jerry Weintraub, which was nominated for a Primetime Emmy. He also was a producer of Chicago 10, a documentary which premiered on the opening night of the Sundance Film Festival in early 2007. He was also a producer of Surfwise, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2007, and Gonzo, a biographical documentary of Hunter S. Thompson directed by Alex Gibney.

Carter was an executive producer of 9/11, a film by Jules and Gedeon Naudet about the September 11 terrorist attacks, which aired on CBS. Carter received an Emmy Award for 9/11, as well as a Peabody Award. He also produced the documentary adaptation of the book The Kid Stays in the Picture, about the legendary Hollywood producer Robert Evans. It premiered at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, screened at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival, and opened in theaters in July of that year. In 2012, Carter had a minor role in Arbitrage.

In 2017, he was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada by Governor General David Johnston for "contributions to popular culture and current affairs as a skilled editor and publisher".

Carter announced his departure from the editorship of Vanity Fair on September 7, 2017. He will be on gardening leave until the end of 2017.

Personal life

Carter was born in Toronto. He has been married three times. His first wife was a Canadian; the marriage was dissolved before Carter moved to the United States at the age of 28. His second marriage, to Cynthia Williamson, lasted 18 years and produced four children. The couple divorced in 2000. Carter married Anna Scott in 2005. They have a daughter.

Carter has identified himself as a libertarian: "I don't vote. I find both parties to be appalling and OK at the same time. I find it harder for anybody as they get older to feel 100 per cent strongly behind one party. There's lots more grey than when I was younger. I'm a libertarian."

Carter currently resides on Bank Street in Manhattan's West Village and Roxbury, Connecticut. He is co-owner of two Manhattan restaurants: the Waverly Inn, a restaurant at 16 Bank Street, West Village, and the Monkey Bar at 60 East 54th Street, Midtown.

References

Graydon Carter Wikipedia


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