Vintage Sunday Times Magazine 28th November 1993

£12.00

Vintage Sunday Times Magazine 28th November 1993

Shevvy stakes all –  Eduard Shevard- nadze was the liberalising Soviet foreign minister. Now he faces a greater test: saving Georgia from civil war. By Simon Sebag-Montefiore

Carol Sarler believes it is impossible for a writer to approach a subject for interview without taking along a baggage of preconceptions. The fun starts when the preconceptions are wrong-as happened when she met the larger-than- life PR Lynne Franks.

Absolutely frank –  Infamously brilliant at spotting trends and selling them, the queen of PR, Lynne Franks, is. abdicating her throne. Report by Carol Sarler.

Cover story – Posh punk.  Once the domain of guttersnipes in bondage trousers, punk has now been appropriated by the aristocracy. Why bother? asks former punk Julie Burchill. Photo- graphs by Manuela Pavesi

Manuela Pavesi was fashion director at Italian Vogue until she started out on a new career as a photographer. Her passion is fashion and photographing clothes on real people, often in sur- real circumstances -in this case to the accompaniment of ‘posh punk’ Issy van Randwyck’s singing

You talkin’ to me? – Can Martin Scorsese, the motor-mouthed director of such brutal films as Raging Bull and GoodFellas, convincingly portray the 19th-century world of Edith Wharton? By Russell Miller

The head master – Philip Treacy causes a stir with unlikely but fabulous hats. Report by Paula Reed-

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Vintage Sunday Times Magazine 28th November 1993

Shevvy stakes all –  Eduard Shevard- nadze was the liberalising Soviet foreign minister. Now he faces a greater test: saving Georgia from civil war. By Simon Sebag-Montefiore

Carol Sarler believes it is impossible for a writer to approach a subject for interview without taking along a baggage of preconceptions. The fun starts when the preconceptions are wrong-as happened when she met the larger-than- life PR Lynne Franks.

Absolutely frank –  Infamously brilliant at spotting trends and selling them, the queen of PR, Lynne Franks, is. abdicating her throne. Report by Carol Sarler.

Cover story – Posh punk.  Once the domain of guttersnipes in bondage trousers, punk has now been appropriated by the aristocracy. Why bother? asks former punk Julie Burchill. Photo- graphs by Manuela Pavesi

Manuela Pavesi was fashion director at Italian Vogue until she started out on a new career as a photographer. Her passion is fashion and photographing clothes on real people, often in sur- real circumstances -in this case to the accompaniment of ‘posh punk’ Issy van Randwyck’s singing

You talkin’ to me? – Can Martin Scorsese, the motor-mouthed director of such brutal films as Raging Bull and GoodFellas, convincingly portray the 19th-century world of Edith Wharton? By Russell Miller

The head master – Philip Treacy causes a stir with unlikely but fabulous hats. Report by Paula Reed-

96 pages. All our magazines are the original first day copies. This issue is in good condition for age.

Additional information

Weight 200 g
Condition

Good condition