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- <text id=89TT1251>
- <title>
- May 15, 1989: Profile:Frances Lear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 70
- A Maturing Woman Unleashed
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Frances Lear, publisher with a messianic commitment to women
- over 40, has broken the wrinkle barrier by reaching for a
- neglected market
- </p>
- <p>By Martha Smilgis
- </p>
- <p> Flawlessly attired in a black Chanel suit, Frances Lear
- gazes for a moment out her office window at the Madison Avenue
- traffic below. Then, whippet-like, she whirls to confront the
- semicircle of editors at her morning story conference. "What's
- the word we want?" she asks. Through owlish goggles she
- scrutinizes their faces, as if seeing them for the first time.
- Before anyone can answer, she darts to her chair and
- provocatively settles her slender black-stockinged legs on a
- cluttered coffee table. She sits stiffly, ladylike. Her
- expressive hands, with their buffed, not polished nails, beat
- the air. "Older women of our generation have been described as
- depressed, sad, menopausal, decrepit, unproductive," she blurts.
- "God, I feel I'm running through a maze of negative perceptions
- like a tractor."
- </p>
- <p> Quietly, Lear recedes as the band of vocal editors suggests
- fresh definitions: "sensual," "off the nest," "reborn,"
- "glamourized," "well maintained." "Too much like automobiles,"
- trills Lear, shooting across the room like a small comet. At
- 65, she's delicately handsome: 5 ft. 6 in., 115 lbs., with a
- taut dancer's body, sandblasted jawline, thick uncolored
- platinum hair and barely a trace of makeup except for one
- "expensive cosmetic," the face-lifting, her first done in her
- late 40s. Her fastidiously tailored look is accented by
- understated braided-gold Cartier jewelry and a black-band
- Tiffany watch. But behind the reserved, nearly studied exterior,
- her agile mind freewheels playfully. She conducts the meeting
- by digression, challenging and revising every assumption
- presented and switching subjects to alight on a new idea before
- circling around to finish the last. The method is collaborative:
- a free-form Scrabble game that reflects her scanning, multitrack
- way of thinking. Gradually, eventually, problems are solved:
- story ideas jell, stereotypes are smashed, cliches dissolved and
- media-worn phrases reconstituted into acceptable headlines.
- </p>
- <p> Frances Lear is on a roll. Her high-risk venture of
- creating a magazine for mature women is a splashy success. Just
- four years ago, with $30 million from her $112 million divorce
- settlement from television producer Norman Lear, she conceived
- Lear's, a bimonthly publication catering to "The Woman Who
- Wasn't Born Yesterday." This past March, with a photograph of
- Lear gracing the anniversary issue, Lear's went monthly, with
- a circulation of 350,000. The average age of her readers is 51,
- the average yearly household income a startling $95,600. New
- issues are fat with glossy ads aimed at this blue-chip audience.
- Lear, a lifetime liberal committed to democratic causes, had
- qualms about going so far upmarket but did so "to sell the idea
- to advertisers, which would ensure success." Failure was not in
- the cards.
- </p>
- <p> Like the rhythm of her editorial meetings, Lear's office is
- comfy random clutter. Most kindly described, the impromptu
- decor is Beverly Hills garage sale. Three roughhewn country
- kitchen tables, each with computer terminals, serve as desks for
- Lear and two secretaries. Chinese porcelain lamps keep
- incongruous company with industrial carpeting and overloaded
- bulletin boards. From her secretary's desk, Lear unearths a
- stash of Milky Ways. She gingerly peels the wrapper, nibbles,
- carbo-loaded for re-entry. "Let's explore the French mystique,"
- she interjects. "Why do French women remain sexy until they are
- very old?" Her editors bubble with cultural reasons and names:
- Simone Signoret, Catherine Deneuve. Lear postulates a theme: "So
- it is genetic; they like sex, celebrate sexuality, while
- American women have a puritanical streak that restricts them."
- Protest comes when one editor reminds Frances that their survey
- found the Lear's woman likes men, specifically older men. "Sure,
- they don't have to explain the Korean War to them," quips
- executive editor Audreen Ballard. Laughter erupts. For summer
- fashion Lear endorses slinky-skirted bathing suits: "Remember,
- need and taste are the keys to this market."
- </p>
- <p> The editors exit as the art director enters with layouts
- and galleys to be approved. First, the horoscope page. Lear
- reads Cancer, her sign. "This makes no sense. What does it mean?
- We need a story on what exactly constitutes a good horoscope."
- Lear's restive eyes skid to a stop as she views a transparency
- of a creamy-faced 50-year-old beauty. "This one bothers me. The
- beauty is too static, too beige, one cast. She looks like she's
- been laid out. We want depth of character in the face." Gone.
- Next, the blowup of a near naked Tarzan accompanying the article
- "My Son the Body Builder." "Where's my magnifying glass?" asks
- Lear as she hunches over the light table to study the ripply
- pecs. "Wheeee, this is fun! It sprights up the book." Her
- secretary interrupts. A chauffeured car is waiting to deliver
- Lear to a television taping. "Where's the script?" Lear chirps
- as she loops the strap of her Fendi bag, schoolgirl-style, over
- her glistening sable coat. "Will I have cue cards or a monitor?
- Now, where's my Milky Way? My, it's fun being the new girl in
- town."
- </p>
- <p> The birthing of her brainchild has nonetheless come with
- pain and angst. Hungry for success, Lear plunged straight into
- the cutthroat magazine enclaves of Manhattan. Reports of this
- berserk Beverly Hills housewife with bags of cash, attended by
- cook, butler, masseuse, personal trainer and psychologist, who
- held meetings in her opulent duplex at the Ritz Tower wearing
- a satin bathrobe, crackled along the editorial phone lines that
- feed Manhattan's extensive magazine gossip vine. Up against this
- hostile environment, a cornered Lear unleashed her blowtorch
- anger. She scorched some hefty professional egos and earned
- herself a "loose cannon" label. She hired editors, picked their
- brains and jilted them at whim. Consultants came and went like
- midtown buses.
- </p>
- <p> Wiser today, and equipped with a settled, trusted staff,
- Lear ruefully recalls the chaotic gestation: "In the beginning,
- I knew nothing about the magazine business. I knew I had a good
- idea. Everyone told me so, but they all bet against my doing
- it." In addition to exasperated editors, she was confronted by
- battalions of advertising and research "pros." She recalls them
- as gnomish little men who denigrated an audience of older women
- and told her that old "broads" and "gals" didn't want to see
- pictures of themselves. They smugly reiterated the Madison
- Avenue maxim: Youth is beauty. "The reason some men fear older
- women is they fear their own mortality," explains Lear, who
- despite the tumult plowed ahead and chose to remain a solo
- financial player to ensure her control of the enterprise. Kevin
- Buckley, the first editor during the bruising start-up,
- nonetheless credits Lear "as the first to see that most
- magazines neglected or talked down to millions of Americans. The
- success was inevitable and a pleasure to behold from a
- distance." The rapid growth of Lear's magazine has encouraged
- competitors. This month a new entry, Mirabella, aimed at
- 30-to-50-year-old women, may nibble at the younger readers in
- Lear's audience.
- </p>
- <p> If Frances Lear has a serious enemy, it is the youth
- culture, which she blames for confining some women to birdcage
- existences. "Many older women are inhibited and afraid to act.
- It is such a waste of human potential," she laments. "We must
- look into the mirror and smile." She caustically castigates the
- youth culture for denying sexuality to mature women and
- instilling in them a sense of inferiority. Her frequent fantasy
- is to annihilate the Playboy magazine mentality that she blames
- for psychologically crippling women by attaching a Playmate's
- age and dimensions to female sexuality. "Someday we will have
- porn films with 55-year-old women in them," predicts Lear.
- "Already, we know there is plenty of action in Sun City."
- </p>
- <p> An orphan, Frances was adopted at 14 months and reared in
- Larchmont, N.Y. When she was eleven, her father committed
- suicide after losing all his money in the Depression. Frances
- felt that her mother, a beauty of German Jewish origin with a
- keen sense of high fashion, betrayed her by "marrying a bad
- husband for economic security." A competitive child, she
- captained the basketball team and edited her high school
- yearbook. Her mother died when she was 18. To support herself,
- she went to work as a stock girl, eventually graduating to
- fashion buyer at Lord & Taylor. When Lear learned that her
- manic-depressive episodes, which she now controls with lithium,
- could have a genetic component, she began a search for her
- biological parents. She returned to the small Jewish orphanage,
- with its stacks of cribs and bunk beds ("My competitiveness
- comes from having had to scream the loudest for attention"), and
- managed one night to get drunk the lawyer who had arranged her
- adoption. Much as she pleaded, he never revealed the identity
- of the parents.
- </p>
- <p> There were two short marriages ("In those days, it was the
- only way you could go to bed with a man") before she met and
- married Norman Lear, then a TV writer. In 1957 they moved from
- New York City to Los Angeles, where she stayed at home and
- reared their daughters. Although Frances was the inspiration for
- Norman's acerbic TV character Maude ("All of Norman's work is
- autobiographical--Archie Bunker was based on his father"),
- the show-business community was a peculiar culture that reduced
- Frances, who did not want to be either a starlet or a producer,
- to an atrophying, bitterly depressed Hollywood wife. After much
- therapy, she chose to end her 28-year marriage. (Norman Lear,
- 66, has since married a psychotherapist, with whom he has had
- a son.)
- </p>
- <p> Lear discreetly sidesteps rumors of a boyfriend, but she
- says, "For older women, like older men, money is a plus when it
- comes to attracting the opposite sex." Except for weekly dinners
- with her two daughters, entertainment means magazine business.
- Parties are held at her Southampton beachfront mansion or
- cavernous Fifth Avenue apartment with its giant de Koonings,
- vast Persian rugs and a paralyzing view of Central Park. The
- service is formal but the tone relaxed. At a recent dinner for
- potential advertisers, Georgette Mosbacher, flame-haired CEO of
- La Prairie skin-care company and wife of the Secretary of
- Commerce, griped acidly about "the hatchet job" the Washington
- Post magazine had done on her. "What did they call you?" Lear
- asked. "`Glamorous,'" drawled Mosbacher. "Take it, honey,"
- barked Lear. "They call me `eccentric.'" Under the gleam of
- crystal refracted by lemony candlelight, Lear presided over
- dinner for twelve served by a squadron of waiters. Playing
- impresario, she deftly focused scattershot conversations into
- one group topic, spawning debates over the reasons matte
- eye-shadow sales are soaring (one theory: softens the wrinkles)
- and whether there will be a woman President--"Not in my
- lifetime," insists Lear. Quick and sharp-witted, she suffers
- fools not at all and snubs sycophants with an icy glance. But
- when she is surrounded by sympathetic friends, her conversation
- expands. She defends her obvious vanity: "This quality
- continues into old age and drives the desire to remain sexual,
- slender and fashionable." A self-styled vegetarian with a diet
- of fish, vegetables and pasta, Lear says, "People think older
- women who are thin don't work at it. They work harder at it."
- Each season she buys a new wardrobe of Chanel clothes and
- cruises about Manhattan on 65 pairs of black flats. "At every
- age a woman should feel she is dressed her best," advises Lear.
- "Often intelligent women feel embarrassed about concentrating
- on fashion. They shouldn't. It isn't trivial." Though a
- feminist, she readily exalts the sexual power of feminine
- beauty. Blissfully she recalls lounging about a country-club
- pool in her 20s. "I was wearing a fuchsia top and bottom, brief
- for those times. My body was just right. Well, the men just kept
- on coming over to me. At that moment, beauty was power." As the
- priestess of age preaches her formula for mature beauty to
- Madison Avenue, once again heads are snapping.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-