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Eileen Ford - the model maker

A new book reveals the extraordinary rise of Eileen Ford and her beautiful people

July 16, 2015 13:49
Pioneers: Eileen Ford with her husband, Jerry, co-owners of the Ford Models agency, in October 1948

By

David Robson,

David Robson

4 min read

The New York fashion business is visibly Jewish - think Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren, Donna Karan, Marc Jacobs, Diane von Furstenberg; the fashion model business is not. IMG, the highly professional global marketing group founded by the late Mark McCormack, is the biggest agency in the world; Elite, brainchild of the late John Casablancas, a buccaneering, brilliant, louche Spanish-American, took centre stage in the age of drugs, sex and disco, and remains a major force. The people who more or less invented modelling as a highly paid professional job and built the defining, and for decades the most powerful agency, the trade's gold standard, were Eileen Ford and her husband, Jerry.

The story of Eileen Ford's brilliant, turbulent career is vividly brought to life in a new book by the royal biographer and historian Robert Lacey.

Jerry was tall and handsome, a college sports star, a Catholic boy who throughout his life and his nearly half a century in a cut-throat business, remained the epitome of cool rectitude. Eileen was very different - forceful, passionate, domineering, a mentor and protector to her girls, a heavy drinker, a genius at spotting and nurturing models, a legend and sometimes a monster. When she died age 92 last year, 650 people attended her funeral at St Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue. There were many lengthy obituaries published; they mentioned her Quaker education and that her maiden name was Eileen Otte. What none of them said was that she was born Eileen Ottensoser, daughter of a rather upmarket Jewish debt collector in New York.

Her grandfather Lippman (later Louis) Ottensoser had come to America from Furth in Bavaria, where there had long been a flourishing and distinguished Jewish community, among them Rabbi Zvi Ottensoser, a distinguished scholar, an expert on Maimonides and a follower of Moses Mendelssohn, whose translation of the Torah he revised, improving the German. He was also an enthusiastic advocate of progressive Jews moving across the Atlantic. Among those who headed west from Furth in the 19th century were Julius Ochs whose son Adolph bought the New York Times, Levi Strauss, the blue jeans man and, in the 20th century, Henry Kissinger. Eileen Ford was, in her own sphere, as transformative as any of them. In the 1920s, modelling had been a kind of hobby for good-looking debutantes who weren't always bothered whether they were paid or not; in the early post-war years, when Eileen became involved, it was a trade where photographers ruled and the models were pawns with nobody representing their interests. What Eileen Ford did in partnership with Jerry changed the terms of trade. Her girls were forcefully represented - if you were with Ford you were no longer the victim of photographers' and clients' whims. You were properly rewarded for your time, you were looked after. In a good-cop-bad-cop combination that was not be messed with, Jerry was the good but smoothly formidable giant whose bills people did not fail to pay, Eileen was the fierce fighter crossed at your peril.

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