Gloria Laura Vanderbilt (born February 20, 1924) is a member of the prominent United States Vanderbilt family. She is an artist, actress, and socialite most noted as a spokeswoman for designer blue jeans.
Vanderbilt is the only child of American railroad heir Reginald Claypoole Vanderbilt (1880-1925) and his second wife, Gloria Laura Mercedes Morgan (1904-1965).
She became heiress to a $USD 4 million trust fund upon her father's death, when she was 15 months old. The rights to control this trust fund while Vanderbilt was a minor belonged to her mother. As a result, Vanderbilt became the subject of a custody battle in a famous and scandalous trial in 1934 placing her mother against the powerful and influential Vanderbilt family. Testimony was heard depicting her mother as an unfit parent, much of which was conjecture and hearsay.
Vanderbilt's mother eventually lost custody to her sister-in-law Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney but litigation continued.
Vanderbilt married Hollywood agent Pasquale DiCicco ("Pat" DiCicco) in 1941; they divorced in 1945. Her second marriage, to conductor Leopold Stokowski on April 21, 1945, produced two sons, Leopold Stanislaus Stokowski, born in 1950, and Christopher Stokowski, born in 1955; they divorced in October, 1955. On August 28, 1956, she married director Sidney Lumet; they divorced in August, 1963. She married her fourth husband, author Wyatt Emory Cooper in 1964. They had two sons, Carter Vanderbilt Cooper, in 1965, and CNN reporter and anchor Anderson Cooper, born in 1967. Wyatt Cooper died in 1978 during open heart surgery in New York City. Carter Cooper died in 1988 after jumping from the family's 14th floor apartment.
During the 1970s, she licensed the use of her name on a line of fashion eyeglasses, perfume and clothing. (Initially, her involvement in clothing consisted of putting her name (in place of the previous brand name, "Lucky Pierre") on a line of blouses produced by the Murjani Corporation). In 1979, Murjani proposed launching a line of designer jeans carrying Vanderbilt's brand name; they were more tight fitting than other jeans of the day, with the heiress's name embossed in script on the back pocket.
Vanderbilt also appeared in a series of television ads promoting her products. Her designer label has flourished, with the Gloria Vanderbilt "swan" logo eventually appearing on dresses and perfume as well.
Author of:
Subject of:
Fashion Designers:
1924 births | Living people | Vanderbilt family | American socialites
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Gloria Vanderbilt".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world