Tina Brown (born Christina Hambley Brown on November 21, 1953, in Maidenhead, England) is a British-born American magazine editor, columnist, and talk-show host. As the editor of The New Yorker from 1992 to 1998, she reversed the venerable magazine's declining fortunes.
In 1939 George had been briefly married to a 17-year old Irishwoman who would later become actress Maureen O'Hara. The couple had the marriage annulled. It was after this that he met Bettina Kohr, who was then the Lord Sir Laurence Olivier's press agent. In her later years, Bettina worked as a gossip columnist for an English-language magazine for expatriates in Spain, where she and George lived in retirement.
Brown was a rebellious adolescent. She was expelled from three boarding schools; in her words, she was expelled from one because she "organized protests because we weren't allowed to change our underpants," and another "where I had described (the headmistress's) bosom as an unidentified flying object."David Wallechinsky & Amy Wallace: The New Book of Lists, p.10. Canongate, 2005. ISBN 1841957194.
Brown went to college at the prestigious St Anne's College, Oxford. Before graduating in 1974 she won the 1973 Sunday Times Drama Award for her one-act play Under the Bamboo Tree. A subsequent play, Happy Yellow, was mounted at a small theatre in London in 1977. She also wrote for Isis, the university literary magazine, to which she contributed interviews with the columnist Auberon Waugh and the actor Dudley Moore. She ended up dating both men. Her relationship with Waugh served as a great boost to her writing career, as he used his influence to get attention drawn to her. At this time in the mid '70s she also dated the writer Martin Amis.
She met Harold Evans in 1974, and began working for his Sunday Times as a writer. She reported from New York for the paper and its color magazine, then quit to join The Sunday Telegraph in London when she and Evans fell in love. Evans and his wife, Enid Evans, a school-teacher and magistrate, were divorced in 1978. Evans and Brown were married in East Hampton, New York at the home of Ben Bradlee and Sally Quinn on August 20, 1981.
After leaving Tatler she was hired in May 1983 as an editorial adviser to Vanity Fair, initially for six weeks. She stayed on as a contributing editor for a brief time, and then was named editor-in-chief on January 1, 1984. Her restructuring of the magazine debuted with the April 1984 issue, featuring actress Daryl Hannah on the cover. The magazine's readership began to grow in 1985, and the magazine eventually became a tremendous success both in circulation and profit. She took the sales from around 200,000 to more than a million with a mix of celebrity interviews,serious foreign affairs specials, columnists and photography. She persuaded the novelist William Styron to write about his depression under the title Darkness Visible, which in turn became a best-selling non fiction title.
1953 births | British journalists | British magazine editors | Former students of St Anne's College, Oxford | Living people | Washington Post people
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