HUGO VICKERS Biographer & Historian
Beaton in the Sixties (ed)(2003)
Hardback (UK) 2003
Hardback (US) 2004
Paperback (UK) 2004

The enthusiastic reception for The Unexpurgated Beaton, the first volume of the diaries of Cecil Beaton as he wrote them, prompted Hugo Vickers to return to the 145 original manuscript volumes for a second effervescent and un-retouched selection.

Here is Cecil in the second half of the 1960s at the peak of his career as a photographer and designer, the triumph of My Fair Lady, which he designed for both the theatre and on film, is behind him. As this volume opens, Sir Winston Churchill lies dying. But it is off with the old and on with the new - this is the 'swinging sixties', the era of the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and Mary Quant. Cecil the photographer is much in demand as ever still contributing to Vogue, even occasionally making an exception for old friends and becoming a bridal photographer once again, as he did for Lucy Lambton.

Cecil the designer signs up for the Alan Jay Lerner-André Previn musical Coco, based on the life of his old friend Coco Chanel. Here in unexpurgated form for the first time is his chilling account of that gruesome experience, over which the menacing figure of Katharine Hepburn looms large.

Beaton also travels aboard Cécile de Rothschild's yacht with Great Garbo. He encounters Andy Warhol and Picasso and is fascinated by how the new generation tests the boundaries as he and his friends had done in the 1920s.

Hugo Vickers, Beaton's biographer, provided the introduction, the links and what Alexander Walker in his review of the original volume called his 'waspish footnotes, the salt on the side of the dish'.





UK paperback and US Hardback in print.
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