“It was just what you did automatically, go to lunch with friends. And it was so different than now. People were at the top of their form.
Those restaurants were so beautiful, and people felt they had to live up to the elegance of the setting. You wore your latest Givenchy or Balenciaga. And you felt that there were delicious conversations taking place at every table. Now you go into a place and everything looks transactional.”
--Socialite Deeda Blair on lunching with other New York high society wives in the mid-20th century.
Paul and Stella McCartney, Los Angeles, 1975. By Harry Benson
"You look stupid until a year later, when you think, 'Not bad. What was I complaining about?'"
--Harry Benson, the photojournalist whose 40-year career has included prominent work for Life, Vanity Fair, and the New Yorker, on how people react to photos of themselves (via his recent interview with the New York Observer.)
“I feel like I got a winning lottery ticket in my life and the rug could be pulled out from under me at any time,” Ms. Zuckerberg said. “I am going to appreciate every last moment of awesomeness I can get.”