Fashion
The Real House of Gucci: Who Is Patrizia Reggiani, and Why Did She Order The Hit On Her Maurizio Gucci?
Published
3 years agoon
By
Terry Power
The first time Sara Forden interviewed Italian socialite Patrizia Reggiani, she was in her penthouse, climbing the walls. It was 1993, and Reggiani had invited Forden—then the Milan Bureau Chief for Women’s Wear Daily—to sit down with her at her luxury apartment overlooking the fashion capital’s Piazza San Babila. “Patrizia was on a personal campaign to discredit and destroy Maurizio and had reached out to various media outlets for interviews,” Forden said, referring to Reggiani’s ex-husband, Maurizio Gucci, who was head of the famed fashion house at the time. “The interview was pure vitriol: Patrizia was in a phase where she was worried that Maurizio was going to lose the company. She attacked him up and down. It was pretty intense.”
The next time Forden communicated with Reggiani, she was behind bars in the city’s San Vittore Prison. It was early 1999, about a year after Reggiani had been convicted and sentenced to 29 years in prison for commissioning Maurizio Gucci’s murder. On the morning of March 27, 1995, the 46-year-old Gucci was killed by a gunman in the lobby of his company headquarters on Via Palestro 20, just steps from Milan’s fashion district.
When Forden and Reggiani reacquainted, Forden was working on a book on the family dynasty and Gucci’s murder. “I tried to get an interview with Patrizia in person but the prison authorities were worried about her having access to the media,” Forden told me from her office at Bloomberg News in Washington, D.C. where she now leads a team of reporters covering tech policy and lobbying. Despite repeated attempts, the Justice Department officials kept turning her down, so she did the next best thing: “I wrote letters to her and she answered a lot of my questions this way, Forden said. “A lot of it was about her early relationship with Maurizio and how he had changed.”
Twenty years later, Forden’s 2001 book, The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed, is the basis of the much-anticipated film directed by Ridley Scott and starring Lady Gaga as Reggiani and Adam Driver as Gucci. “When I wrote it, I always envisioned the book as a movie,” said Forden, who acted as a consultant for the film and also worked with the screenplay writer. “I tried to set the scenes in such a way because I could visualize them on the screen. But never in my wildest dreams did I imagine it would become a film of this caliber with this director and cast.”
Fabio Lovino
To Reggiani, the idea of marrying a Gucci must have seemed like something from a movie. The petite-framed, violet-eyed beauty, who was often compared to Elizabeth Taylor, came from a far less distinctive background. Her mother grew up helping out in the family restaurant, while her father owned a successful transport company. “Despite being on the fringes of the elite Milanese industrial class’s inner circle, Patrizia was very much on the social circuit and would rendezvous with the young industrial set in Santa Margherita on the Ligurian coast,” said Forden. With the help of her mother, Reggiani would also host her own parties. “She was going to school at the time, but she was also this very active young socialite,” Forden said.
It was at the debutante party of a mutual friend one November night in 1970 that Reggiani, then 21, first met Gucci. He spotted her from across the room wearing a bright red dress that showed off her curves. “Maurizio was crazy about her from the start,” Forden said. “I do believe that Patrizia fell in love with him as well, but I also think she was being groomed by her mother to get on the inside of this top tier society.” Gucci, who would one day inherit his father’s 50 percent stake in the company, was indeed top tier: “He was the eligible bachelor with the big name,” Forden added.
“Patrizia thought he was getting a big ego,” Forden said. “He was a big guy now but not in the way she wanted him to be.”
Their relationship quickly progressed, but Gucci’s father, Rodolfo, did not approve. He believed Reggiani was a social climber and demanded his son break things off. But the younger and usually much more timid Gucci stood his ground, and Rodolfo was left stupefied when the confrontation concluded with his son storming off to pack his bags. “Weeks before the wedding, Rodolfo went as far as trying to get the Cardinal to prohibit the nuptials,” Forden said.
Tension inside the couple began when Reggiani started to weigh in more on the family business. By this point, Gucci had inherited his father’s 50 percent stake and took over leadership of the company. “In the letters she wrote to me, Patrizia described how he gradually changed from being someone who looked to her for guidance to someone who wanted to have his own way and do his own thing,” Forden said. As Gucci became more annoyed with Reggiani’s attempts at influencing him, he started to push her away. “Patrizia thought he was getting a big ego,” said Forden. “He was a big guy now but not in the way she wanted him to be.”
Forden has tried to better understand Gucci’s side of things more recently. “He was finally starting to be his own person and was putting a lot of pressure on himself in regards to the company,” she said. “He really wanted to prove to both his late father and grandfather’s memories that he could lead the family firm—he wanted to be the one to do it. That made him less willing to take input from others, including Patrizia.”
In 1985, Gucci shut Reggiani out completely and walked out of the marriage. She was outraged at the separation, but there was more indignation in store once Gucci managed to push his uncle and cousins out of the company. “The money was just gushing out,” Forden said. “He dropped hundreds of thousands of lira on a boat and a luxury apartment in Milan, and was racking up all this debt.” Reggiani became afraid for her daughters’ futures, worrying that their inheritance would be gone. “She was terrified that there would be nothing left for them,” Forden said. “She often talked about putting them first.”
Of course, Reggiani herself was used to a very expensive lifestyle, and the prestige of being a Gucci—even as an estranged, and later ex-wife—was still crucial to her sense of self, Forden added. Reggiani felt that she needed to keep tabs on Gucci and had mutual friends report back to her about what he was up to. One such “spy” was the cook for Gucci’s new girlfriend, Paola Franchi. “They were all her eyes and ears,” Forden said.
Fabio Lovino
Reggiani called on psychics for deeper insight. “She felt that there was nobody she could really talk to about her problems and it wasn’t uncommon in the fashion industry to consult psychics for guidance,” Forden said. “I recall interviewing a psychic that Maurizio would see. She was more like a therapist that he felt he could be completely open with.” Reggiani, on the other hand, asked the mediums to take on a more active role. “She would regularly have spells and things done against him in attempts to get him to come crawling back,” Forden said. “Maurizio was even convinced that she had put a hex on him.”
Was Reggiani responsible for orchestrating the murder, or did Auriemma take matters into her own hands?
Reggiani’s attachment and animosity towards Gucci became all-consuming. “She began to record every contact she had with her ‘Mau’ as she still referred to him, in what would become an obsession,” Forden wrote in the book. A Neopolitan clairvoyant named Pina Auriemma (played by Salma Hayek in the film) became an influential person in her life. “Patrizia didn’t trust the Milanese social circle she was in and didn’t really feel like she could be herself with them,” Forden said. Auriemma was the only person with whom Reggiani could truly unburden herself. “When Patrizia was distraught enough to contemplate suicide after Gucci abandoned the marriage, it was Auriemma who talked her out of it,” she said.
In 1993, when Gucci was forced to surrender his own 50 percent stake in the company—ending the family’s affiliation with the fashion house once and for all—it was the latest blow in a line of disappointments Reggiani was already seething about. “It was a personal affront and the last straw,” Forden said.
Fabio Lovino / Courtesy
Two years after the murder, the crime was connected back to Reggiani and she was taken into custody for having hired a hitman to kill her ex-husband. Auriemma, who was arrested as an accomplice, later confessed to having arranged for the assassin. “In the beginning, the investigating magistrate didn’t even consider Patrizia a suspect despite the fact that her phone was tapped and there was a recording of conversations with Pina,” Forden said. “The calls were cleverly disguised: they talked about the payoff money in code as if they were talking about meters of fabric for reupholstering curtains. It wasn’t until someone who knew one of the actual killers gave a tip to the police that they put the focus on Patrizia.”
Was Reggiani responsible for orchestrating the murder, or did Auriemma take matters into her own hands? It’s a question that is still reverberating in fashion circles the world over more than 25 years later. “I’ve asked myself this even recently and have talked to people about it,” Forden said. “Ultimately, I believe the judge in the case correctly convicted Patrizia of the murder, but I do believe that there was a big dose of Pina in there too.” Forden said Reggiani maintained her innocence. “Patrizia’s position at the time she was corresponding with me was that Pina took it upon herself to do the deed and then blackmailed her about it afterwards,” Forden said. Auriemma was convicted and given a slightly lesser sentence of 25 years in prison.
Reggiani’s defense lawyer, Giovanni Maria Dedola, said he would have liked a full confession from Reggiani at the time of the trial. “She was difficult to work with and had an inability to be critical of her actions,” he told me from his offices in Milan where he continues to practice criminal law. Dedola believed that Reggiani was mentally disturbed and if his request for a medical expert had been accepted, it would have been possible to get a lesser charge because of some extenuating circumstances. “I wish she would have had more trust in the psychiatric expertise,” he said.
Courtesy of Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures Inc.
In 1992, not long after her divorce from Gucci, Reggiani began suffering from debilitating headaches. She was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor and underwent surgery to remove it—but the tumor turned out to be benign. Dedola consulted with a neuroscientist and professor at Yale University who believed that had Reggiani’s condition been correctly diagnosed and the surgery performed with the purpose of removing a benign tumor, her brain wouldn’t have been exposed to radiation, so it wouldn’t have damaged the frontal lobes—the parts of the brain that give the ability to reason and use judgement.
“When Maurizio started to take, and then lose control of, the company, Patrizia felt like it was a slight against her personally.”
But this wasn’t her legal team’s only line of defense. “On the one hand, they were stating that Patrizia wasn’t fully cognizant because of the brain tumor operation,” Forden pointed out, “but at the same time they also had this other defense saying that even though she may have wanted Maurizio dead, that she was manipulated by Pina, who was the one who hired the hitman.”
Getty
A psychiatric evaluation of Reggiani, commissioned by the judge in the case, posited a different theory. “They did a detailed analysis of her personality and they basically said that she had a narcissistic personality disorder,” Forden said. “Patrizia had an exaggerated perspective and put herself at the center of things. She perceived things being done against her, so when Maurizio started to take, and then lose control of, the company, Patrizia felt like it was a slight against her personally. That was her personality and how she read things as happening in her world.” Forden said Reggiani was very lucid at trial and quick on her feet in response to questioning. “She danced around interrogations very well,” she said. “There were times where she even appeared to be sharper than the prosecutor.”
One thing Forden can personally attest to is that Reggiani is not someone who can be easily examined. “Before I sat down with Patrizia, I interviewed Maurizio during the period leading to his loss of the company in 1993,” she said. “It was Maurizio who got me into writing a book in the first place. But I found Patrizia to be much more complex, and I spent a lot of time trying to sort out all of the different facets to her personality.”
Reggiani declined an interview with ELLE.com, and Forden hasn’t heard from her since their correspondence more than two decades ago. For his part, Dedola says that he has only had two casual encounters with Reggiani on the street since her release from prison in 2016—11 years early—for good behavior. But there are indirect signs that Reggiani’s thought process is shifting. “I believe she is trying to make amends,” said Forden. She noted that in an Italian television interview two years ago, Reggiani said she used money she inherited from her mother to compensate Maurizio’s doorman, Giuseppe Onorato, who was shot in the arm during the attack, and she also gave some to Gucci’s partner Paola Franchi, who she had kicked out of Maurizio’s penthouse just after the murder. “She has said that she wants to do what is right,” Forden said. While the movie puts the focus on her past, Reggiani has her sights set on her second act.
Wendy Kaur is a Toronto-based lifestyle, beauty and fashion writer whose work has been published in British Vogue, ELLE Canada, InStyle, FASHION, FLARE, and others.
This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io
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Fashion
Jennifer Lopez Joined Ben Affleck In L.A. With Kids For Thanksgiving
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
On Wednesday night, Jennifer Lopez arrived in Los Angeles with her 13-year-old twins Max and Emme. The family was likely there to join Lopez’s boyfriend, Ben Affleck, for the Thanksgiving holiday. Lopez recently returned from the much colder climate of British Columbia, Canada, where she was filming her latest project, The Mother.
J. Lo touched down in her private jet wearing a teddy fur coat from Coach’s Autumn/Winter 2019 collection, and a pair of Ugg boots. Classic airplane outfit, celebrity style. Lopez and Affleck originally dated in 2002 and broke up in 2004. Their romance was rekindled earlier this year, soon after Lopez ended her relationship with baseball player Alex Rodriguez. The new couple went official in July, while celebrating Lopez’s 52nd birthday abroad.
Affleck’s most recent relationship with Ana de Armas ended in January after about a year together. He had divorced ex-wife Jennifer Garner in 2015 after being married for almost a decade. Garner and Affleck had three daughters, Violet, Seraphina, and Sam.
Before traveling back to the U.S., Lopez posted a story to Instagram Reels about how grateful she was to be headed home.
“Hey everybody, it’s my last day here shooting on The Mother out in Smithers in the snow, it’s been beautiful, but tonight I’m on my way home,” she said, as she walked through the wild landscape in a black coat and beanie.
“I’m so excited for Thanksgiving! I hope everybody has an amazing weekend with their families and their loved ones, there’s so much to be grateful for this year. I’m on my way!”
This is the first major holiday of the year since Lopez and Affleck reunited, so it’s likely to be a big one for both families.
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Fashion
Everlane’s Black Friday Sale is Packed With Winter Essentials
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
Courtesy
This is not a drill: Everlane just kicked off its Black Friday sale. Now through Monday, November 29, the direct-to-consumer brand is offering 20 to 40% off its cozy sweaters, minimalist activewear, and popular jeans. If you’re not super familiar with Everlane, let me spell it out for you: this is a big deal.
The e-tailer might be known for making sustainable, ethically made clothes and accessories at a fair, affordable price, but Everlane rarely has sales beyond its Choose What You Pay section. So, if you want to stock up on cute basics for less, now’s your time to shop.
And, in true Everlane fashion, the brand is taking this opportunity to give back. Everlane is partnering with Rodale Institute and help U.S. farmers transition their farmland to regenerative organic—and donating $15 per order to the cause. A great sale that gives back? I’m sold.
But, hurry! These deals are going to sell out fast, so you won’t want to waste any time filling your e-cart.
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1
The Cloud Turtleneck
$150 $105 (30% off)
Sweater weather is officially here, so why not pick up a few fresh layers? This turtleneck is the S’s: snuggly, stylish, and on sale.
2
The Authentic Stretch High-Rise Skinny Jeans
everlane
$78 $58 (25% off)
Looking for a great pair of jeans, minus the markup? Everlane’s classic skinny style is not only super stretchy, but it’ll look good with everything from chunky sweaters to silky blouses.
3
The ReNew Teddy Slippers
everlane
$65 $39 (40% off)
Why limit the shearling trend to the upper half of your body? These plush slippers will give even your most worn-in sweats a stylish edge.
4
The Chunky Cardigan
everlane
$110 $77 (30% off)
Sure, this may not be the cardigan Taylor Swift was talking about. But, with an exaggerated collar and ribbed finish, this style would definitely score top marks from the singer herself.
5
The Canvas Utility Boots
everlane
$115 $59 (40% off)
Brave the cold weather in style with Everlane’s chic boots. The canvas uppers and thick sole make these an ideal, all-weather option.
6
The Lofty-Knit Henley
everlane
$150 $105 (30% off)
Made with a nubby blend of merino wool, alpaca, and recycled nylon, this henley is perfect for a cozy night in, yet stylish enough to wear in public.
7
The Perform Bike Shorts
everlane
$45 $22 (51% off)
No, you can never have too many stretchy pants. Everlane’s bike shorts ooze major Lady Di vibes — for under $25, no less.
8
The ReLeather Court Sneakers
everlane
$110 $66 (40% off)
Made with recycled leather, these refresh sneakers will serve up major curb appeal — and Mother Nature’s seal of approval.
9
The Field Dress
everlane
$100 $60 (40% off)
Found: a fun, flouncy frock you can wear year-round. For a wintry take, pair with opaque tights and your favorite chunky boots.
10
The Cozy-Stretch Wide-Leg Sweatpants
everlane
$150 $75 (50% off)
With a straight-legged silhouette and wool material, it’s safe to say these are the chicest sweatpants we’ve ever seen. To sweeten an already enticing offer, this pair is half off.
11
The Organic Cotton Flannel Popover
$80 $56 (30% off)
Everlane reimagined the traditional flannel with a cropped silhouette, voluminous sleeves, and a slew of minimalist colors.
12
The Studio Bag
everlane
$275 $192 (30% off)
Large enough to fit all your essentials, but not too big that it’ll weigh you down, Everlane’s Studio Bag is the perfect everyday purse.
13
The ReNew Long Liner
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$158 $118 (25% off)
House Stark was right: winter really is coming. Made with recycled materials, this liner is a great layering piece that’s considerably chicer than the yesteryear’s Michelin Man-worthy parkas.
14
The Felted Merino Beanie
everlane
$50 $30 (40% off)
All set on clothes? Pick up this cheery beanie, which is 40% off its original price.
Kelsey Mulvey is a freelance lifestyle journalist, who covers shopping and deals for Marie Claire, Women’s Health, and Men’s Health, among others.
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Fashion
29 Winter Fragrances That Exude Main Character Energy
Published
3 years agoon
26 November 2021By
Terry Power
29 Winter Fragrances That Exude Main Character Energy