Betsey: A Memoir, by Betsey Johnson and Mark Vitulano. Viking 2020
I was thrilled to see this book on the “New Books” shelf at the library. I have a large interest in fashion (despite being completely unfashionable myself) and am a fan of Betsey’s work. I settled in with it, expecting insights into her life and creative process, as well as learning more about how the fashion world worked during her heyday. I read the book over one night.
At the
end, I was kind of sad. The book did not live up to my expectations. I figured
it would be a really exciting tale. Parts were, of course, but a lot of the
story was oddly flat. I don’t know if this was a result of two people telling
her story (perhaps her style and that of Vitulano didn’t mesh? I don’t know),
or if Johnson was under a time crunch to get the book done, or what. But there
were very few places where I felt her emotions, her creative fire.
Her early
life at school and home came across well; there is a good deal of detail in
that section. The part where she moves to New York and is working for Mademoiselle
have a sense of exhilaration; how could it not when things move as fast as her
early career did? Her professional life seems to have always been moving fast,
leaving the reader to wonder if Johnson can keep up with it. Her private life
also moves fast; she admits that she was in love with the idea of love and
falls fast- sadly, for the wrong men. Her first three husbands are emotionally
abusive (and sometimes physically so), which led me to thinking “RUN NOW” and
being amazed at how long she stayed with a couple of them. Given how open she
is about it being abused, I think she’s learned her lesson. She’s been with her
current husband for 23 years now (she does not mention this man in the book) so
things seem calm from the outside.
Her
professional life was one of ups and downs; her clothes exploded on the fashion
scene, different from what anyone else was doing. Trying to get out from under
working for others, she had trouble borrowing money to start her own store- and
paid it back in record time. At one point she had 66 retail stores. Then some
bad business decisions were made, the economy went down the tubes, and she
lucked out when Steve Madden bought her company. She is still creative
director, so her fashions still live for yet another generation of girls.
Sadly, I can only give the book 3 stars.