Table of Contents
December 2009

Inside the December 2009 Issue

Robert Pattinson. Photograph by Bruce Weber.

Web Extras Send in the Crowns

VF.com’s Royal Watch. Little Gold Men

VF.com’s Oscar blog. Vonnegut’s Vault

Read “Shout About It from the Housetops,” a never-before-published story by Kurt Vonnegut from his upcoming posthumous collection, Look at the Birdie.A Decade in Covers

Visit our archive of V.F. covers from the 00s, and vote for your favorite in our poll. The Pulse of a Nation

See the complete results of this month’s 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll. Slaughter in Syria

In October 2008, American special-forces troops in four helicopters crossed the Iraq border to Syria, ostensibly in search of terrorists, and gunned down seven laborers. Filmmaker Peter Coyote and journalist Reese Erlich trekked to al-Sukariya to get the villagers’ story. James Wolcott’s Blog

Read the daily musings of VF.com’s resident culture critic. Off the Grid

Michael Wolff’s blog.

FEATURES

Twilight’s Hot Gleaming

Overnight, Robert Pattinson found himself the world’s No. 1 heartthrob—and the Twilight star isn’t sure he likes it. Visiting Pattinson at his Waldorf hideaway, Evgenia Peretz learns about his wild year, his relationship with co-star Kristen Stewart, and Hollywood’s doubts about casting him as vampire Edward Cullen. Photographs by Bruce Weber. More: Find photos, interviews, and more in our Twilight archive.

PreciousMoment

Ruven Afanador and Leslie Bennetts spotlight Lee Daniels and Gabourey Sidibe, director and star, respectively, of the indie-movie sensation Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire.

Endless Summers

Bouncing between top posts at Harvard and the White House—neither place lacking in big egos—Larry Summers has never been afraid to speak his mind. Are his critics right to call him a bully, or are they just cowed by his brilliance? William D. Cohan goes searching for the human side of Obama’s economic adviser. Portrait by Steve Pyke. Plus: Annie Leibovitz’s portraits of “Team Obama.”

Vampire Prep

Justin Bishop and Michael Hogan spotlight the indie rockers of Vampire Weekend, who are slyly riffing on their prepster image for a second album, Contra.First, the Gloves Came Off …

Supermodel Stephanie Seymour seemed to break from her stormy romantic past when she settled down with art-collecting tycoon Peter Brant in Greenwich, Connecticut. But with the couple deep in the divorce-court dirt, Seymour makes a full disclosure to photographer Mario Testino. Plus: Relive the supermodel era with our sexy, stylish slide show.

The Trouble with Harry’s

The Cipriani brand, long the guarantee of a glamorous evening, had New York society flocking to its nightspots—until Arrigo and Giuseppe Cipriani fled the U.S. in the wake of tax-evasion convictions. Mark Seal catches up with the father-and-son restaurateurs in Europe, where they finally tell their side of the story. Photographs by Giacomo Bretzel. Q&A: Mark Seal discusses the Cipriani empire.

A Crime of Shadows

The Web-crawling child-molester is a bogeyman of the Internet Age, and police authorities may be over-reacting. In a detailed reconstruction of the online cat-and-mouse game between a determined detective and her target, Mark Bowden reveals how a man who is likely not a pedophile can be caught and convicted as one. Photographs by Gasper Tringale. Q&A: Mark Bowden discusses his investigation.

Restless Development

André Carrilho and Christopher Hitchens spotlight novelist Zadie Smith, whose latest, nonfiction book reflects an elegantly supple mind.

Inheritance, Italian-Style

A surprise cremation, one love child’s adoption, two other would-be heirs—it’s no soap opera, it’s the real-life scandal engulfing some of Italy’s most venerable families. Bob Colacello unravels the legacy of Carlo Caracciolo, Prince of Castagneto, the playboy press magnate whose DNA could settle quite a few questions.

FANFAIR 31 Days in the Life of the Culture

Sculptural scene: Liz Kabler in the Met’s rooftop garden The Cultural Divide My Stuff—John Derian Frank DiGiacomo gives Second City a round of applause Elissa Schappell’s Hot Type Punch Hutton on the online home-décor magazine Lonny Gagosian’s new retail outpost Julian Sancton is on board with Up in the Air Bruce Handy is out-Foxed by Wes Anderson Punch Hutton’s Hot Gifts—the best picks for a beautiful holiday season Lisa Robinson’s Hot Tracks.

COLUMNS

The Author Who Played with Fire

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and its two sequels put crime novelist Stieg Larsson atop the best-seller lists, but he didn’t live to see it. As the last of Larsson’s trilogy is published in Europe, Christopher Hitchens looks to Sweden’s dark side for clues to the author’s brilliant success.

Vanities Chastain Virtue

Jessica Chastain

As Told to Craig Brown

Malcolm Gladwell explains Christmas

In Character

Michael Imperioli

Out to Lunch

Sidney Lumet

Stage Fright

Mark Seliger and John Heilpern spotlight the Broadway-bound cast of The Addams Family, including Bebe Neuwirth as Morticia and Nathan Lane as Gomez. Altogether ooky! I’m a Culture Critic … Get Me Out of Here!

Reviewing the oeuvre of Dog the Bounty Hunter, Kate Gosselin, and all the attention junkies of the Real Housewives franchise, James Wolcott concludes that Reality TV is the destroyer of everything decent and good. Photo illustration by Darrow. Inside the Astor Verdict

After five stressful months, and weeks of deliberation, the verdict finally came: Anthony Marshall was guilty of defrauding his centenarian mother, Brooke Astor. With in-depth accounts from eight jurors, Meryl Gordon reveals the fears, tears, and backroom fireworks that nearly led to the mistrial of the decade.

The Thigh’s the Limit

Patrick Demarchelier and Laura Jacobs spotlight the spring ready-to-wear collections in Paris, where hemlines are ignoring the recent financial unpleasantness.

Et Cetera

60 MinutesPoll

How do Americans feel about H1N1, Facebook, and “Get ’er done”? Editor’s Letter

Attraction and Repulsion

Proust Questionnaire

Andre Agassi

Plus

Contributors; Letters; Postscript; Fairground; Credits

Addicted to Cute

It’s not safe to surf the Web, clogged as it is with adorable pictures of kitties and puppies and babies and things that go “awww” in the night. The epidemic of cute has reached into big business, politics, and Hollywood, observes Jim Windolf, but all this sweetness stems from a depressing truth.

The Now of Avedon

When photographer Richard Avedon edited a special issue of Harper’s Bazaar, in April 1965, it wasn’t simply fashion—it was the future. Recalling Avedon’s prophetic mix of Space Age, multi-racial youthquake symbols (the Beatles! the Astronettes! Jean Shrimpton!), David Michaelis tells how America’s national portraitist rejuvenated his career.

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