Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Iris Apfel is 96 and Will Never Retire
Iris Apfel is 96 and Will Never Retire Iris Apfel doesnât own a computer, so if you want to get in contact with her, you have to pick up the phone and call. Several times. And donât mistake that for some sort of crotchety aloofness. Apfel might be 96, but sheâs not out of touch. Sheâs just busy. Really, really busy. Apfel is supposed to be resting, by the way. Works too hard. Doctorâs orders. âI donât have any time to waste,â she says, speaking from her always-buzzing cell phone in Palm Beachâ"ostensibly on a âbreakâ from noisy New York. Apfelâs new book, Accidental Icon, hit shelves in March, and the roll out hasnât slowed down. Now, when she isnât working on her line of apparel, jewelry, and shoes for the Home Shopping Network (HSN), she has a book signing to run to, or a press call to hop on. This spring, she partnered with Bergdorf Goodman on a clothing pop-upâ"a floral and feather affair, trumpeted by a brigade of Apfel-inspired mannequins in the storeâs famed window displays. Next up: a collection of jewel-toned linens and tableware for the home furnishings company Grandin Road, and some porcelain jewelry for the French luxury store Bernardaud. The list goes on. She lovingly refers to herself as a âgeriatric starletâ and rightfully so. Her look is like a walking kaleidoscope, or a Picasso painting, dipped in a barrel of costume jewelry. But a relentless work ethic is as much an Iris Apfel trademark as her oh-so-oversize glasses. Iris Apfel + Inc International Concepts Launch, La Sirena, New York, August 30, 2016. Shane Drummondâ"BFA/REX/Shutterstock Apfel started her career in the 1940s as a âcopy girlâ at Womenâs Wear Daily, a $15 a week job where her only task was to carry stacks of paper from one personâs desk to another. Shortly after, she landed a gig as an assistant to the interior designer Elinor Johnson. In 1948, she married Carl Apfel, and the two launched their own luxury fabric and design business, Old World Weavers, in 1950. The company was a massive success; nine U.S. First Ladies tapped the couple for White House interior design projects. After its sale in 1992, Apfel continued working for herself, picking up apparel, jewelry, and home furnishing commissions at what most people would consider a breakneck pace. But Apfel isnât like most people. She stumbled into fame in her golden years and seems genuinely mystified by her late-in-life celebrity. It found her just the same: When Apfel was 85, the Metropolitan Museum of Art dedicated an entire exhibit in its costume wing to her personal apparel and jewelry collection. 2014 saw the release of Iris, a documentary from the late director Albert Maysles. And earlier this year, Apfel became the oldest person to have a Barbie doll fashioned in her likeness. After nearly 80 years in the workforce, her tenacity defies most twilight-year ideals. But as worries of an impending retirement crisis threaten to plague the workforceâ"just 23% of baby boomers think their savings will last through retirement or that theyâve adequately prepared for it, according to a 2017 survey from the Insured Retirement Instituteâ"Apfelâs way of life is something any worker has to think about these days. . Sheâs still in a league of her ownâ"about half of Americans retire between the ages of 61 and 65, according to the Census Bureau. Studies show that the average age of retirement is rising, though, mostly owing to longer life expectancies, changes in Social Security benefits, and rising health care costs. Some people are working longer because they want toâ"they love their job, or they like it more than a life-of-leisure alternative. And a few years shy of her 100th birthday, Apfel is their poster child. âFor me, retirement is a fate worse than death,â she says. âIâve seen so many people, especially in a place like Palm Beach, who worked so hard in their lives, and they come down here cold turkey, and then one day wake up and they realize how vacuous their lives are now. I mean it isnât funny, Iâve seen it with my own eyes!â There are tons of photos in Accidental Iconâ"mostly shots of Apfel, sometimes at work, huddled over antique textiles (and always in her couture best). But the most powerful images are of her and Carl together. Sepia-toned photos of the twoâ"dancing at black-tie events, traveling in the Middle East, London, and Italy, and sifting through flea market fabricâ"document a beautiful partnership, both inside and outside the office. After Carl died in 2015, Apfel says her work took on new meaning. âHe really pushed me into this,â she says. âSo I decided I wouldnât just stay at home and cry all day. Iâm working harder than I ever did in my life.â Apfel doesnât talk about her story like itâs a heroâs journey. She insists she never had a big, life-affirming goal, or even a business plan. If you spend too much time analyzing things, she says, it âtakes the juice out of it.â She always just did what interested her, and stopped when it didnât. Sometimes, well-intentioned people tell Apfel she should try to relax a little moreâ"maybe put her feet up, or consider living in Palm Beach full-time. Her response? âI learned a long time ago that I canât live in somebody elseâs image,â she says. âIf I want to live my life my way, why shouldnât I? I donât give a damn. They can go peddle their papers.â
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.