Beautiful People of the Café Society: Scrapbooks by the Baron de Cabrol
Author Baron de Cabrol, Text by Thierry Coudert
- Publish Date: November 15, 2016
- Format: Hardcover
- Category: Photography - Subjects & Themes - Celebrity
- Publisher: Flammarion
- Trim Size: 10-1/4 x 13
- Pages: 264
- US Price: $120.00
- CDN Price: $160.00
- ISBN: 978-2-08-020271-0
Reviews
—Vogue.com
"The glamorous European aristocrats from the 1920s to the 1960s are chronicled like never before. The watercolors, collages and archival documents help the reader discover the journey back in time."
—The Society Diaries
"the holiday season’s most alluring book"
—Architectural Digest
"Next month, Flammarion releases 'Beautiful People of The Cafe Society', a book that sure as anything will have you mad with social envy."
—GuestofaGuest.com
"Skip forward in time, and the court’s masquerades of the 19th century find a 20th-century parallel in the “café society” immortalized by Baron de Cabrol in whimsical collaged form."
—The New York Times
"The recently released Beautiful People of the Cafe Society (Flammarion, $120) opens the doors of the private world of haute monde legends such as Étienne de Beaumont, Charles and Mary-Laure de Noailles, the ever-controversial Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Charles de Beistegui, the Maharani of Baroda, Viscountess Jacqueline de Ribes, Elsa Maxwell, Gianni Agnelli, Christian “Bébé” Berard, Duff and Diana Cooper and Louise de Vilmoran. Even if you don’t know who they are, you will want to see how they lived. And boy, did they ever live."
—Avenue Magazine
"Speaking of prominent tastemakers of the twentieth century, Baron Fred de Cabrol, the late aristocratic French decorator, remains much admired today. A figure who, along with his wife, Daisy, was present at most of last century's most acclaimed balls and gatherings, Baron de Cabrol counted the likes of Duff and Diana Cooper, Charles de Beistegui, and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor as friends. Such a glittering social life deserved documentation, but not in prosaic fashion. Baron de Cabrol's scrapbooks, with their charming blend of photographic cut-outs and illustrated backgrounds, present a highly-colorful and delightful record of a social milieu that has all but died out. It's no wonder, then, that author Thierry Coudert has devoted his latest book, Beautiful People of the Café Society: Scrapbooks by the Baron de Cabrol, to the Baron's handiwork. Just as he did with his previous book, Café Society: Socialites, Patrons, and Artists 1920-1960, Coudert provides the reader with a dazzling account of twentieth-century European café society."
—Peak Of Chic