Home ยป Posts ยป Elsa Klensch, pioneer in television fashion journalism, dies at 92

Elsa Klensch, pioneer in television fashion journalism, dies at 92

by Barbados Today
4 min read
A+A-
Reset

SOURCE: CNN- Elsa Klensch, who was among the first to bring fashion to TV screens with CNNโ€™s โ€œStyle with Elsa Klenschโ€ in the 1980s, has died at 92 in New York City, CNN has confirmed.

For two decades, she gave CNN viewers a front row seat to runways all over the world, including New York, London, Milan and Paris.

โ€œThere is nothing as exciting as a good collection. I can go in like many other fashion editors โ€” tired, depressed, fed up,โ€ Klensch said on her show in 2000. โ€œOnce those good clothes come down the runway, the whole world changes.โ€

Klensch was born in Sydney, Australia. She studied journalism at the University of Sydney and began her career in London in the 1960s, but her reporting took her to a number of locations, including Papua New Guinea and Hong Kong, where she worked as a freelance business writer for Womenโ€™s Wear Daily. In the 1970s, Klensch worked as a fashion editor and reported for WWD, Vogue and Harperโ€™s Bazaar in New York.

She joined the Cable News Network in 1980, hosting and producing โ€œStyle with Elsa Klenschโ€ until 2001. Klenschโ€™s weekly reports covering the global fashion industry, in which she brought designers in front of the camera, developed a devoted following and made her show one of the networkโ€™s most watched in the 1980s.

Elsa Klensch attends the Cynthia Steffe fashion show during New York Fashion week in 2005.

Elsa Klensch attends the Cynthia Steffe fashion show during New York Fashion week in 2005. Credit: Thos Robinson/Getty Images

Long before the advent of social media, fashion bloggers and influencers, Klensch was one of the only sources of dedicated fashion news. Her straight talking delivery put the latest fashion trends into context for a mainstream audience, often pulling back the curtain on one of the worldโ€™s most exclusive industries.

Few fashion industry luminaries could escape her camera crewโ€™s focus. Klensch interviewed many of the worldโ€™s leading designers including Miuccia Prada, Marc Jacobs and Karl Lagerfeld and supermodels such as Naomi Campbell and Christy Turlington.

โ€œWhen we started, maybe for the first five years, we were the only television crew (at fashion shows),โ€ Klensch said on her show in 2000. โ€œDesigners really didnโ€™t understand the concept of television.โ€

Celeb-packed shows and bombastic sets return at Milan Fashion Week

When Klensch arrived at fashion shows everyone was aware, said Walter Imparato, her photojournalist for over a decade. Many designers came to expect her backstage to interview them about their work.

โ€œWe rolled up, we were like a rock band,โ€ said Imparato, now a senior photojournalist at CNN. โ€œPhotographers were waiting for hours and we blew right in.โ€

Industry icons and regular households alike tuned in to watch โ€œStyle with Elsa Klensch,โ€ and it became one of the highest-rated shows of CNNโ€™s weekend programming.

โ€œWatching โ€˜Style with Elsa Klenschโ€™ was more than just must see TV for me โ€“ it was a religion,โ€ American designer Jeremy Scott told CNN via email. โ€œI remember, after starting my own career in Paris, the excitement and sense of fulfillment I felt when Elsa came backstage to interview me for the very first time โ€“ it was a full circle moment for me and I feel so fortunate that I was able to tell her myself how very meaningful her work was to me growing up โ€“ the window she provided for me into a world I so longed to be a part of.โ€

Paris Fashion Week womenโ€™s ready-to-wear 2022: How to watch the shows online

Klensch received many industry accolades during her career. In 1987 she was recognized by the Council of Fashion Designers of America (CFDA) for her work in fashion television. She was also elected into the Best Dressed Hall of Fame, joining ranks with Audrey Hepburn, Yves Saint Laurent and Anna Wintour.

Far from fluff, fashion was serious business for Klensch and she covered the industry with notable rigor. During an interview with The Look Online, conducted after her show was no longer on air, she said, โ€œI think design has to be treated with respect because itโ€™s such an important part of our lives. I think good design makes our lives more livable, it makes us happier, it makes us function more easily.โ€

Klensch met her husband, Charles Klensch, who was then the Saigon bureau chief for ABC News, in the 1960s. They married in Saigon during the Vietnam War.

After โ€œStyle with Elsa Klenschโ€ came to an end, she continued to write and lecture on fashion. She also penned several mystery novels.

You may also like

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it. Accept Privacy Policy

-
00:00
00:00
Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00