How British Vogue pulled off its Legendary cover with 40 women

Publish date: 2024-08-23

By Bonnie McLaren & Tom RichardsonBBC Newsbeat

Ned Rogers Four women of varying ages and ethnicities are in front of a photographic backdrop inside a studio, with the camera pulled back so lights and other equipment are visible, giving the shot a behind the scenes feel. One woman, standing, is dressed head to toe in white in a suit. Next to her, seated on a stool, a woman wears a lacy, lingerie-style outfit. Then a second seated woman wears a long, pure white dress with halterneck. She has her hand placed tenderly on the midriff of the final woman, who stands next to her wearing a leather body-con style dress.Ned RogersModel Christy Turlington, British presenter Maya Jama, US actress Selma Blair and model Precious Lee were among the women invited to the shoot

If you saw the latest cover of fashion bible British Vogue going viral last week, you probably had the same question as many others.

"How on Earth did they manage to get 40 of the most famous, in-demand women on the planet in the same place at the same time?"

Rosie Vogel-Eades has the answer.

She's the magazine's global bookings director and the person who co-ordinated the massive photoshoot.

Her boss, British Vogue editor-in-chief Edward Enninful, wanted to mark his final issue after seven years with something special, and his pitch was a cover featuring some of the world's most notable women.

Household names from the worlds of fashion, film, music and sport, together in one location. Easy, right?

Rosie had her doubts.

"I figured it was never going to happen and I told him he was mad," she tells BBC Newsbeat, laughing.

"Then suddenly he was like 'I want Miley Cyrus, I want Oprah...'

"And I said, 'sure, let me see what I can do'."

Reuters British Vogue editor-in-chief Edward Enninful, wearing black rimmed glasses, a white shirt and dark blazer. He's looking at the camera. The background is white with black writing and artwork on the wall.ReutersEdward Enninful became British Vogue's editor-in-chief in 2016 and is the first black man to hold the role

So Rosie started putting in calls to agents and managers but experience told her it wouldn't be easy.

"Getting people to share a cover or getting models to share a cover can be difficult, let alone people of different disciplines, having models share with musicians, with actors," she says.

"Things get very complicated in that way."

But she needn't have worried.

"Once they started saying 'yes', I was like, 'oh my God, I'm gonna have to get a knife and a fork and eat my words', which I was very happy to do," she says.

"It's testament to what people will do for Edward.

"I think there's so much goodwill to him from all of these people who he had put on his covers before to come together to kind of say goodbye."

Steven Meisel Forty women of varying ages and ethnicities gathered before a white studio backdrop. All are dressed in black, white or a combination of the two, and are looking into the camera. The four women at the front are sitting on the floor, and the rest are behind, arranged in rows that increase in height, so that all 40 are visible. Above their heads, the Vogue logo in gold letters. The cover line reads: "Legendary! 40 Vogue icons, one epic shoot... the ultimate fashion issue."Steven Meisel

Rosie admits that the original plan didn't involve 40 cover stars, but the situation escalated once US TV host Oprah Winfrey was on board.

"As things often have a tendency to do with Edward, they kind of snowball and things get bigger and more fantastical," she says.

"But I've never worked on something of that size where people were so willing to give their time and so quickly."

Rosie says almost everyone they approached to appear on the cover agreed, with only Nicole Kidman unable to make it due to filming arrangements.

The next step was to set a date, and plan a strict schedule - Rosie calls it a "military operation" - at an undisclosed location in New York chosen for December's shoot.

"It was all super-secretive," she says.

"There were very few of us in the office who actually knew who was going to be there. And we kept it really tight, which was almost, maybe, more exciting.

"It was almost like running a fashion show," she says. "When you have that much talent in one place and everyone has to be ready for a certain time.

"So we had a whole floor just of hair and make-up, we had a whole floor of styling, a whole floor with people's management and things like that.

"And it was all sort of very, very structured."

Rosie says that all the stars in the shoot had to be on set by 15:00, meaning a long day of prep beforehand.

"So some people were there [at] eight in the morning, some people arrived at 14:59 already with their hair and makeup done," she says.

Getty Images A woman with shoulder length brunette hair stands in front of an elaborate arrangement of white flowers. She's wearing a black jacket over a top with an elaborate, purple-pink floral designGetty ImagesRosie Vogel-Eades was a part of the team that co-ordinated the epic shoot, and says she initially thought it was a "mad" idea

"Once I ticked everyone off, and everyone was in hair and makeup, I went outside to go and get coffee, sort of decompress and basically call my husband in floods of tears.

"Because I don't know if I'm ever going to do anything that would be as good as this and perhaps I've sort of peaked.

"And he was like: 'Well, why don't you go back inside and enjoy it rather than crying on the phone to me?', and I did.

"And it really was amazing."

After several weeks of prepping Edward's final issue, which goes on sale from Tuesday, Rosie says "it's nice be able to share it with the world" after all the secrecy.

And she thinks it's a fitting send-off for her former boss who, in her view, has had an "immeasurable" influence on the fashion industry.

"I think he's really changed the landscape for so many people," she says.

"Given voices to people who weren't necessarily heard or seen or involved before.

"But something that he always says is that there's still so much work to do.

"And I really hope that we can continue doing that kind of work even while he's not the editor-in-chief.

"I'm so grateful that I got the opportunity to work with him and work on that cover and on all of his covers, you know, because it's all been a wild ride."

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The full list of 40 stars:

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