Moving to Tanzania in 1960 to study chimpanzees, Jane Goodall changed the way we view both our closest genetic relatives and ourselves. Now 70 and recently honored as a Dame of the British Empire, she pauses here following her latest journey to Africa, which was documented for two Animal Planet specials| Vanity Fair | The Complete Archive
With critics savaging her latest movie and fans alienated by rumors of lesbianism, socialism, and snobbism, Katharine Hepburn fled to Paris in 1934, abandoning a career that forced her to deny what she really was: politically radical and sexually unconventional. But the 26-year-old Oscar winner returned to the U.S. 17 days later, ready to do whatever stardom required. In an excerpt from his biography, WILLIAM J. MANN reveals bow Hepburn created the American icon known as "Kate," helping bury ...| Vanity Fair | The Complete Archive
The entire history of Vanity Fair at your fingertips. Every story, every shoot, every cover—it’s all here.| Vanity Fair | The Complete Archive
At 25, Stephen Glass was the most sought-after young reporter in the nation's capital, producing knockout articles for magazines ranging from The New Republic to Rolling Stone. Trouble was, he made things up—sources, quotes, whole stories—in a breathtaking web of deception that emerged as the most sustained fraud in modern journalism| Vanity Fair | The Complete Archive