In the ashes of World War II, as Paris emerged from occupation and rationing, a visionary journalist named Hélène Gordon-Lazareff launched a magazine that would redefine women’s media. Elle, founded in 1945, wasn’t just about dresses and lipstick – it was a bold declaration of femininity, empowerment, and modernity.
Gordon-Lazareff, a Russian émigré turned Parisian powerhouse, blended American flair with French elegance, creating a publication that spoke to the “modern working woman” and influenced global fashion journalism for decades. Her story is one of resilience, innovation, and unapologetic style, from fleeing revolutions to spotting stars like Brigitte Bardot.
Hélène Gordon-Lazareff was born on September 21, 1909, in Rostov-on-Don, Russia, into a wealthy Jewish family. Her father, Boris Gordon, was a tobacco magnate who owned factories, a printing house, and even a newspaper, embodying the cultured elite of pre-revolutionary Russia. Her mother, Élisabeth Skomarovski, and older sister Émilie completed the family unit. But the Bolshevik Revolution upended their lives. Around late 1917, the Gordons fled the chaos, embarking on a dramatic escape: Hélène, her mother, and sister traveled by luxury train to the Black Sea, then to Istanbul, where young Hélène’s long hair was cut short to evade Bolshevik scrutiny—a practical bob she would keep for life.
Arriving in Paris in early 1920, the family settled amid the city’s vibrant cultural scene, though her parents soon separated. Hélène, described as a “spoiled child traumatized by exile” and “fascinated by power,” thrived academically. She attended Victor-Duruy High School and later studied ethnology at the Sorbonne, immersing herself in the surrealist circles of Paris, where poets like Philippe Soupault dedicated verses to her.
By the early 1930s, she had graduated from the Institute of Ethnology, but not before a brief, youthful marriage at age 19 to chemical engineer Jean-Paul Raudnitz in 1928. The union produced a daughter, Michèle Rosier (who would later become a noted designer), but ended in divorce after three years due to financial mismatches with Hélène’s lavish tastes.
Her early career veered from academia to adventure. In 1935, she joined the Sahara-Sudan ethnographic expedition led by Marcel Griaule, spending two months with a Dogon tribe in Africa, studying totemism and women’s roles. This experience sparked her writing; upon return, she published a travelogue in L’Intransigeant.
It was during this period that she met her future husband, Pierre Lazareff, a prominent newspaper editor, at the home of explorer Paul-Émile Victor. Losing interest in scholarly pursuits, Hélène pivoted to journalism in the 1930s, penning children’s pages for Paris-Soir under the pseudonym “Tante Juliette” and contributing to Marie Claire. Her multilingual skills – fluent in Russian, French, English, and more – made her a natural in the fast-paced world of media.
World War II forced another upheaval. As Nazi forces advanced, Hélène and Pierre, who directed Paris-Soir, fled to New York in 1940 to escape persecution – Pierre’s paper had been critical of the regime. In Manhattan, Hélène’s adaptability shone. Fluent in English, she integrated into American journalism circles, landing roles at Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue, where she honed her fashion writing skills.
She later became head writer and editor of The New York Times‘ women’s page, while Pierre worked for Voice of America. These years exposed her to the bold, consumer-driven style of U.S. magazines, contrasting with Europe’s wartime austerity. She absorbed ideas about dynamic layouts, practical advice, and empowering content for women beyond mere ornamentation.
The couple returned to a liberated Paris in 1944, brimming with fresh perspectives. France was rebuilding, and women had just gained the right to vote in 1944. Hélène saw an opportunity: French women, weary of rationing and outdated pre-war magazines, craved something vibrant and relevant.
Leveraging Pierre’s media empire (he founded France-Soir), she launched Elle on November 21, 1945 – though some accounts note the inaugural issue hit stands amid paper shortages, printed on coarse, yellow stock that evoked fresh French bread. The magazine’s offices were set up above France-Soir at 100 Rue Réaumur, and early covers were shot in Manhattan using borrowed French accessories, like 15 chic hats from Lilly Daché, since color photography was scarce in post-war Europe.
Hélène Gordon-Lazareff’s greatest contribution was transforming fashion media from elitist escapism into an accessible, multifaceted platform. Elle‘s motto – “seriousness in frivolity and irony in graveness” – captured her ethos: fashion as cultural force, intertwined with news, beauty, lifestyle, and social issues.
The first 24-page issue featured a modern cover of a smiling, dynamic young woman in motion, holding a ginger cat – a far cry from the static, objectified models in rivals like Vogue or Marie Claire. It promised to help women “dress well despite shortages” and offered a blend of entertainment, practical tips, and cultural commentary, setting a new standard for French women’s magazines.
Under her leadership from 1945 to 1972, Elle became a trendsetter. In 1946, she hired Françoise Giroud as managing editor, who praised Hélène as a “brilliant, young woman.” Gordon-Lazareff spotted and elevated icons: In 1949, she discovered 15-year-old Brigitte Bardot on a train platform, turning her into Elle‘s junior fashion model and launching her stardom.
She championed emerging designers like Christian Dior, whose 1957 fittings she personally attended, and featured stars such as Grace Kelly and Marilyn Monroe on covers. In 1958, she partnered with Galeries Lafayette for an Elle-branded clothing line, democratizing fashion. By the 1960s, Elle influenced what women wore across Europe and the U.S., earning her a 1966 Neiman Marcus Fashion Award for her global impact.
Her innovations extended beyond content. Elle targeted the “modern working woman,” covering topics like career advice, health, and politics alongside couture – predating feminist waves while empowering readers subtly. Anecdotes paint her as a charismatic force: always in Chanel suits, feet on her desk, sipping tea, she navigated the male-dominated press with seduction and authority. Yet, she wasn’t a vocal feminist; she disliked pants on women and clashed with the 1968 social upheavals that challenged her editorial style.
Hélène Gordon-Lazareff stepped down as Elle‘s editor-in-chief in September 1972, amid changing times, but her influence endured. At the request of French President Georges Pompidou, she received her full salary from the Hachette Group until her death on February 16, 1988, in Le Lavandou, France. Le Monde hailed her as “one of the great figures of the French press after the Liberation.”
Her legacy is profound. Elle, now an international powerhouse with editions in over 40 countries, embodies her vision of women as active, multifaceted beings – not just muses. She revolutionized fashion journalism by making it inclusive and ironic, blending high style with everyday relevance, and paving the way for magazines like Cosmopolitan and modern digital platforms. Through Elle, she empowered post-war women, introducing dynamic portrayals that broke from pre-war objectification and influenced feminist discourse, even if unintentionally.
Gordon-Lazareff’s personal flair lives on in anecdotes: from Orson Welles flipping through Elle in 1954 to her role in spotlighting Bardot and Dior, she turned media into a star-making machine. Today, as Elle celebrates milestones like the 2025 Style Awards, her spirit endures, reminding us that fashion media isn’t frivolous – it’s a mirror of society’s evolution. In a world of influencers and algorithms, Hélène Gordon-Lazareff’s contributions remain a testament to the power of one woman’s bold vision.