The Cinema Society screening of yesterday evening to disperse the ashes My at Bergdorf 's, the obvious question, for this reporter was at least, where viewers were hoping it would be their final resting place. Vera Wang said she did not mind having his ashes scattered to the shopping mecca of Fifth Avenue, because she is so a ruthless shopper. Reed Krakoff, for its part, no matter where he is buried, as long as it is next to his wife, Delphine. BG's Linda Fargo Style.com narrated in a close encounter with the afterlife that had once in the store: "in 1998, we were trying to create paradise on one of the Windows with a smoke machine and it stuck! We had to etch ' help! ' on windows for someone to get us out. That was the last time I used a fog machine ".
The documentary gives an overview of the history of Bergdorf, from back when the Goodmans lived in an apartment on the seventh floor, the infamous order 200 units-mink earmuffs by Elizabeth Taylor, to today, when senior director of Visual presentation David Hoey trekking in Long Island City to supervise the construction of holiday boxes. The real star, however, is 85-year-old Betty Halbreich, sharp-tongued personal shopper for Bergdorf since 1976. When asked what she would do if not this, she dryly replies: "drink".
After the screening, guests made their way to Harlow, where the Director Matthew Miele open about what not to do the final cut of the film. "There are definitely some racy stories of the locker room, but it wasn't really where I wanted the story to go." Perhaps his next film will be more irreverent? Could be: honey said, "I am currently working on a new film on another shop on Fifth Avenue, as legendary, and something everyone is going to be interested in".
— Todd Plummer
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