Edith Raymond Locke
Edie Locke was an Austrian-American magazine editor and television producer and presenter. She was editor-in-chief of Mademoiselle from 1971 through 1979.
Early life
Edith Rosenberg Laub was born in Vienna on 3 August 1921 to Dora Hochburg Laub and Herman Laub, who was a department store buyer. She had one younger brother who died as an infant. In 1938, when Hitler invaded Vienna, she and other Jewish students were expelled from her school and her father was fired. Locke was in 1939 able to obtain a US visa and fled, first by train to Cherbourg, then on the Aquitania to New York; her parents were unable to obtain U.S. visas and fled to England. Locke lived in Brooklyn, where the family had relatives who took her in, worked in a toothpaste factory, and took courses at Brooklyn College, including English lessons, as she had immigrated speaking no English.Publishing and fashion career
Locke got a job as a secretary at Harper's Bazaar, a monthly women's magazine. She became an assistant editor at Junior Bazaar. She wrote a monthly newsletter about fashion for an advertising agency, which was read by Mademoiselle's editor-in-chief Betsey Blackwell, who hired Locke in the early 1950s as an associate fashion editor. In 1971 Blackwell retired and Locke became the magazine's editor-in-chief. She was fired in 1979 by Alexander Liberman, then editorial director of Conde Nast, because he wanted a "lighter and sexier" magazine, similar to competitor Cosmopolitan, than the issues-heavy version Locke was producing. During her time at Mademoiselle she worked with and mentored multiple fashion designers. Proteges she mentored when they were launching their careers included Betsey Johnson, Donna Karan, and Ralph Lauren.Locke hosted and produced You! Magazine for USA Network starting in 1981 and later a regular fashion segment for Attitudes, a daily lifestyle show on Lifetime.