![]() ![]() He also was a producer of Chicago 10, a documentary which premiered on the opening night of the Sundance Film Festival in early 2007. Ĭarter has co-produced two documentaries for HBO, Public Speaking (2010), directed by Martin Scorsese, which spotlights writer Fran Lebowitz, and His Way (2011), about Hollywood producer Jerry Weintraub, which was nominated for a Primetime Emmy. The show, directed by Tony Award-winner Joe Mantello, opened at the Booth Theatre in New York City in April 2013, and at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles on December 3. Ĭarter was a producer of I'll Eat You Last, a one-woman play starring Bette Midler, about legendary Hollywood talent agent Sue Mengers. Jeff Bridges played a character based on Carter in the 2008 film adaptation. His often idiosyncratic personal style was depicted in How to Lose Friends & Alienate People, a book by former Vanity Fair contributing editor Toby Young. Ĭarter in a publicity shot for Vanity FairĬarter's Vanity Fair combined high-profile celebrity cover stories with serious journalism. Ĭarter is the author of What We've Lost (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, September 2004), a comprehensive critical examination of the Bush administration. Accolades during his tenure include his having won 14 National Magazine Awards and being named to the Magazine Editors' Hall of Fame. He was the editor from July 1992 until late in 2017. Carter was then editor at The New York Observer before being invited by Vanity Fair to take over for Tina Brown, who left for The New Yorker. In 1986, Carter and Andersen founded Spy, which ran for 12 years before it ultimately ceased publication in 1998. Carter spent five years writing for Time on the topics of business, law, and entertainment before moving to Life in 1983. In 1978, Carter moved to the United States and began working for Time as a writer-trainee, where he met Andersen. ![]() Despite its success, The Canadian Review was bankrupt by 1978. ![]() By 1977, The Canadian Review had become award-winning and the third-largest circulating magazine in Canada. In 1973, Carter co-founded The Canadian Review, a monthly general interest magazine. After high school in Trenton, Ontario, Carter attended the University of Ottawa followed by Carleton University, but never graduated from either school. ![]()
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