Alexandra Shulman CBE (born November 1957) is a British journalist and magazine editor who served as editor-in-chief of British Vogue from 1992 to 2017, achieving the longest tenure in the publication's history.[1][2][3] Beginning her career as a writer for Tatler in 1982, she advanced to features editor at Vogue, then became the first woman to edit GQ magazine, before returning to Vogue in its top role.[4][5] Shulman was awarded an OBE in 2007 for services to fashion journalism and a CBE in 2018 for services to magazines, reflecting her influence on the industry amid evolving commercial and cultural pressures.[6] Post-Vogue, she has contributed as a columnist to the Daily Mail and authored books on fashion and personal style.[5]
Early life
Family background and upbringing
Alexandra Shulman was born in 1957 in London to Milton Shulman, a Canadian-born drama critic and author who served as theater critic for the Evening Standard from 1953 to 1991, and Drusilla Beyfus, a British writer, broadcaster, and features contributor to Vogue magazine.[7] Her parents' journalistic careers shaped a household centered on intellectual pursuits, with Shulman later describing her childhood as "interesting" amid high expectations and articulate discourse.[7][8]As the eldest of three siblings—followed by sister Nicola, two years her junior, and brother Jason, approximately five years younger—Shulman grew up in a stable environment in central London, where her parents rented properties, including in the affluent Eaton Square area favored by her father.[9][9] The family's dynamic retained strong sibling bonds into adulthood, as evidenced by a 2019 trip to Ukraine, the ancestral region of their grandparents, which evoked childhood roles and interactions.[10] Her paternal grandparents had emigrated from Ukraine to Canada, with her grandmother Ethel Raisberg originating from Russia before settling in Toronto, infusing the family with Eastern European Jewish heritage.[11]
Shulman commenced her journalism career at Over 21 magazine, a women's monthly aimed at a young audience akin to an early British Vanity Fair.[15] In 1982, she joined Tatler, a Condé Nast publication, initially under editor Tina Brown and later Mark Boxer, advancing to features editor over the subsequent five years.[15]In 1987, Shulman transitioned to The Sunday Telegraph as editor of the women's pages, later assuming the role of deputy editor for the newspaper's current-affairs and photo reportage tabloid supplement.[15] She returned to Condé Nast in 1988 as features editor at British Vogue, contributing to content development during a period of evolving fashion coverage.[15][16]Shulman's early magazine editing experience culminated in her appointment as editor of GQ in February 1990, making her the first woman to lead the UK edition of the men's lifestyle title; she held this position until 1992, overseeing its launch and initial issues amid a competitive menswear media landscape.[15][16] These roles established her expertise in features journalism and editorial strategy within fashion and lifestyle publishing.[17]
Editorship of British Vogue
Alexandra Shulman assumed the role of editor-in-chief of British Vogue in 1992, succeeding Elizabeth Tilberis after a career that included features editing at the magazine and a stint as the inaugural editor of UK GQ.[18] Her appointment marked a shift toward a more pragmatic, reader-focused approach, as she lacked the traditional high-fashion pedigree but brought journalistic experience to broaden the publication's scope beyond elite fashion circles.[19]Under Shulman's leadership, British Vogue emphasized a mix of high fashion, accessible journalism, and cultural features, expanding editorial content to include broader lifestyle topics while maintaining visual excellence.[20] She prioritized British designers, promoting them as a national brand alongside international supermodels like Kate Moss, whose 1993 debut cover exemplified her era's blend of grit and glamour.[18] Other landmark covers included Princess Diana in 1997 and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, for the magazine's 2016 centenary issue, which highlighted her ability to secure high-profile subjects.[21] Shulman also curated content that engaged readers intellectually, such as in-depth articles on fashion's societal role, contributing to the magazine's evolution into a leading global fashion authority.[22]A key initiative during her tenure was a 2009 letter to major designers—including Domenico Dolce, John Galliano, Stella McCartney, Alexander McQueen, and Donatella Versace—criticizing the trend of shrinking sample sizes that failed to fit even professional models, describing them as producing garments for figures with "jutting bones and no breasts."[23] She argued this forced magazines to select unnaturally thin models or rely heavily on retouching, advocating for sizes aligned with average model proportions to sustain realistic imagery.[24] The letter, though private, leaked and sparked debate on industry standards, with Shulman later confirming ongoing correspondence on the issue as late as 2012.[25]Circulation grew modestly by 12% to 195,053 copies over her 25 years, amid a challenging print market, though monthly readership expanded substantially through heightened profile and advertising volume, which peaked at record levels like 2,236 pages in 2008.[26][13] Shulman stepped down in summer 2017, her final September issue featuring a collective cover of models spanning decades as a nod to Vogue's history.[27] Her era solidified the magazine's commercial viability while preserving its aspirational core, adapting to reader preferences like favoring pink and red-toned covers for better sales.[19]
Post-Vogue contributions
After departing from her role as editor-in-chief of British Vogue in 2017, Alexandra Shulman maintained an active presence in fashion commentary and media. She became a regular columnist for the Mail on Sunday, where she writes on topics including fashion trends, industry shifts, retail dynamics, and social observations related to women's lives.[28]In April 2020, Shulman released Clothes... and Other Things That Matter, a memoir blending personal anecdotes with reflections on clothing's emotional and cultural significance, drawing from her extensive experience in fashion without relying on Vogue-specific archives.[29] The book, published by Cassell, explores themes of ambition, identity, and style evolution, receiving attention for its candid insights into private versus public personas in the industry.That same month, in May 2020, Shulman joined Atterley.com, an Edinburgh-based online fashionmarketplace, as a strategic advisor to support its growth amid digital retail expansion, leveraging her expertise in curating luxury brands and understanding consumer behavior. Her role involves advising on marketplace positioning and trend forecasting during a period of crowdfunding and international scaling for the platform.[30]Shulman has also pursued public speaking engagements, focusing on fashion journalism, media evolution, retail strategies, and gender-related issues, often represented through agencies like Kruger Cowne. These activities, alongside her writing, position her as a continued influencer in British fashion discourse post-Vogue.
Controversies and public criticisms
Accusations of lack of diversity
During her 25-year tenure as editor of British Vogue from 1992 to 2017, Alexandra Shulman faced criticism for the magazine's limited representation of ethnic minorities, particularly in cover models and editorial staff. Only two black women, Naomi Campbell and Jourdan Dunn, received solo covers, with Dunn's appearing in the February 2011 issue and Campbell's earlier solo appearance marking the other instance amid predominantly white cover selections.[31][32] Critics, including model Naomi Campbell, highlighted this as evidence of systemic underrepresentation, noting that British Vogue had not featured an individual black model on its cover since 2002 prior to Dunn's appearance.[33]Campbell escalated the accusations in August 2017 by posting an Instagram image of British Vogue's editorial masthead under Shulman, revealing an all-white team of senior staff, which she contrasted with the incoming diverse appointments under successor Edward Enninful.[34][35] Fashion commentators and media outlets, such as The Guardian, framed this as a failure to reflect Britain's multicultural population, arguing that editorial choices perpetuated exclusion despite available diverse talent.[33] Shulman, however, defended her record in a November 2017 Guardianinterview, stating that her primary responsibility was commercial success rather than diversity quotas, as "my chief remit was not to show ethnic diversity as a policy" given that such covers sold fewer copies to the magazine's predominantly white readership.[36]Shulman rejected accusations of racism or positive discrimination avoidance as unfounded, emphasizing that hiring and content decisions prioritized merit and market viability over ethnic balancing, and expressing irritation at implications of bias.[36] She argued that British Vogue's circulation, which hovered around 220,000 copies monthly during her era, depended on appealing to its core affluent consumer base, where white models dominated sales data from advertisers and retailers.[37] While critics like those in Racked interpreted her stance as emblematic of unexamined privilege, Shulman's position aligned with broader fashionindustry practices at the time, where diverse representation was not yet a sales driver, as evidenced by similar patterns in peer publications.[38] The debate intensified post her departure, with Enninful's December 2017 issue featuring multiple black models, signaling a shift but underscoring the commercial risks Shulman cited.[39]
Comments on successors and industry changes
Shulman expressed reservations about Edward Enninful's approach following his 2017 appointment as her successor, noting a shift toward celebrity-driven content that she critiqued in a Business of Fashion column as prioritizing personal fame and social media over editorial rigor.[40] She described an emerging "bitterness" at Vogue, where a narrative portrayed the magazine under her tenure as dominated by "posh white girls" needing replacement, leaving her feeling like "persona non grata" after 25 years.[41] In 2023, Shulman reflected that Enninful's six-year stint, which she viewed as emphasizing diversity over continuity, ultimately diminished the editor's independent authority amid Condé Nast's centralization.[42]By contrast, Shulman welcomed Chioma Nnadi's 2023 transition to head of British Vogue, hailing her debut issue as a "love letter to London" that restored British identity through features like FKA Twigs on a black cab and nods to red telephone boxes.[43] She praised Nnadi's emphasis on "properly written" journalism, including in-depth interviews with figures like Billie Piper and stories on hypochondria and parenting, alongside a revival of classic British motifs such as the "posh lady gardener" exemplified by Lila Moss.[43] This marked, in Shulman's view, a corrective to prior international influences, blending high fashion with accessible British brands like Marks & Spencer.[43]Shulman attributed broader industry shifts at Vogue to Condé Nast's New York headquarters exerting greater control post-2017, introducing roles like "editorial content director" that curtailed local autonomy and prioritized digital metrics such as affiliate links over print's editorial voice.[42] She lamented the erosion of distinct national editions under Anna Wintour's oversight, foreseeing homogenized content amid a transatlantic power dynamic.[42] On wider fashion trends, Shulman argued in 2020 that the coronavirus pandemic could beneficially curb overproduction, as the sector grappled with excess brands and collections contributing to waste, potentially leading to a post-lockdown sales boom on June 15 while forcing structural reductions.[44]
Personal life
Relationships and family
Shulman married American writer Paul Spike in 1994.[45] Their son, Samuel "Sam" Spike, was born on 23 December 1995.[45] The couple divorced in 1998, when Sam was three years old.[46] Through her marriage to Spike, Shulman became stepmother to his children from a previous relationship, including stepdaughter Emma, who lived with the family and whom Shulman helped raise; she also had a stepson, Matthew.[47]Following her divorce, Shulman began a relationship with journalistDavid Jenkins, whom she had known since her late teens—he was 27 when they first met in the late 1970s.[45] The pair reconnected romantically around 2005 and have lived together since, though they have not married; Jenkins has never been wed.[46][48] In April 2025, Jenkins proposed marriage while recovering from cancer surgery, but Shulman declined.[49]Shulman has maintained a close relationship with her son Sam, who as of 2017 was in his early twenties and pursuing interests in music production.[47] She has publicly expressed concerns about his future family life, including worries over potential relocation or mismatched partnerships, as noted in her 2025 writings.[50]
Health challenges
In 2021, Shulman was diagnosed with breast cancer after experiencing sharp pain beneath her left breast, which she initially attributed to a pulled muscle or bra discomfort; an ultrasound revealed a 2 cm tumour undetected by mammography.[51] Her sister had previously been treated for the same condition, though genetic testing confirmed neither carried the breast cancer gene. Treatment consisted of a lumpectomy to excise the tumour and surrounding tissue, followed by a five-day course of radiotherapy and a daily preventive medication; chemotherapy was deemed unnecessary due to the cancer's early stage and low aggressiveness.[51] Shulman has rejected terms like "survivor" or framing her experience as a "battle," emphasizing the passive role of medicalintervention over personal agency.[51]In 2024, Shulman received a colon cancer diagnosis through an NHS bowel screening test, with no preceding symptoms such as bleeding or abdominal pain; a subsequent colonoscopy verified the presence of a tumour.[52] On June 19, she underwent a six-and-a-half-hour robotic-assisted surgery at Charing Cross Hospital in London to remove the tumour, but developed a pulmonary embolism the following day, necessitating intensive care and anticoagulant therapy.[52] The early detection precluded additional treatments beyond surgery and ongoing management of the blood clot.[52]Shulman has also managed chronic anxiety and depression, disclosing in 2024 that she has taken Prozac, a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, for over 25 years to mitigate severe episodes, including those linked to high-stress periods in her career.[53] In September 2025, at age 67, she was found to have severely elevated blood pressure via home monitoring, placing her at high risk for stroke or heart attack despite the absence of symptoms like headaches or chest pain; medication adjustments rapidly stabilized the condition, which she speculates may stem from unaddressed cumulative stress from her editorship at British Vogue (1992–2017).[54]
Awards, honors, and legacy
Professional recognitions
Shulman was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2005 New Year Honours for services to the magazine industry.[55] She received the British Society of Magazine Editors (BSME) Editor of the Year award during her editorship of Vogue.[56] In 2016, she was named Periodical Publishers Association (PPA) Editor of the Year and awarded the WGSN Futures Outstanding Achievement Hall of Fame accolade for her contributions to fashion forecasting and industry leadership.[57][56]In December 2017, Shulman received the Drapers Award for Outstanding Contribution to Fashion, recognizing her role in championing British designers and elevating the sector's global profile through Vogue.[58] Later that month, she was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2018 New Year Honours for services to the fashion industry.[59] These honors reflect her 25-year tenure at British Vogue, during which circulation grew significantly and the publication solidified its influence in fashion journalism.[60]
Impact on fashion journalism
Shulman's 25-year editorship of British Vogue from 1992 to 2017 marked a shift toward a more commercially viable and reader-centric model of fashion journalism, prioritizing content that resonated with broader audiences over purely avant-garde industry preferences. She expanded coverage to include high-street fashion and accessible trends, reflecting evolving consumer interests particularly in the early 2000s, which contributed to circulation growth to approximately 200,000 copies by the end of her tenure—the highest in the magazine's history.[26][58][11] This approach, driven by what magazine buyers wanted to see rather than solely designer acclaim, helped elevate British Vogue's influence while navigating print-to-digital transitions and media disruptions.[61]Her tenure emphasized advocacy within fashion journalism, championing emerging British talent such as Alexander McQueen and Christopher Kane, and bolstering London Fashion Week's global profile through editorial support and initiatives like the BFC/Vogue Designer Fashion Fund. Shulman used her platform to critique systemic issues, including a 2009 open letter to designers urging standardized sample sizes to better accommodate working models, and a 2016 model-free issue featuring "real women" like Emily Blunt to highlight everyday representation.[62][18] These efforts positioned fashion editors as industry reformers, blending promotion of supermodels like Kate Moss—who appeared on 37 covers—with calls for practical reforms in body standards and diversity.[18]Shulman's legacy endures in her demonstration of editorial longevity amid technological shifts, having adapted British Vogue to digital demands while maintaining print's aspirational core, influencing subsequent editors to balance commercial imperatives with cultural commentary. Her post-Vogue columns, such as those in The Daily Telegraph, continue to offer candid industry analysis, reinforcing fashion journalism's role in fostering intelligent discourse on trends, retail, and consumer behavior without succumbing to ephemeral hype.[63][16]