Transcript
Introduction
A journalist once wrote that I often seem less an actual person than the heroine of some dicey Danielle Steel novel. The basic Danielle Steel story is to take a plucky heroine, set her on a quest, and then subject her to every villain and viper and obstacle imaginable. Which I suppose is not an entirely bad summary of my life so far.
When Tamara Mellon's father lent her the seed money to start a high-end shoe company, he cautioned her, "Don't let the accountants run your business." Little did he know that over the next 15 years, the struggle between the financial and the creative would become one of the central themes of Mellon's business. Mellon grew Jimmy Choo into a billion-dollar brand, yet it's her personal glamour that keeps her an object of global media fascination.
Vogue photographed her wedding, Vanity Fair covered her divorce and the criminal trial that followed. And the Wall Street Journal covered the three private equity deals, the relentless battle between the suits and the creatives, and Mellon's triumph against a brutal hostile takeover attempt. But despite her eventual fame and fortune, Mellon didn't have an easy road to success.