On September 2, Vogue announced that longtime insider Chloe Malle would become its new Head of Editorial Content for the U.S. edition. The decision marks a defining step in Anna Wintour’s carefully orchestrated succession plan. Wintour, now global editorial director and Condé Nast Chief Content Officer, will remain deeply involved at the top of the brand. This is not a handoff but a recalibration. The rise of Chloe Malle signals both continuity and change, and the fashion world is watching with equal measures of excitement and scrutiny.
Chloe Malle: A professional biography
After graduating from Brown University in comparative literature and writing, Chloe Malle began her career at the New York Observer, where she worked on the city desk and covered real estate, culture, and civic life. Freelance bylines soon followed in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and Architectural Digest. In 2011, she joined Vogue as Social Editor and gradually climbed through the masthead as Contributing Editor, then Vogue.com Editor, and co-host of The Run Through podcast.
Under her leadership, Vogue.com doubled direct traffic. Readership for wedding coverage grew by 30 per cent. She launched digital franchises such as Dogue and the Vogue Vintage Guide, showing a flair for playfulness as well as audience growth. One of her signature moments was the exclusive coverage of Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos’ wedding, which illustrated her ability to translate access into editorial impact.

The person behind the title
Born in New York in 1985, Chloe Malle spent part of her childhood in Los Angeles while her mother filmed Murphy Brown, before returning to New York. She attended Riverdale Country School and Brown University. She is married and has two children. Her personal lineage adds cultural irony, as her mother once played a Vogue editor in a Sex and the City cameo.
Her interests, style, convictions
Malle has openly called herself a proud nepo baby, a candid reference to her being the daughter of Candice Bergen and Louis Malle. She has acknowledged the privilege but has insisted that it sharpened her work ethic. She once admitted that fashion was not her main interest when she joined Vogue, confessing that she wanted to be a writer but was seduced by the magazine’s force. That duality shapes her editorial perspective.
Anna Wintour praised Malle’s ability to balance history with the demands of today, describing her as warm, inclusive, and wise. Malle’s work has consistently shown a reporter’s attention to story rather than spectacle. From the White House wedding of Naomi Biden to cultural profiles in podcasts, her editorial identity leans toward curiosity and narrative depth.
Why Editor and not Editor in Chief
The title is precise. Vogue U.S. no longer has an Editor in Chief. Condé Nast has replaced that title with Head of Editorial Content across its international editions. Malle now holds that role for the American market, while Anna Wintour continues as global editorial director and Condé Nast Chief Content Officer. The structure centralises authority but still allows local leaders operational freedom.

Anna Wintour remains at Vogue.
Anna Wintour has not left. She continues to direct global strategy, significant events such as the Met Gala, and the cultural footprint of Condé Nast. The choice to keep her in place reflects continuity for advertisers, designers, and celebrities who rely on Vogue’s global platform. Malle manages daily output while Wintour preserves the institution’s aura. The arrangement reflects dual leadership: tradition and transformation side by side.
Why Anna Wintour chose Chloe Malle
Anna Wintour’s public comments on the appointment were telling. She said she had one chance to get it right and praised Malle’s originality, diligence, and ability to carry Vogue’s history and its digital future simultaneously. Industry voices described the selection as pragmatic and rational. Lauren Sherman, a prominent fashion journalist, called it a practical and reasonable choice that prioritised competence over spectacle.
The choice was not about glamour but about proven results. Malle had already delivered measurable audience growth, successful digital franchises, and exclusive features that rippled across media. For Anna Wintour, who has long rewarded those who understand Vogue’s machinery from the inside, Chloe Malle was the logical candidate.

Speculation versus decision
In the months before the announcement, speculation filled the press. Names such as Chioma Nnadi in London and Jo Ellison of the Financial Times circulated among serious insiders. Celebrities from Meghan Markle to Kim Kardashian appeared in tabloids as long-shot guesses. In the end, the practical favourite prevailed. Chloe Malle was chosen for a record of editorial achievement rather than for notoriety.
What to expect from Chloe Malle’s Vogue
Readers can expect greater newsroom synchronicity. Digital storytelling will become more immediate, podcasts more central, and cross-platform narratives more tightly coordinated. Print editions may appear less frequently but are expected to carry a higher collectable value.
Vogue’s print footprint has been shrinking. The September issue, once nearly one thousand pages, now sits closer to three hundred sixty-five. Critics question whether digital momentum alone can sustain the prestige that print once embodied. Another risk is proximity to Anna Wintour, which may blur perceptions of Chloe Malle’s independence.
Print will still serve as a gallery for definitive images and profiles. Digital will continue to function as the fast-moving engine. Chloe Malle’s instincts as a writer and cultural observer will shape content, maintaining a blend of curiosity and authority.
Voices and testimonials
Chloe Malle said on her appointment, “I am so thrilled and awed to be part of this. I also feel incredibly fortunate to have Anna just down the hall as my mentor.”
Anna Wintour stated, “Chloe has proven she can balance Vogue’s long, singular history with its future on the front lines of the new.”
Chloe Malle has also reflected on her background, noting, “There is no question that I have benefited from the privilege I grew up in. It made me work much harder.”
Her earlier recollection about joining Vogue was equally candid. “I was hesitant when I was interviewing because fashion is not one of my main interests in life. I wanted to be a writer, but the Vogue machine seduced me.”
Industry voices echoed these sentiments. Spanish daily El País called her the pragmatic choice, collaborative and digitally attuned. The Washington Post highlighted her broad range across books, podcasts, and online journalism. The New York Post warned of challenges in reviving print but acknowledged her focus on thematic storytelling as a promising path.
The larger signal to fashion
Chloe Malle’s appointment signals to the industry that heritage brands can adapt by subtle evolution rather than by rupture. Designers see continuity of coverage and influence. Advertisers know an editor who understands measurable growth. Readers see a magazine committed to staying relevant across platforms. This is a cautious pivot, not a revolution.
To conclude,
Chloe Malle represents agility and storytelling depth. For the industry, she embodies continuity with measurable growth. For Condé Nast, she is the proof that succession can be managed without destabilising a global brand.
The rise of Chloe Malle is not a revolution but a recalibration. She brings pace, tact, and quiet ambition to a magazine that must reconcile heritage with digital urgency. Anna Wintour remains the compass while Malle becomes the engine. The duet will define Vogue’s future. If it works, Vogue will continue to set the cultural weather. If it falters, it will expose how fragile legacy can be. Fashion thrives on reinvention, and this new chapter is exactly that. In the end, Chloe Malle is both the story and the storyteller, and Vogue is once again ready to make the cut that everyone will notice.
José Amorim
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