NEW YORK, NY.- Fans of Winona Ryder lined up outside Dover Street Market in Manhattan on a recent chilly evening to attend a launch party for Winona, a book of Polaroids and cellphone shots of the Gen X cultural idol.
Shes so famously private that any peek into her interior life is delicious, Daniela Tijerina, a writer and editorial assistant for Vanity Fair, said. Ive molded so much about my own style after a woman I know so little about, and that makes her as cool as a person can possibly be.
The shots in the book were taken by Robert Rich, who started photographing Ryder soon after becoming friends with her more than 20 years ago. His images capture her in unguarded moments: eating pizza during a sleepover at his Hells Kitchen apartment; and smoking a cigarette in a bathroom, while model Daria Werbowy quoted lines from Reality Bites to her.
At the party, Rich, 57, signed copies of his book, as guests mobbed a merch table selling T-shirts, caps and tote bags, all of which read: Winona.
What we love about Winona is that you know nothing about her, Rich said. We love that shes a mysterious woman. I used to never recognize her when Id meet her. Shed always be wearing a visor or a pageboy cap. Id walk through the city with her, and no one even knew who I was with.
He befriended Ryder when he was a manager of the Marc Jacobs store on Mercer Street in SoHo in 1999. The shop was a hangout for Selma Blair, Sofia Coppola, Parker Posey and Kate Moss, and Rich often took Polaroids of celebrity clients in his basement office.
He got to know Ryder during fittings at the store and later helped dress her in Marc Jacobs pieces for parties, premieres and magazine photo shoots. After Ryders shoplifting trial in 2002, he became a confidant during a period when she retreated from public view.
A year ago, Rich found himself thinking about all the Polaroids he had amassed in several shoeboxes in his closet, and he texted Ryder about the idea of collecting them in a book. After she said yes, the London-based book dealer and publisher, Idea, took on the project. Marc Jacobs wrote the foreword.
As the party guests sipped Champagne and flipped through the book, Jacobs made an appearance.
She was our young Garbo, he said. A Winona sighting was always a big deal back then. She came to one of my shows at the time, and I still remember she was a little like a deer in the headlights. Shes not snobbish. Shes not the red carpet girl. And that has always added to her cachet and cool.
Francesca Sorrenti, who designed and edited the book, reflected on Ryders enduring appeal.
To understand Winona, you have to understand the youth movement of the 1990s, she said. There are only a few personalities quite like hers out there at any given time, and in her era, it was Kate Moss and Winona. Youd just see them and youd want to know, Who is that?
Ive hung out with Winona, Sorrenti added. And yes, shes shy, and that shyness also projected itself into what her fans consider her mystique.
Hanging out by a rack of Comme des Garçons jackets was Inna Blavatnik, a creative director. Im of the Generation X era that Winona represented, she said. It was all about having a moody cool and not giving a you-know-what, and she became my role model as a teenager.
As the night progressed, fashion designer Zac Posen and musician Joe Jonas stopped by and a question loomed: Would Ryder show?
I texted her about the party, Rich said, but I havent heard anything back yet.
Filmmaker Zoe Cassavetes offered: Ive known Winona for a long time, and when you get to know her, shes extremely present and generous, but shes also good at disappearing into the ether. She concluded: If she were coming, she wouldnt tell anyone she was.
Ryder ultimately never materialized, but Jayna Maleri, a fashion editorial director, said she preferred it that way. I almost never want to see Winona Ryder in person, she said. Not because I think shed disappoint me, but because she occupies a place in my brain so rooted in my nostalgia that it would be jarring.
Shes an icon of my youth, the eternal cool girl who embodied the authenticity of the 90s, she continued. And I want to hold onto my illusions of her.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.