Monica Ainley is a Who What Wear UK Editor in Residence and a Paris-based fashion and culture writer and broadcaster. She is the co-creator of the influential Fashion: No Filter podcast and the culture podcast Fanfare. Monica also authors Mon Review, a weekly dispatch on aesthetics, literature and contemporary rituals.

I’ve gotta be honest: my style has secretly been informed—I mean, cut out a magazine and tape it on the wall-level informed, by Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy for the better part of twenty years. Probably my mum’s too, come to think of it.

Not secretly, actually; if you’d asked, I’d have said CBK’s the best person to picture when you’re running late and don’t know what to wear. And it’s not like I think I’m cooler than the Gen Z crowd currently “discovering” her. I’m just older! And so is my mum.

Sorry, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy Stans—Lee Radziwill Is Our New York Style Crush

(Image credit: Getty Images)

It is kind of annoying when everyone catches onto something you feel is lowkey yours, though, right? Even if you had no particular claim on it to begin with. Like… I dunno, Substack… or the Brontes. Suddenly, you’re as basic as anyone. But you know who I’ve recently taken up for casual outfit-inspiration purposes? Lee Radziwill. Who? Carolyn’s aunt-in-law. What? Jackie Kennedy’s sister. Yes, exactly, her. Or, if you watch Bravo: Carole Radziwill’s mother-in-law.

Lee Radziwill

(Image credit: Getty Images)

Of course, this is not exactly a left-field, unheard-of style reference either. Lee Radziwill was an American socialite, PR executive and basically the lifelong fashion influencer before influencers were a thing. She moved in rarified international circles, eventually marrying Polish aristocrat Prince Stanislaw Radziwill. But what she was most known for, over the course of her whole life, was her reputation for exquisite taste –both on her person and in her apartments; she had one helluva eye for interiors too. Lee’s imprint on 20th-century style is undeniable.

And yes, Love Story fans will perhaps have noted that Lee is mentioned in Ryan Murphy’s series, but not actually shown. Which I think was a big mistake on the show’s part, given its main flex was aesthetics. Also, though Lee lived to be 85, she sadly did not escape the Kennedy curse, which, if you understand the family tree, you may have noted while watching the show. Lee’s son Anthony (JFK Jr’s cousin and BFF) died tragically of cancer at 40, just a month after the crash that killed John and Carolyn.