Martha Stewart: In Her Own Words
By Agate B2
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About this ebook
This collection of quotes has been gathered from Martha Stewart’s numerous public statements—interviews, op-eds, television appearances, books, and more. It’s a comprehensive picture of her business empire, her advice for life and the home, and her comeback after scandal and imprisonment.
Martha Stewart has called herself a “late bloomer,” but after she published her first book, Entertaining, at the age of 49, she rapidly built on that first success, launching magazines, television shows, retail lines, and more books to establish a media empire. Her name is synonymous with tasteful decor, delicious from-scratch foods, and the covetable estates she keeps in upstate New York, the Hamptons, and Maine.
Even after the insider trading scandal that threatened to derail her career in 2004, Stewart was able to rebuild her image of classic domesticity matched by a tireless work ethic. New ventures like “Martha & Snoop’s Potluck Dinner Party” have added a sense of playfulness to her personal brand and introduced her to new audiences.
A winner of multiple Emmys and James Beard Awards, and the chairperson of her own media conglomerate, Stewart has proven she has staying power across generations. She’s a true icon, not just for fans who learned how to cook and keep house from her books and television shows, but for audiences who associate her name with taste, simplicity, and style.
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Martha Stewart - Agate B2
Martha
Stewart
In Her Own Words
Martha
Stewart
In Her Own Words
EDITED BY
Suzanne Sonnier
A B2 BOOK
AGATE
CHICAGO
Copyright © 2020 by Agate Publishing, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without express written permission from the publisher.
Martha Stewart: In Her Own Words is in no way authorized, prepared, approved, or endorsed by Martha Stewart and is not affiliated with or endorsed by any of her past or present organizations.
Printed in the United States of America
Martha Stewart: In Her Own Words
ISBN 13: 978-1-57284-288-5
ISBN 10: 1-57284-288-1
eISBN 13: 978-1-57284-840-5
eISBN 10: 1-57284-840-5
First printing: August 2020
Agate books are available in bulk at discount prices. For more information, go to agatepublishing.com.
I was serving a desire—not only mine, but every home-maker’s desire, to elevate that job of homemaker. It was floundering, I think. And we all wanted to escape it, to get out of the house, get that high-paying job and pay somebody else to do everything that we didn’t think was really worthy of our attention. And all of a sudden I realized it was terribly worthy of our attention.
—THE NEW YORKER, FEBRUARY 13, 2000
Contents
Introduction
Part I: Foundations
Nutley Days
Early Adulthood
Values
Part II: Good Things
Food
Entertaining
Decorating
Gardening
Animals
Part III: Hard Times
Insider Trading Scandal
Prison and Home Confinement
Part IV: Empire
Business Philosophy
Media
Merchandising
Milestones
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Just about everyone has an opinion on Martha Stewart, America’s best-known expert on homemaking and entertaining. These opinions can be remarkably strong and polarized relative to her wholesome aim of bringing good things
to people’s lives. Whatever one thinks of her, Stewart’s arc of stratospheric rise, precipitous fall, and remarkable comeback is as American as a slice of her homemade pie.
Little about her ordinary upbringing suggests that great success would be in her future. Stewart was born to Polish-Catholic, working-class parents in 1941, the second of six children raised in a modest neighborhood in New Jersey. Growing up, she learned gardening lessons from her father and homemaking skills from her mother. By some accounts, her father was demanding and encouraged his daughter’s perfectionist tendencies in all things.
Intelligent and hardworking, Stewart excelled in school. When she was curious about something, she learned all she could until she became proficient. This would become a hallmark of her life and career.
Her enterprise and good looks led to modeling jobs while still in high school, which continued through college at Barnard and into the early years of her marriage. Then, after her father-in-law taught her about the stock market, Stewart became a licensed broker and worked on Wall Street.
After moving with her husband and baby daughter to a historic Connecticut farmhouse, Turkey Hill, in the early 1970s, Stewart threw herself into cooking from scratch and renovating the house and grounds. Eventually she quit her Wall Street job altogether to run a catering business from her home kitchen.
Catering in her prosperous Connecticut community led to connections and a publishing deal. Her book Entertaining, published in 1982, became a bestseller and launched a media empire. Stewart described the areas of her expertise as living,
which included but was not limited to cooking, baking, entertaining, decorating, gardening, crafting, and homemaking—all treated with her trademark elegance. She soon became known as a master of the domestic arts. As Stewart put it, I was trying to make a business out of lifestyle. No one had ever done that before. So I was a pioneer in trying to make lifestyle an actual business. And I think I succeeded rather well.
By any metric, Stewart is correct.
Her success was built on her image as a polished and patient mentor who could make routine tasks into interesting, even glamorous endeavors. She did this first through her books, and then via television, a magazine, radio, social media, design, and product licensing. As the go-to expert in the profession she’d invented, she grew an eponymous empire, employing hundreds of people to expand her brand and support her vision. And she became a cultural phenomenon.
Stewart was more than a lifestyle doyenne, though. She proved to be an exceptionally sharp businessperson as well. In 1997, she had the foresight to buy all of her publishing, television, and retail operations, which she merged to create the company Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia. The initial public offering of MSLO stock two years later made Stewart the first self-made female billionaire in the United States.
She also disrupted stereotypical gender roles. While her subject matter focused on the traditionally female domain of the comforts of home, she was unapologetically competitive and ambitious in business. In combining the two spheres of homemaking and business, Stewart shattered the limits of narrow gender stereotypes.
But not everyone was an admirer. As her public profile grew, critics accused Stewart of being an untrained dilettante, overconfident and didactic. The media mocked her as cold and out of touch. While legions of fans emulated Stewart, a growing chorus of fault-finders ridiculed her.
Ill will toward Stewart reached a crescendo with the ImClone scandal of the early 2000s, in which she was investigated for insider trading, obstruction of justice, and conspiracy related to her sale of 4,000 shares of ImClone Systems stock. Stewart, usually as perfectly composed as her exquisite trays of hors d’oeuvres, was rattled by the SEC investigation, subsequent trial, public scorn, and made-for-TV movies that resulted. Though she unflaggingly proclaimed her innocence and believed she was unfairly