Marie Claire | |
Publisher: | Groupe Marie Claire (France) Perfil (Argentina) Are Media (Australia) Fashion Group (Mexico) Future plc (UK) Future US (U.S.) |
Circulation: | 411,149 (France) 227,729 (UK)[1] |
Circulation Year: | 2013 |
Language: | Distributed in 24 languages |
Category: | Fashion |
Frequency: | Monthly |
Editor: | Katell Pouliquen (France) Andrea Arbelaiz (Argentina) Nicky Briger (Australia) Andrea Thompson (UK) Nikki Ogunnaike (U.S.) |
Editor Title: | Editor |
Country: | France / UK (published in 35 countries)[2] |
Website: | (France) marieclaire.perfil.com (Argentina) marieclaire.com.au (Australia) marieclaire.com.mx (Mexico) marieclaire.co.uk (UK) marieclaire.com (U.S.) |
Issn: | 0025-3049 |
Marie Claire (stylized in all lowercase) is a French international monthly magazine first published in France in 1937, followed by the United Kingdom in 1941. Since then various editions are published in many countries and languages.
The feature editions focus on women around the world and global issues. Marie Claire magazine also covers health, beauty, fashion, politics, finance, and career topics.
Marie Claire was founded by Jean Prouvost (1885–1978)[3] and Marcelle Auclair (1899–1983).[4] Its first issue appeared in 1937.[5] In 1976, Prouvost retired and his daughter Évelyne took over the magazine and added L'Oréal Group to the company.[6]
Marie Claire publishes editions in more than 35 countries on five continents.[7]
The U.S. edition of the magazine was started by the Hearst Corporation, based in New York City, in 1994. Hearst has branch offices in France, Italy, and several locations in the United States including Detroit, the West Coast, New England, the Midwest, the Southwest, and the Southeast. The Esquire Network reality television series Running In Heels follows three interns working in the NYC office of the magazine. The editor-in-chief from 2012 to 2020 was Anne Fulenwider. On 9 December 2019, Hearst Magazines announced that Fulenwider would be leaving her post at the end of the year.[8] Aya Kanai, then chief fashion director of Hearst, was named the new editor of the women's magazine and started in January 2020. Sally Holmes[9] took the helm in September from Aya Kanai, who surprised Hearst execs when she jumped ship to Pinterest after just nine months as editor in chief.
During the pandemic, Hearst quietly reduced the title's print frequency from 11 issues to seven in 2020 and instead launched its first digital issue with cover face Janet Mock. It also made Marie Claire's 2020 Power Trip virtual. Power Trip[9] is Marie Claire's annual 36-hour, invite-only, all-expenses-paid networking conference for successful women across all industries that Fulenwider launched in 2016 as a way to make the magazine stand out in the event space. In May 2021, Future US acquired the American edition of Marie Claire magazine from Hearst and has published it since June 2021. In September 2021, it was announced that the Summer 2021 issue of Marie Claire would be its last monthly print edition, and remaining subscribers would receive issues of Harper's Bazaar.[10] That same year, Power Trip was once again an in-person experiential event.[11] In June 2022, Future relaunched Marie Claire in print[12] with its Beauty Changemakers Issue.
Through its digital edition, Marie Claire reported a reach of up to 15 million visitors per month.[13]
Marie Claire launched a UK print edition in 1988, with a website launched in 2006 featuring segments on daily news, catwalk shows, photographs and reports, fashion and beauty, buys of the day, daily horoscopes, and competitions.
Its cover price was increased in February 2018 from £3.99 to £4.20, but this did not compensate for a decline in sales and advertising revenue, with print display advertising down 25% in 2018 and 30% in 2019. In September 2019, the magazine's then owner, TI Media, announced that the final print edition would be published in November and the brand would become digital only, under license with Groupe Marie Claire. The UK website currently has two million monthly users.
Combined print and digital circulation from July to December 2018 was 120,133 per issue – almost a third of which were free copies, and 4,729 of which were for the digital edition. This was down on the same period in 2017, when the average circulation was 157,412, with 4,012 digital edition readers.[14]
Currently, Marie Claire UK is published by Future Publishing, which acquired TI Media and also owns Marie Claire US.
Marie Claire magazine is run by magazine and digital publisher Are Media, which acquired Pacific Magazines in 2020.[15]
MarieClaire.com.au launched in 2016 after the digital rights were returned to Pacific Magazines from Yahoo and provides daily fashion, beauty, and lifestyle news. In March 2019, Marie Claire partnered with Salesforce.com to survey Australian women to analyse how attitudes have changed in the workplace.[16]
The Japanese-language edition of Marie Claire, first published in 1982,[17] was the first international edition published in a non-French speaking territory, as well as the first non-European edition, although it ceased publication after the 9 September issue went on sale in July 2009, due partly to the economic downturn.[18]
Following a relaunch, since 2012, Marie Claire has been published in Japan under the name Marie Claire Style. This new format is offered as a free supplement in the Yomiuri Shimbun and distributed in wealthier suburbs of Japan. The magazine has now been made available at subway kiosks for a ¥200 cover price.[19]
The first South Korean edition of Marie Claire was published in March 1993 by MCK Publishing. Since 2012, the Marie Claire Film Festival has been held in South Korea.
An international edition of Marie Claire has operated in Argentina under the Argentine publishing house Perfil since March 2019.[20]
Other international, Latin editions of the magazine were published in Mexico by Grupo Televisa and also in Colombia but ceased publication by 2019 and 2020,[21] [22] but returned to Mexico in 2021 and Colombia in 2024.
Marie Claire has Arabic editions which are published in Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Morocco, and Algeria.[23] In 2010, an Indonesian edition was launched. An edition was also launched in Estonia (published between 2007 and 2010), Germany (published from 1990 to 2003),[24] India,[25] [26] Philippines (published between 2005 and 2009),[27] Indonesia, and Poland.[28]
fr:André Touret
. 2005. Éditions Créer . 9782848190587 . 2418285. (351 pages).