Exclusive: The Real Emily Speaks! Leslie Fremar on the Era That Inspired The Devil Wears Prada
Released on 04/29/2026
This is The Run-Through.
I'm Chloe Malle and I am so excited
for this extremely important exclusive podcast
with Leslie Fremar.
The Real Emily Revealed.
Leslie, I'm so excited about this.
We've all been talking about this for a few weeks
and it just means a lot to me
and the podcast that you're coming on
because I was really touched when we spoke on the phone
and you shared that this had just been something
that you had not talked about for a while
and just have a lot of questions.
I'm very curious. I don't think
I've ever actually really talked about it.
Why are you open to talking about this now
and why do you think people are so fascinated
by this story of who these characters really are?
I don't know, I think at the time, 20 years ago,
the fashion industry was very hush hush
and it was like an inner circle type situation.
And I feel like when she wrote the book,
no one really knew much about it
because everyone, not that it was secretive
but it was just hard to break in
and exclusive. It was more insular.
Yeah, very.
So I think at that time people found that really interesting
to get a real insider view
because no one frankly would've exposed it
quite like that.
So I think that that was really interesting.
I think the movie did a great job
at kind of fictionalizing it.
And making it a little bit more fun
than maybe it actually is or was,
but I quite enjoyed the movie, you know, as entertainment.
So I think that people see it, the fashion industry maybe
as entertainment, I don't know.
Well we'll come back to that,
but first I wanna start that you are now 25 years later,
an extremely successful stylist.
You've styled Charlize Theron for a long time,
many other people.
I wanted to talk a bit about your early career in fashion,
but I also wanna talk about what is the most exciting part
of your current job and what you love to do the most.
Are you doing anything for Ken?
I'm actually not this year.
I find in my career, I've,
I don't wanna say slowed down,
but I've really tightened up the jobs
that I do now 25 years later.
Just, you know, I have kids and a busy family
and just trying to balance it all.
And I think when I was really in the height
and thick of the whole thing, I was never home
and I was always on a plane and traveling, flying.
So personally I have pulled back a lot.
And I'm just really selective on my current jobs
that I do, I couldn't give it up completely
'cause I'm very passionate about it.
And it really is a part of me.
I don't work every single day if that makes sense.
Well, good for you. I just, today actually,
Charlize is climbing a billboard in Times Square
for her new movie Apex.
We just came off the tour.
Wow. Yesterday we did
five changes.
Wow! In a day, yeah.
Oh my god, just list what those are
'cause I feel like people, especially with
The Devil Wears Prada 2 press tour being
in such high octane go mode,
but people don't really understand
how intense these days can be for everyone on those teams.
So like, what is the five changes
of a day on a press tour for Charlize?
So we flew in the day before from LA,
so we're all completely jet lagged.
Wake up at five in the morning,
start glam, go to The Today Show.
Take the look from The Today Show
and we go and change her.
We went to ride the subway for an hour
to do a podcast on the subway.
Then we went to The View,
changed her when she got to The View.
We had a little break, went to Jimmy Fallon,
changed at the hotel.
Left for Jimmy Fallon.
At Jimmy Fallon, we changed her for the premiere
and went to the premiere.
That is a crazy day. It was a really long day.
This is something that came up
because at The Devil Wears Prada 2 premiere on Monday,
we were all noticing how hard it is
to coordinate four main stars together.
And like I loved Emily Blunt in the Capparelli,
but it wasn't really like a group photo dress.
And I wonder like, are you talking
to other co-stars stylists for their press tours?
Like what is that process like?
I personally don't, actually, I probably should
after seeing that photo,
but there's so much prep that goes into it.
And it's really done in advance that it's hard to work
with someone else and take that into consideration.
Like we're moving really fast.
So I think unfortunately for those group photos,
maybe those girls spoke a lot of red was worn.
It was like bridesmaids where Anne and Meryl got the memo.
I know. And they all looked great.
It just, as a group it was, there was dissonance.
Yes, I agree with you.
It's very hard to do.
And I think, you know,
people changed their mind last minute
and you have like kind of a selection of pieces
and you know, you try to schedule it out in advance,
but then things change and something breaks
or, you know, things you can't anticipate.
So I don't think it would add an extra challenge
to then consider a costar.
Okay, we're rewinding though
to what year are we when you first graduate college
and you're starting your career in fashion
and you're going to Conde HR?
1999.
So it's 1999. Yeah.
It's almost Y2K. Yeah.
What did you know about Vogue, Anna Wintour,
Conde Nast, when you went in for that first interview?
I knew who Anna was.
I interned at a local magazine in Canada
when I was in high school.
I was always-- You grew up in Toronto?
Yes, in Toronto.
I loved photography growing up.
I dabbled a little in modeling, wasn't for me.
Ended up having an interview with, at the time,
her name was Bucky Keady in HR.
I was interning at Harper's Bazaar
in the accessories department.
And someone mentioned
that there was an opening in the beauty department.
Okay. I interviewed for that job.
With Amy Astley?
With Amy. Okay.
Yes, I did not get that job.
She actually hired Tinsley Mortimer.
Wow!
Amy Astley,
who was the longtime beauty editor at Vogue,
then the founding editor of Teen Vogue
and now the esteemed editor of Architectural Digest.
Correct, so I interviewed with her
and I didn't get the job.
Tinsley got the job.
And so then Bucky actually called me back to let me know
that I didn't get the job and asked me if I wanted
to come in to interview for Anna's second assistant.
And did you know what that meant?
No.
You know, I'm from Canada
and I was really just, I don't wanna say desperate.
But I needed to work and I wanted a job in fashion
and no better place than to learn from her.
And obviously Vogue for me was the dream.
I didn't necessarily think it was gonna be my first job.
It ended up being my first job.
And so what was your first interview with Anna like?
Or your only interview with Anna?
I remember it clearly, I remember what I wore.
I wore Jill Stewart.
Okay. I was wearing a navy blue
button up shirt
tucked into kind of an A-line black skirt.
And then the girls at Harper's lent me a pair
of Jimmy Choo pumps from the closet.
And they had a little bow on them.
I didn't necessarily feel like myself,
but I felt like I was dressing for the job.
And what was the interview process like?
I met with Bucky, then I met with Jill Demling,
who is the first assistant at the time.
This is Jill Demling, who then went on
to be the longtime entertainment editor at Vogue.
Then I met with Anna.
And what were your first impressions of Anna
and also the whole ecosystem at Vogue?
I was petrified, to be honest.
I was so nervous.
I think I blacked out, I don't even remember.
I think she asked me what book I was reading,
where I was from, and why I wanted to work there.
And I think she was desperate for an assistant.
And that's why I got the job.
Devil Wears Prada became such a phenomenon that anyone
who took a job in Anna's office or really at Vogue
after that, there was that base level of awareness of
what a version of working at Vogue was like.
But when you started, there was nothing like that.
What was the onboarding process like?
I mean, I did not know anything.
I remember she asked me for tickets for that ferry
that goes around Manhattan, I think it's called Circle Line.
And I didn't even know what Circle Line was.
Why is she going on the Circle Line?
I swear. I remember that.
It's not like you are savvy like you are now,
where you're like, just looking everything up
on the internet and it's like right there.
Like, I was like asking, I was like, what is Circle Line?
Everyone's like rolling their eyes.
They're like, it's the ferry, and I was like, ugh.
And you can't ask Anna for clarification.
No, you can't. It almost becomes
a parlor game of sorts around the office
sometimes to either decipher her handwriting
or figure out what she means by something.
And with the handwriting, oh my god,
that's actually comedy.
I was like, you know what?
My dad has kind of this scribble.
So I was kind of used to it.
There's certain people in the office who are known
for being good at it
and they take great pride in deciphering.
There's a moment in the book
where there's a long sequence about
how the Andy Sachs character trying to figure out
what Miranda meant by a restaurant review in The Post.
Yes. And about
a new Asian fusion restaurant.
And she cannot figure it out.
And it turns out it's not The New York Post,
it was The Washington Post.
And it's this big aha moment.
Did you have any great quest
for understanding like that?
Oh my god.
Like she had all these friends that I had to learn
and I didn't know who they were.
Can you spell Gamana? That I can do.
But there were other things like Lord Rothchild
and like just how to like kind of address people
and you know, she had friends
that their calls would always roll through
and others that I would have to, you know,
take a message and just like learning.
Who taught you that, those nuances?
Definitely Jill. Yeah.
Jill was very Type A.
She was the senior assistant, like really strict.
She ran a tight ship in Anna's office.
Absolutely.
You know, we became friends,
but I definitely learned a lot from her.
Was there like a booklet of the rules?
Because some of the more recent assistants really rely on
this like 20 page document that is continually updated
with each outgoing class. Oh!
Really? Yeah.
Oh no, I wonder who wrote the original.
I know, it's a good question actually.
I did not have that.
So you just had Jill? Yes.
What were some of the most challenging learning curves
for the first year of getting, or the first few months?
Well, I mean, answering the phones and taking messages
and making sure that she knows, you know,
who she wanted to speak to.
Whose call would roll.
Is this email? No.
Is there any email at this point?
No.
I would fax her newspapers when she was in Paris
and we would type out, yeah, there was email.
But she wasn't on it.
Right, a lot is going through the phone.
Oh everything. Which now, you know,
it's a totally different ballgame.
Right.
No, she did not have email.
We would print out if someone emailed her
and give it to her physically,
or we would write her messages on what we called the board.
And it would get updated.
It would say the time.
The message, the phone number of
who she needs to call back.
That was described very in great detail in the book.
Yes. Which I think
was very accurate.
Oh yes.
And then it's presented to her.
Oh it is?
Oh, that's amazing.
Wow, good for her.
Well it would go on top of the desk
and she would grab it.
And then she would return her calls.
She returned everything
and then we would just check it off when it was done.
You declined to become the first assistant
when you were first offered the promotion.
Correct. Tell me more.
I was just like learning the job
and Jill had been there for a while
and she was ready to move on.
How long are you in the office at this point?
I wanna say six months. Okay, so not even a year.
No. Because a typical tenure
for second assistant
and first assistant is one to two years.
Yes.
I'd say I was there for six months, maybe eight.
But Jill was really ready to move on
and she kept convincing me that I was ready
and I was like, I am not ready.
You know, because there was like very distinct roles.
The first assistant would do like all of her scheduling
and maybe more like business related stuff.
And then the second assistant at the time would do more
of the personal stuff, getting her coffee, her lunch,
you know, making sure her car was there, much simpler
or what seemed to me as simpler tasks at the time.
So when she offered me the promotion,
I said, no thank you.
And what made you come around?
I think Anna called Jill in the office
and was like, Jill, you need to convince her.
That's nice. I was like
I knew I couldn't say no.
What are your like core memories of that first year
working for Anna with Jill?
I mean, it felt to me like grad school.
Like this is like the best grad school.
Like I just got into Harvard grad school.
To me, that's what it felt like.
Anna had no boundaries
where we could listen in on her calls.
Her doors are open for meetings.
Like if you really were to pay attention, so much to learn.
And I actually did feel that
and appreciated that even though I was like young
and green and just didn't really know.
It was all moving really fast it felt like to me.
But I was there, I was in the heart of it.
And the people that you're networking with.
You know, invaluable.
Everything just felt,
I felt really lucky to be honest.
Did your friends and family understand?
No, and actually, I'm the type of person
that doesn't gloat or like just overshare.
I was just like, this is my job.
Like, please stop asking me questions.
But everyone always had questions.
I'm kind of like that.
Yeah. I'm reserved
and I was like, you know, it's work.
And I would just shut it down.
What was it like, I mean, I was shocked even knowing
what the intensity of Anna's office that in the book,
Andy can't answer a personal phone call
and say a one word, yes.
Correct. Was that?
I don't know if that's true.
But like your parents wouldn't call you at work?
Oh, absolutely not. And they knew that.
Yes. = I mean that's pretty rare.
Yes. It's like the military.
Yes. There was nothing personal.
Nothing personal happened in there.
Right. Anna didn't ask us
personal questions.
I didn't ask the junior personal questions.
It was like business was moving.
Well, as the junior,
I would have to be at the desk at 7:30
and she would call.
And then in the evening, you were leaving with the book?
Whatever time it was finished.
9:00, 10:00. Yeah.
And so then you moved to Sullivan Street
so you could be closer to the book drop off.
That's real commitment.
It's good for your sleep.
HR told me that I had to be at work at 7:30
and I panicked because coming out of college,
I don't even think I'd woken up before 9:00 ever.
So that made me nervous.
And then realizing that I had to wait
until this book was done, you know, before I got to go home.
And just remind people what we mean by the book.
We don't mean The Devil Wears Prada.
It was a mockup of the magazine where
basically they would paste in the stories from the front
of the book, you know, center of the book,
all the fashion stories. In like a spiral ring.
Yes, it would mimic the magazine
and Anna was able to remove pages and make changes
or she would put post-its.
Lots of post-it notes, like, I don't like this.
Kill this. See me.
Yeah, move this.
Oh my god, so many see mes.
So then I'd have to get the book.
She would hand me the book when she came
in the morning, go through all the see mes.
Then I'd have to call
and be like, Anna wants to see you.
And everyone would be like, roll their eyes
behind the scenes like, oh, there's so many post-its today.
And by the end of the month,
the post-its kind of got smaller.
It's true, you hope they winnow down.
And they do.
We are obviously here because I reached out
because I'd heard over the years, oh, you know,
the real Emily was maybe Leslie, maybe Jill,
Kay Young was in Anna's office around that time.
But we'd never met and I never talked to you directly.
So we're doing a event for our book club on Monday
and we're having a conversation afterward.
And I was like, it'd be fun to have anyone
who has a suggestion of who Emily might be.
And Plum Sykes is like,
her daughters thinks she's the Emily,
she's definitely not, which she's now debunked.
But then we spoke on the phone
and you very sort of frankly said, well,
it's not really up for discussion.
I hired Lauren
and we sat across from each other for eight months.
Have you ever talked about this before?
No, I haven't. Do you feel confidently
that you are the real Emily?
No, I know I am, yes.
Correct.
I am Emily.
I'm fascinated by memoirs in general
and how your own story is always someone else's story too.
And that's something I've, you know, struggled with.
I've done non-fiction writing
and I just have never felt comfortable publishing it.
Because you're worried about other people in your life.
And so I do think that most memoir writers
and fiction writers, because most fiction is based on
something, it's a difficult needle to thread.
And I wonder, when was the first
time you heard about this book?
So I was actually working for Tonne Goodman at the time.
I had left Anna's office.
Who was Vogue's fashion director at the time.
So I had expressed interest to Anna that I wanted
to work in the fashion department
and that I really wanted to work on set.
And she told me that she couldn't give me the job,
but she would allow me to interview for it.
So I interviewed with Tonne
and ended up moving into the fashion department, cut to,
I'm in Tonne's office that we shared at the time.
And I get a call from Anna's office saying that she wanted
to see me and my heart sunk.
I was like, she never would call in an assistant
into her office.
So then I went into her office, she said,
who's Lauren Weisberger?
And I said, she was your junior assistant.
She was only here for a short period of time,
maybe eight months.
And she's like, well, she wrote a book about us
and you're worse than me.
And I was like, I wanted to like ask more questions,
but you can't really ask her that many questions.
And I was like, okay.
And she's like, well, I received the galley,
which is like a book before it's published
and she let me read it.
It was actually quite mean, the galley,
and I think obviously an editor came in
and really softened it and made it.
In what ways do you remember?
I don't remember exactly,
but everyone just wasn't,
there wasn't this like lightness to it.
It felt quite dark I remember thinking,
and I found that quite hurtful.
I think what got put into the world is a much lighter,
nicer version of what she actually wrote.
So I think that's what kind of lives in my mind
because that's what ended up being put out there.
But I remember feeling like it was a betrayal
at the time, you know?
People weren't like very public about their jobs
and everything was not secretive,
but like, you just didn't talk about it.
And it was like, it just felt this exposure,
even though someone obviously advised her
to make it fiction, it was really based off of a lot
of things that, you know, I lived, she lived.
Did you recognize things you had said?
Definitely, yeah.
I definitely told her a million girls
would kill for the job. That was your line.
That was definitely my line
'cause I actually really believed that
and I knew that she didn't necessarily wanna be there.
I'm just curious, when Anna gave you the galley,
did you like take it immediately into the hallway
and like start reading?
I think that's probably what I would do.
Did you wait till you got home?
I waited until I got home.
I think we were like really busy.
Like Tonne was probably packing up for a big photo shoot
and I was like, oh my god.
Like what is this thing gonna say?
But immediately you knew
it was gonna be about your time with Lauren.
Can you describe your process of hiring Lauren
or how you knew that you were
the Emily character she describes in the book?
I mean, to be honest, Lauren didn't really
socialize with anyone else.
So I think her experience at Vogue was really
with me and with Anna.
You know, you're quite busy in the office,
so you don't have much time to, you have to make an effort
to make friends outside the office, which I did.
You're just really busy.
And I think she also had a learning curve
'cause she just graduated from college
and I had to teach her all of these things
and she didn't really know who anyone was either.
And I could relate to that.
And I remember, I mean,
we had a nice conversation when I interviewed her
and she is very smart.
I just felt like she would be able to get it quickly.
Was it true that she was open, that she wanted
to work at The New Yorker?
Yes.
She didn't tell me that,
but she told the managing editor at the time
that she really wanted to be a writer.
And I recall her taking a writing test
and, you know, things didn't necessarily go her way.
And they suggested that she take this class.
And I think the story that I was told was that this teacher,
or you know, this course kind of said, write what you know.
And I think, you know, as the story goes,
that's where it started.
Her and I never talked about it.
And we never talked again after she left.
You've never seen her? No.
In 20 years. No.
Wow.
What do you think it would be like if you guys reunited?
I think it would be very awkward.
I mean, I don't hold a grudge towards her,
but it's just, it became something
that I don't think she knew that I knew.
And so I think it would just, there's nothing to be said.
What is similar to the book,
and obviously now we associate so much the her,
the Andy Sachs character with the movie,
but was she a fish out of water in as extreme a way
as she presents it?
Yes, I do think she was,
I recall she had just graduated from Cornell
and felt like maybe getting coffee
and, you know, hamburgers
and mashed potatoes was like below her.
I came from Canada, I couldn't really relate to
that Ivy mentality,
but I think she just felt like the tasks at hand
were below her.
Yeah. Yeah.
Did Anna eat hamburgers and mashed potatoes?
Yes. Wow.
From the Royalton, I think.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah.
Either a steak or a hamburger really rare.
Yeah. Baked potato,
mashed potatoes.
Yeah. That was like the diet.
At the time.
What do you remember being
the hardest learning curve for her?
For me, the driving force,
and I can only speak for myself,
was that I really loved fashion
and wanted my career long term to be in fashion.
I loved the photo shoots.
I love photography, I love clothes, I love the art of it.
And I think for her, the end game was different.
I think she wanted to be a writer.
Not that she couldn't get things out of that experience
that would help a writing career.
Obviously she did.
But I think the fashion part of it
just did not interest her.
I wanna do a little fact versus fiction
because a lot of us at Vogue,
when we were talking about picking this book
as our next book club, realized
that no one had read the book.
We all had just seen the movie.
And reading it, it's sort of fascinating to hear about
what it was like working at Vogue in the early aughts,
but also wondering what was actually true
and what she sort of, you know, largely fictionalized.
So I do think it's amazing that one
of the most infamous lines in the movie,
not everyone was saying it.
Just you were saying it.
I think I definitely said it.
Something I would say.
Which is a million women would kill for this job.
Girls.
Yes.
And earlier this month when I interviewed some
of Anna's more recent assistants, we were talking about
how the gird your loins moment really was quite similar
to what would happen.
Can you describe what it was like
when Anna would arrive? Oh my god.
It was such panic, but you had to hide it.
Yeah. And I think over time,
it went away.
I wasn't afraid of her by the end,
but at the beginning I definitely was.
And I'm sure Lauren felt like, you know, I can't speak
for her, but I'm sure she felt
nervous when she would arrive.
So she would arrive all of the newspapers,
The Times, Washington Post, The New York Post,
The Daily Mail, every newspaper
had to be kind of laid out in a fan.
And when would she actually read those?
Oh, she would, she would
sit there and go through all of them.
I don't know, front to back,
but she would definitely read the front pages,
the interesting stories.
She was definitely kept up on current affairs.
And when she was arriving, would you switch shoes?
Would you change?
What was that?
I always had Birkenstocks under my desk.
I would put on heels when she arrived.
She definitely caught me a few times.
Like she would call me from the elevator bank
and be like, I forgot, can you bring it?
And I'd already changed my shoes
and I would like run out with her, whatever she forgot.
And she would like not even look at me
and like, be looking at my feet.
I think she knew that I would do that.
So that is true.
Actually, I don't know if I would survive all day in heels.
It's so hard.
Yeah, so I couldn't,
and there's a lot of running around and you know,
if she's not there, like I just wanted
to be comfortable.
Oh I have a million pairs of Birkenstocks.
I have every color.
Wow. Yeah.
Okay, so that's been a consistent wardrobe staple.
Yes, I've even been in Birkenstock ads.
I have a long relationship with Birkenstock.
I'm very passionate about Birkenstock.
I wanna know, did you ever go to Paris with Anna?
No, Anna did not travel with her assistants.
That is fiction.
There was a woman in the Paris office
that would assist Anna when she was there.
Her name was Fiona.
Fiona's still there.
Oh really?
So yes.
One of the big plot points in the book
and the movie is that Andy gets to go to Paris
instead of Emily.
And it's this great betrayal of Emily.
Was there ever a situation like that?
No. Okay.
Yeah, I think the fiction part of the book is
that this character turns into this superstar.
And I did not witness that.
I think this idea
that the Emily character is not very pleasant or nice
or seems high strung
is because I probably was not very nice.
And I probably was high strung
because I felt like I was having
to do her job as well.
So for me, that was really frustrating.
I think she was probably just sitting there writing a book
and not necessarily taking the job
as seriously as I did.
Or you know, a hundred million girls would.
So I think that that probably
created some tension in the office
where maybe I would snap at her
or you know, she just didn't wanna play the game.
Were there rules you passed down to her
and rules that Jill passed down to you
and were some of those rules not actually from Anna?
I don't think any of the rules
are actually from Anna to be honest.
There were rules that were passed down to me that were like,
I couldn't eat at my desk.
You couldn't go to the bathroom
unless one of the assistants had to be there at all times.
So if you have to ask the senior assistant,
like if you could go use the restroom.
Her checks were all typed out on a typewriter.
At the time, we had these messenger slips,
I'm sure it's all digital now,
but you'd have to fill them out.
Like if I needed something sent to her house
or picked up, we had to type them on a typewriter.
Oh wow, you couldn't write it.
We couldn't write it.
And everything that came out
of her office had to like be very presentable.
Jill leaves, I go into the first seat
and I'm like, this is all a huge waste of time.
Like why am I sitting here on a typewriter
typing this thing, I can write it in five minutes.
So I just started writing them.
And Anna never said anything, she didn't care.
I don't think she noticed.
Did you start eating at your desk?
So yes, I think I started eating, maybe not something
that was very fragrant, but I definitely ate
much more than drinking a smoothie behind my computer.
Which was what I was told was allowed.
You were never on a diet
where when you felt faint you'd eat a piece of cheese?
I probably did when I was the junior.
Because I was told that I wasn't allowed to eat at my desk
and I had to sit there all day.
I wasn't allowed to leave.
But when I moved into the role, when the book was kind of
came into life, I ate.
That's so funny.
Is the dry cleaning and and laundry situation
the same as the book?
No, it was just dry cleaning.
She would bring in her dry cleaning
and we would separate the dry cleaning.
You know, couture would go to Madan Paulette
and the regular dry cleaning would go somewhere else
and the senior assistant at the time would
also do the expenses.
So that was all something that we had to keep track of.
That is true.
What about the Harry Potty?
Harry Potter manuscript?
I don't recall.
I would have to fact check that.
The timing of when Harry Potter came out.
There were definitely requests that were like that
about getting things, you know, that weren't available.
Wow. Yeah.
So we already talked a little bit about
when Anna called you in,
you got the galley, you read it.
How did that percolate around the office?
I don't remember if it was gossiped about like,
I don't know if I'm not the type of person that would,
you know, run around and be like,
oh my God, there's a book coming out.
I think I kind of kept it to myself.
So I'm not really sure who was in the inner circles
of knowing that that was happening.
So you read the galley
and you thought I obviously I see myself in this
because this was my role.
But what did you recognize
and what upset you as being not accurate?
I mean, I knew it was me.
You know, Lauren and I had spent
these eight months together.
It's a really intense relationship.
You know, you're working together from 7:30 in the morning
till 7:30 at night
and you know, day in, day out, weekends,
obviously you're not working on the weekends,
but it's possible that you would have to.
So I think that relationship is really intense
and you rely on each other.
Would I have considered her a friend?
No.
Like, we didn't necessarily socialize,
but I think that that was also something
that was taught to me.
Like Anna didn't really socialize with us.
She wasn't like asking us like, how was your weekend?
So I think in the office, that wasn't really a ritual for me
to like talk to her.
But I did meet her boyfriend
and I did know personal things about her
and we definitely had a relationship.
Obviously, I got frustrated with her.
So I think that that's where that mean part
in her perspective probably came from.
But it definitely, to me at the time,
felt like a betrayal.
I was like, oh my god, I spent
so much time with this person.
And she didn't give you a heads up?
No. You never
ran into her after. No.
But you did run into her boyfriend.
Yeah. What was
that interaction like?
Oh my god, he was like, are you okay?
Like, are you so pissed?
And I was like, I came to terms with it too
because the book wasn't as bad.
So I was kind of just laughed it off.
But it definitely stung.
A few years later the movie comes out.
Yeah. How are you feeling
about it then?
I just can't believe it took like this life form
that was gonna like live on.
And I just remember thinking like, oh my god,
I cannot believe now I have to deal with like a movie.
People know you were Emily
and did you sort of not wanna share that
with people you were Emily for the rest of your life?
Well, I didn't realize it was like that was gonna happen.
I think people that knew me at the time,
you know, that were in like, you know, even PR
or working at brands, like they all knew that it was me.
But it was fictionalized.
So I was able mentally to like separate myself from it
where I didn't feel like it was this like horrible portrayal
of me per se.
Like I went to see the movie and I enjoyed the movie.
So I was able to like separate myself enough
to like enjoy it.
Why do you think the movie was different than the book?
Because I think that there was this fantasy element added
to it where to me it was, this was my real life
and I was like living it and I was stressed
or I was, you know, tired
or I made a mistake
or you know, I needed a paycheck,
you know, whatever it was.
To me, it was real.
But in the movie it just, it felt more of a fantasy
of what like this perception of the fashion industry is.
So that allowed me to enjoy it.
There's a joy to it.
It's optimistic.
It feels relatable
to anyone who's starting out in their career.
Whereas the book felt very specifically
about one experience.
Yeah, yeah.
I agree.
I think the editors did a fantastic job in adding
this element of Hollywood.
And you know, mass
and all of those things to get people to go and see it.
'Cause at the time I think people also would
turn their noses to fashion.
Or you know, it wasn't this like thing
that accepted everybody, it wasn't inclusive.
So I think the movie made it a little bit more inclusive
and romanticized it
and all of these things that made it entertainment.
But at the end of the day, it was still like my life.
It was hard to decipher.
Was there ever a real life version
of the Cerulean blue sweater moment where Lauren
was sort of explained the magnitude of the fashion industry?
Or you felt like you understood
how big an ecosystem this was?
Yeah, I think I was always trying to remind her
that this was something to take seriously
or I took it seriously.
And she really didn't.
So that really frustrated me.
I was like, this is a huge international business.
This is like an art form to lots of people.
People get dressed every day as an expression
of like who they are.
I took that seriously even though, you know,
obviously I know I'm not curing anything.
It was important to me, not being important to her
just really irked me.
We found an old Gawker piece.
Okay. That referenced
a July 2006 page six article.
The title is Leslie Fremar Haunts Lauren Weisberg's Dreams.
Oh my god, okay. And it speculates
that you're the real Emily.
And people in the comments said
that they found your Friendster account, that you seem nice
and they wondered if you were British
like Emily Blunt, did you ever see this?
I think someone showed at The Post,
The Post at the time would do blind items I guess.
So I felt embarrassed
but also like it could go away at that time
to today's news was, you know, yesterday's trash.
You know, it didn't live on quite like it does today.
So it could like, you know,
I could move on quicker.
It's true actually. If that makes sense.
It's not on the internet forever.
Right, right.
It's a different thing. Yeah, it felt like
it could be thrown out
and like people aren't looking at yesterday's paper.
They're only looking at it today.
So living in the moment felt more true then it didn't like
follow me as much as it would today probably.
Had you ever wanted to, I mean you've been
so discreet about this for two decades,
which I think is a testament to, you know, your respect
for this role and for Anna and Vogue.
But have you had complicated feelings when people say
that they're the real Emily
or talk about it,
I know Plum Sykes wrote a very funny article about
how her daughters are convinced she's the real Emily
and she sort of debunked that.
But circuitously, what has that experience
been like for you?
Well, I think obviously Anna's had many assistants
and I'm not the only one.
So I think all of those people
have a shared experience working for her
and have their own experiences.
But this very specific time in history
and this happening happened to me.
So it frustrated me a little like when we spoke,
I was like, I'm happy to come on your panel,
but it will be quite clear very quickly that it was me.
So I don't wanna make Kate uncomfortable,
I don't wanna make Plum uncomfortable.
Like I can kind of go along with the you know,
the lightness of it.
But it will become very clear quickly that it was me.
And then I don't want us having a conversation with that.
You know, I always felt sensitive to that.
Of course.
So it's weird like having a movie come out 20 years later
and then all of a sudden it's back.
You know, obviously I've moved past it all
and I still work in the business
and I'm able to kind of laugh it off.
But now it feels like yesterday somehow.
Is that why talk about it now 20 years later?
Yeah, I'm just like, you know what,
there's all this speculation.
Everyone really enjoyed the movie.
Anna's clearly embracing it.
And so why not?
You know, just put it out there
and I'm not really worried about the repercussions.
Like everyone has something to say.
That stuff doesn't really bother me.
It just felt like there was this curiosity.
And I was like, you know what, here we go.
Have you ever met Emily Blunt?
I have.
I have met Emily Blunt.
I was really, I'm never excited to meet anyone to be honest.
And I was always like,
if I meet Emily Blunt, what would I do?
So one day I was getting a massage at the Greenwich Hotel
and she was actually at the spa herself.
And I wanted to say something and I didn't.
So I let that moment pass me
and then a client of mine invited me over for dinner
to her house and there was like seven people there
and Emily was there.
So I was like, this is so intimate and personal
and we're at a mutual friend's house.
And so I said to her, I was like, I just need
to let you know I'm Emily.
She was not that interested to be honest.
I was like, I thought I was gonna get this like
huge reaction.
Like no, it was like, oh okay.
You know, I think people focus on is Anna really
like Miranda Priestly?
Are there any stories
of ways Anna would surprise
people by things she did?
Listen, I wanna firstly say that
Anna is my mentor through and through.
I learned everything that I know from Anna.
I would actually give her full credit for the way
that my life turned out.
And I'm very happy with how my life turned out.
So I'm very grateful to Anna.
I think the way she ran her office
without it feeling personal, I still do that to this day.
I think that that's a really efficient way of working
and it's able to keep boundaries.
And when the personal kind of invades the professional,
it becomes a little bit messier.
And I respected her process of that.
There was a story
that I thought was very touching about Anna
finding you crying one day.
Yes. Can you tell me about that?
I had just gotten a call from HR
and they had informed me
that my work visa from Canada was coming up
for renewal
and that the company had a new policy
that they were not gonna sponsor international employees
and that they were not gonna extend my working contract.
I was hysterical.
It was just like my life just like flashed before me.
Like I have to move home.
Like I have a life here, I have a job.
Like I didn't understand, I was hysterical.
I didn't know what was going on,
but I didn't know that Anna was coming in
because I was just kind of really emotional.
And she walked in and I was crying
and I didn't know that she was coming in
and she looked at me and it made her uncomfortable
and she didn't say anything and walked into her office
and I was embarrassed and couldn't stop crying though
because like I just, my life just basically blew up.
She waited a few minutes and then she called me into
the office and she's like,
it's horrible that I do her voice,
but she's like, Leslie, why are you crying?
And I was like, well I just got this call from HR
and you know, they let me know
that unfortunately they're not gonna extend
my working papers and there's a new policy
through the company
that you're just not sponsoring anymore.
And she goes, ugh, just stop crying.
And I was like, okay.
So I leave the office
and then she calls Cy Newhouse at the time
and asked him to come to her office and he walks in
and he's like the cutest little old man
and he just like is always wearing the same like sweatshirt.
I just remember so clearly
and the doors are open so I can hear everything.
And she's like, you need to make my assistant stop crying.
HR just told her that she no longer has a job
and you need to get her a visa.
And he was like, okay, done.
And you're still here. And I'm still here.
She got me my papers.
I love that. Yeah.
I just like wanted to hug her
and be like, thank you so much.
But like I think she just knew how grateful I was.
And there was no exchange of how grateful I was.
We didn't have that relationship.
But I hope and if she's listening, how grateful
I was to her.
You moved from Anna's office to working for Tonne
as her styling assistant.
How long did you work for Tonne?
Three years. Okay, and then?
I went to work at Prada.
Oh okay. So when the book came out,
The Devil Wears Prada, I was actually at Prada.
Oh my god.
I didn't know that. You can't make it up.
So I did the VIP department at Prada
for a really short time
and I met Selma Hayek when I was there
and she hired me freelance, so I left.
You came back to Vogue recently?
Yes. For a very special shoot.
Yes. Can you tell me about that?
Oh my god, this is a crazy story.
So I was literally in the middle of nowhere upstate
with my kids
and they were learning to ride dirt bikes
with some man like in a field.
Yeah. And my agent calls me
and was like, Anna Wintour wants to speak to you,
can you take the call?
And I was like, no.
Like I'm like my pajamas like in the middle of nowhere,
this man is like yelling at me.
My kids are like falling off bikes.
And I was like, I cannot, I had that panic
kind of come back that I like couldn't take the call.
Like I was almost caught too off guard.
Virginia called me
and was like, Anna suggested you for this job to work
with Kamala Harris. For the campaign.
Yes, for the campaign.
The presidential campaign. The presidential campaign.
She was looking for someone.
I was like, wow.
She's like, you know, just take the meeting with
the vice president and take it from there.
See what happens.
So I was like, okay.
So I took the meeting and the vice president
and I, you know, had similar points of view on what needed
to be done and Anna got me that opportunity.
She was shooting the cover of Vogue
and Anna actually allowed me to style the cover,
which was my first, I've been doing this
for a really long time, you know, 20 years.
And I had never, I'd styled many International Vogue
covers before but never an American Vogue cover.
And she let me do the cover
and that was my first American Vogue cover.
And it was like a full circle moment
and like probably my proudest moment.
It was the October 2024.
It was a digital cover and also in print.
But it first came out online
and it was right before the election.
So it was a very powerful, important moment.
And the vice president also knew how important it was
to me 'cause I had shared that story with her.
So it was just, I just felt really proud of that moment
and that will like kind of go down
as something I'm really proud of in my career.
Leslie, thank you so much.
We are so grateful to you coming.
I hope you enjoy the new movie.
I know, Ihave you seen it?
Yes.
Oh really? Are you coming on Monday?
Yes, I'm coming, I'm dying to see it.
Okay, good.
[upbeat music]
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Anna Wintour’s Former Assistants Debunk The Devil Wears Prada
Dan Levy Wants You to Dress Like His TV Show Characters for Halloween
Inside the 2026 Met Gala with Chase Sui Wonders
Exclusive: The Real Emily Speaks! Leslie Fremar on the Era That Inspired The Devil Wears Prada
Valentino Digs in the Archives For Anne's Dress
Emily Blunt Takes Over for Anna Wintour and Talks About Becoming Mary Poppins
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Last Looks with Kehlani for the 2026 GRAMMY Awards