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George Lois, icon of ads and magazine covers, dead at 91

Advertising giant George Lois has died at age 91

Hillel Italie
Saturday 19 November 2022 22:06 EST
Obit George Lois
Obit George Lois (Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

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George Lois, the hard-selling, charismatic advertising man and designer who fashioned some of the most daring magazine images of the 1960s and popularized such catchphrases and brand names as ā€œI Want My MTVā€ and ā€œLean Cuisine.ā€ He was 91.

Lois' son, the photographer Luke Lois, said he died ā€œpeacefullyā€ Friday at his home in Manhattan.

Nicknamed the ā€œGolden Greekā€ and later (to his displeasure) an ā€œOriginal Mad Man,ā€ George Lois was among a wave of advertisers who launched the ā€œCreative Revolutionā€ that jolted Madison Avenue and the world beyond in the late 1950s and ā€™60s. He was boastful and provocative, willing and able to offend, and was a master of finding just the right image or words to capture a moment or create a demand.

His Esquire magazine covers, from Muhammad Ali posing as the martyr Saint Sebastian to Andy Warhol sinking in a sea of Campbellā€™s tomato soup, defined the hyper spirit of the ā€™60s as much as Norman Rockwellā€™s idealized drawings for the Saturday Evening Post summoned an earlier era. As an ad man, he devised breakthrough strategies for Xerox and Stoufferā€™s and helped an emerging music video channel in the 1980s by suggesting ads featuring Mick Jagger and other rock stars demanding, with mock-petulance, ā€œI Want My MTV!ā€

Lois boiled it down to what he called the ā€œBig Idea,ā€ crystallizing ā€œthe unique virtues of a product and searing it into peopleā€™s minds.ā€ He was inducted into numerous advertising and visual arts halls of fame, and in 2008 his Esquire work was added to the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art. Martin Scorsese, Tina Brown and Graydon Carter were among his admirers.

His legacy was vast, although the actual dimensions are disputed. His claims to developing the 1960s ā€œI Want My Maypoā€ breakfast ads and to inspiring the creation of New York magazine have been widely contradicted. Some former Esquire colleagues would allege that he exaggerated his role at the expense of other contributors, such as Carl Fischer, who photographed many of the magazineā€™s famous covers. But his overpowering energy and confidence were well recorded.

In her memoir ā€œBasic Black,ā€ former USA Today publisher Cathie Black recalled bringing in Lois in the early 1980s to propose a new advertising approach for a publication that struggled at first over how to identify itself. Loisā€™ idea was to champion USA Todayā€™s dual appeal as a newspaper and magazine, proposing the slogan, ā€œA lot of people are saying USA Today is neither fish nor fowl. Theyā€™re right!ā€ Before a gathering of the publication's, including founder Al Neuharth, Lois gave an Oscar-worthy performance, Black wrote, ā€œbounding in like a 6-foot-3 teenager hopped up on Red Bull.ā€

ā€œHe flung his jacket to the floor, tore off his tie, then flashed one prototype ad after another, prancing around the room and keeping up a running monologue sprinkled with jokes and profanity. It was epic, almost scary. I was thrilled. When he was finished, the room sat absolutely silent.ā€ All eyes turned to Neuharth, who sat ā€œabsolutely still, his expression hidden behind his dark aviator glasses.ā€ Neuharth paused, removed his glasses and smiled. ā€œWeā€™ve got it,ā€ he said.

Lois' longtime wife, Rosemary Lewandowski Lois, died in September. A son, Harry Joseph Lois, died in 1978.

Lois, the son of Greek immigrants, was born in New York City in 1931 and would cite the racism of his Irish neighborhood for his drive ā€œto awaken, to disturb, to protest.ā€ He liked to say that a successful advertiser absorbed as many influences as possible, and he prided himself on his knowledge of everything from sports to ballet. He was a compulsive drawer and for much of his life made weekly visits to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

He enrolled in Pratt Institute, soon met his future wife and eloped with her before either had graduated. After serving in the Army during the Korean War, he joined the advertising and promotion department of CBS and in 1960 helped found the advertising agency Papert Koenig Lois. Two years later he was recruited by Esquire editor Harold Hayes and remained until 1972, the same year Hayes left.

Esquire was a prime venue for the so-called New Journalism of the 1960s, nonfiction stories with a literary approach, and the magazine would publish such celebrated pieces as Gay Taleseā€™s portrait of Frank Sinatra and Tom Wolfeā€™s ā€œThe Last American Hero Is Junior Johnson. Yes!ā€ But to read the words, you had to buy the magazine, and Loisā€™ covers launched countless conversations.

For a cover story on ā€œThe New American Woman,ā€ he featured a naked model folded into a garbage can. A notorious 1970 cover showed a grinning Lt. William Calley, the serviceman later found guilty of murdering unarmed civilians in the My Lai Massacre, with his arms around a pair of Vietnamese children, two other kids behind him.

In the mid-1970s, Lois was among the public figures who led efforts to free the boxer Rubin ā€œHurricaneā€ Carter from prison. Carterā€™s conviction for murder was later overturned, and he was released in 1985. Lois also wrote several books and was featured in the 2014 documentary about Esquire, ā€œSmiling Through the Apocalypse.ā€

Interest in Lois was renewed through the popularity of the AMC series ā€œMad Men,ā€ but he was not flattered, writing in his book ā€œDamn Good Adviceā€ that the show was ā€œnothing more than a soap opera set in a glamorous office where stylish fools hump their appreciative, coiffured secretaries, suck up martinis, and smoke themselves to death as they produce dumb, lifeless advertising.ā€

ā€œBesides,ā€ he added, ā€œwhen I was in my 30s I was better looking than Don Draper.ā€

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