Dimensions
136 x 184 x 27mm
Do you remember the best summer of your life? In 'Summer at Tiffany' Marjorie Hart delivers the true story of two Iowa blondes who came to New York in the summer of 1945 and talked their way into jobs at Tiffany working as pages -- interacting with everyone from Old Man Tiffany to Judy Garland -- while having misadventures in the city and falling in love during the last months of WWII.
'Summer at Tiffany' is a memoir of the summer of 1945, when Marjorie Jacobson and her best friend Marty travelled from the Kappa House at the University of Iowa to New York City, hoping to land sales jobs at Lord and Taylor or Sak's Fifth Avenue. Turned away from the top department stores, they made their way to 57th Street where refusing to be deterred, Marty lead Marjorie into the legendary Tiffany store, and somehow these best friends talked their way into positions as pages -- the first women to ever work on the sales floor. Their salary left them penniless and pondering the 'Wheaties and Celery Diet', but their diamond filled day-job was the envy of other romantic minded girls who had flocked to New York City that steamy June. Their dream was made complete by their Manhattan department -- conveniently close to the dashing Navy Midshipmen at Columbia University, and their college friends summering on Long Island.
Their workdays found the girls dazzled by the likes of honeymooners Judy Garland and Vincent Minnelli, Marlene Dietrich in her USO uniform, and legendary playboy Jimmy Donohue. They delivered and modelled priceless jewels, nearly lost precious pearls, and encountered Old Man Tiffany himself during a rare visit. In between getting lost in Harlem, witnessing the Eisenhower Parade, VJ Day in Times Square, and mingling with the Cafe Society -- Marjorie Hart fell in love, learned lessons and made decisions that would impact the rest of her life.