We were sad to learn that Drue Heinz, who served as the publisher of The Paris Review from 1993 to 2007, died last Friday, in Lasswade, Scotland. She was 103.
Heinz was a lifelong patron of the literary arts, cofounding Ecco Press and serving as an active board member of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the MacDowell Colony, the Pierpont Morgan Library, the American Academy in Rome, and the International Council of the Museum of Modern Art. In 1964, she underwrote The Paris Review print series—designed to encourage works in the print medium while also publicizing and providing financial support for the magazine.
Beginning in the late nineties, Heinz also lead roundtable discussions on literature at Casa Ecco on Lake Como, in Italy, with such literary heavyweights as Calvin Trillin, Robert Giroux, Lewis Lapham, our own George Plimpton, and many others. These conversations were published in the Review as the series “Como Conversazione.”
Heinz had an influential role at the magazine. She will be missed.
from The Paris Review https://ift.tt/2Imup69
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