Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Michelle Obama on March's Vogue Cover

One of my favorite photos from Men's Vogue.
It was first thought that Michelle would be on January's Vogue cover. But she'll appear on March's cover. It won't be her first time on the cover. Here's a story from Vogue's Sept. 2007 issue:
Iowa in spring. A full nine months before the primaries, but Michelle Obama is already at work on her husband's behalf. The setting: the Chit-n-Chat coffee shop in Waukee. Population 9,213. Percentage of population that is white: 97.7. The subject: values. Hers and his. "I married my husband," she tells the crowd, composed equally of reporters and supporters, "because we shared the same Midwestern values: Keep your word, work hard, treat others with respect."

As a topic, it's a little disappointing. Who would ever come out in favor of shirking work? I had hoped for a little more of "He's a man, just a man"—the speech in which she ribs her lionized husband for being so inept at the banal details of daily life—but those jokes, she tells me later, have gone a little flat. Once you've done them, you can't keep doing them. That, and Maureen Dowd's having chided her in The New York Times for assuming that the American public does, in fact, see Barack Obama as a god. "No harm, no foul," Michelle Obama says of the criticism. "She obviously didn't get me"—though she admits to subsequently toning down the irony. "If the joke is clouding the point, then let's just get to the point."

Of his wife, Barack Obama has said, "She is smart, funny, and thoroughly charming….If I ever had to run against her for public office, she would beat me without too much difficulty." Watching her easy way with the crowd, you can see what he means. She writes her own speeches, speaks without notes, doesn't seem uptight or anxious about being liked, and makes jokes about herself: "When my older brother got into Princeton, I thought, I'm smarter than him!" Moreover, she looks the part of the elegant working mom she was until last May, when she cut back on 80 percent of her $212,000-a-year job with the University of Chicago hospital system in order to concentrate on her husband's campaign.