1. Headline
  1. Headline
updated 1/7/2004 3:39:36 PM ET 2004-01-07T20:39:36

Four months after the death of George Plimpton, The Paris Review announced Wednesday that interim editor Brigid Hughes will permanently run the literary quarterly.

  1. Stories from
    1. Jennifer Lopez & Casper Smart Share Candy in Las Vegas
    2. Todd Bridges Splits from Wife of 14 Years
    3. Gordon Ramsay Leaves Charity Soccer Game on a Stretcher
    4. Elizabeth Banks Is Spending Memorial Day Grilling (Not Sleeping)
    5. Keira Knightley Shows Off Ring as She Smooches Fiancé

“She has a track record of putting out the magazine. To some extent, Brigid has been doing this job for a very long time, although with a very prominent boss,” says Elizabeth Gaffney, the magazine’s editor at large and a board member of The Paris Review Foundation.

The 30-year-old Hughes takes on a role that Plimpton, who died last fall at 76, assumed with tireless enthusiasm for half a century. In deference to Plimpton, his official title — editor — will not be filled. Hughes has the newly established title of executive editor.

“She seems to be very capable, very devoted,” author Paul Auster said. “And it’s very good to turn over the reins to a young person. I think it will keep the youthful spirit of the magazine alive.”

Founded in 1953, The Paris Review has rarely had more than a few thousand subscribers, but few literary magazines are so prestigious. Writers published early in their careers have included Philip Roth, Jack Kerouac and V.S. Naipaul and the magazine’s celebrated history of interviews include conversations with Ernest Hemingway and William Faulkner.

Hughes is a native of Buffalo, N.Y., who majored in English at Northwestern University and joined The Paris Review as an intern in 1995. She became an editor later that year and was named managing editor in 2000.

Hughes acknowledges she doesn’t the fame or flair of Plimpton, known for such exploits as training with the Detroit Lions in the National Football League and performing as a trapeze artist for the Clyde Beatty-Cole Brothers Circus. But she promises to continue the magazine’s tradition of finding emerging writers.

“We just published a story by a new author, Yiyun Li, that I consider the perfect Paris Review story,” Hughes said. “We had no idea who she was. She came to this country from Beijing in 1996 knowing no English. Her story was pulled from the slush file.”

In recent years Plimpton’s role was less in managing the magazine’s content than in replenishing its often low bank account. (In 2001, Plimpton said it had dropped to $1.16.)

Gaffney and others say The Paris Review may hire a business manager.

“No one could do what George could. He was wonderful at dining with a Russian millionaire and coming back with a $10,000 donation,” Gaffney said. “In the future, we’ll be less dependent on the fame of our editor and more dependent on the quality of the magazine.”

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. Beryl soaks Fla., Ga; thousands lose power

    The remains of Tropical Storm Beryl soaked beach vacations and some Memorial Day remembrance services in southern Georgia and northern Florida on Monday and knocked out power to tens of thousands, though emergency officials said it hasn't brought any major damage

    5/28/2012 5:51:17 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T17:51:17
  2. video Wild weather: Heat ‘melts’ NASCAR driver’s shoe
None
  1. TODAY

    video Iraq veteran calls VetDog 'life changing'

    5/24/2012 6:10:31 PM +00:00 2012-05-24T18:10:31
None
  1. Justin Bieber allegedly batters photographer

    On Sunday, Justin Bieber's squeaky-clean reputation took a hit as the singer allegedly launched into a physical altercation with a paparazzo.

    5/28/2012 1:46:45 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T13:46:45
  2. video See photos from the alleged altercation
None
  1. Bobby Brown takes 'Every Little Step' on plaza

    video R&B singer Bobby Brown dedicates his first song, “Every Little Step," to all the soldiers as part of a Memorial Day concert on the plaza.

    5/28/2012 3:33:49 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T15:33:49
  2. video Bobby Brown sings ‘My Prerogative’

    video R&B singer Bobby Brown performs his classic 1988 hit, “My Prerogative” for the TODAY fans on Rockefeller Plaza.

    5/28/2012 3:32:37 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T15:32:37
  3. Your pics! Brown kicks off summer

    Check out viewer pictures from Bobby Brown's Memorial Day performance on the TODAY plaza.

    5/28/2012 4:46:48 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T16:46:48
  4. TODAY
Yum
  1. Yum! Make a delicious barbecued pork sandwich

    5/28/2012 2:12:51 PM +00:00 2012-05-28T14:12:51