Life of a Salesman
He’s no longer at the helm of Neiman’s, but 87-year-old Stanley Marcus still knows how to run a successful business. Just ask him.
He’s no longer at the helm of Neiman’s, but 87-year-old Stanley Marcus still knows how to run a successful business. Just ask him.
By Mark Seal
Who came first—Indiana Jones of Hollywood or Vendyl Jones of Arlington, the archaeologist who has spent years trying to dig up the fabled Ark of the Covenant?
By Mark Seal
A critical appraisal of a local phenomenon by the ultimate insider.
By Mark Seal
Director Oliver Stone may not be sure who did it or how, but he is sure he knows why.
By Mark Seal
Travels with Eric Kimmel, l’enfant terrible of Dallas, Paris, and a Limoges jail.
By Mark Seal
She was a hooker. He was a race car driver. They fell in love. She moved in. He put on his three-piece suit and went to work. She was always on call. They fought. She moved out. Then she found out that his real job was bank jobs.
By Mark Seal
Waiting for Perot; sizing up Texas’ legal egos; switching undies with Bobby and Laura Sakowitz.
By Mark Seal
Hunting down ZZ Top imposters; staying dry with party-giver Frances Billups; test-driving fine art in Beaumont.
By Mark Seal
Celebrating the Day of the Dead with David Byrne; digging for Texas dirt with snoop queen Kitty Kelley; playing nuclear war games in San Antonio.
By Mark Seal
Keeping up with the Perots; pomp-adoring Charlie Sexton; sewing up the ses-quilt-centennial.
By Mark Seal
Sizing up Phyllis Diller; foiling Esquire’s great expectations; hopping continents with honeymooners Lloyd and Joanne Davis.
By Mark Seal
Governor White nods off; Watauga policeman on the wagon; debutante dos and don’ts.
By Mark Seal
Checking in with Corpus’ famous insurance writer; smelling celebrity flowers with Leonard Tharp; sharing some Jello-O with Dionne Warwick
By Mark Seal
Desperately seeking the Cadillac Couch; reading Carolyn Farb’s mail; cowboy cologne strikes again.
By Mark Seal
From the heights of the Dallas social heap, they leaped to the national celebrity circuit. Rich, young, and fashionable, Twinkle and Bradley Bayoud are a case study in how to rise to the top.
By Mark Seal
A new recruit to the ranks of Mary Kay beauty consultants struggles valiantly to do his part in reaching the woman of the eighties and keeping the company in the pink.
By Mark Seal
Roger Staubach finds happiness by swapping Rolaids for real estate.
By Mark Seal
With the Republican convention only three months away, Dallas’ sales forces are frantically gearing up for a merchandising bonanza.
By Mark Seal
Ever since LBJ’s gold Rolex appeared next to his gall bladder scar in news photographs, Texans have been buying the pricey timepieces by the carload.
By Mark Seal