Madame Ophelia DeVore, The Harlem Hostess, 1922 –

March 21, 2016

tumblr_mn8lz0YNNX1qjv1g0o1_400Ophelia DeVore was the first creole-mixed model in the United States. She was born on August 12, 1922 in Edgefield, South Carolina. She was one of ten children born to John Walter DeVore, who was of German American and French American descent, and Mary Emma Strother, who was a Black Indian.

Devore owned a road contracting business and her mother was an educator and musician. He father mentored her in communicating well with people, as her mother stressed proper education, appearance, and etiquette.

DeVore attended segregated schools until she was nine, and then moved to Winston-Salem to live with her mother’s brother, John. Two years later she was moved to New York City to stay with her great-aunt Stella Carter to prevent any future educational interruptions due to her father’s travel schedule.

Devore graduated from Hunter College High School and went on to New York University. There, she majored in mathematics and minored in languages.

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In 1941, she married Harold Cater. He worked as a firefighter while she studied fashion, public relations, and advertising. Together, they produced five children: Carol, Jimmy, Marie, Michael and Cheryl.

Devore married Vernon Mitchell in 1968, who died in 1972.

In 1989, she was featured in Brian Lanker’s “I Dream a World,” a collection of portraits and biographies of black women who helped change America. In 2004, she was honored by the Fashion Institute of Technology and the Fashion Arts Xchange, Inc. for her contributions to fashion and entertainment. She is also the CEO and publisher of The Columbus Times Newspaper in Columbus, Georgia.

DeVore began modeling at the age of 16. As a fair-skinned Creole, Devore would “pass” for Norwegian and gain contracts throughout Europe. In 1946, determined to create a new market for non-White women in the U.S., DeVore would establish The Grace Del Marco Agency.

In the agency’s early days, it was a stepping stone for countless household names; Diahann Carroll, Helen Williams, Richard Roundtree, Harlem’s Cicely Tyson and others. Racism was rampant in New York’s fashion business and the Grace Del Marco Agency was one of the few places non-White models could gain work.

Her agency’s shows took place in churches, college campuses, and in the ballrooms of the Diplomat and Waldorf-Astoria hotels. Like many non-Whites in the mid-twentieth century, DeVore’s breakthrough came in Europe; specifically through the French Fashion world.

Devore also seized media for business equity by co-hosting ABC’s Spotlight on Harlem.

The initial impact took place at many of the Cannes Film Festivals during the 1950’s and 1960’s. Madame Devore also seized media for business equity by co-hosting ABC’s Spotlight on Harlem. Her intensity to “make it” demanded relentless dedication and work ethic; enough to cause her a heart attack while still in her twenties.

In the agency’s later years, it was renamed Ophelia DeVore Associates, and then the Ophelia DeVore Organization. In 1985, DeVore broadened her enterprise globally to include Swaziland as a client, and published her late husband’s newspaper The Columbus Times.

DeVore always maintained a role as activist for non-White inclusion in the fashion industry and creating universally inclusive concepts designed for excellence.


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