An Act of Love: Securing Franca Sozzani’s Legacy
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 28 November 2025
⏱️ 37 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Francesco Carrozzini grew up inside the rarefied world of Vogue Italia — not just observing it, but living it. As the son of Franca Sozzani, the magazine’s legendary editor-in-chief, fashion wasn’t just part of his surroundings, it was a language he was exposed to everyday.
He became a photographer and filmmaker, but it was only later that he turned the camera towards the most personal and complicated subject in his life: his relationship with his mother. The documentary Franca: Chaos and Creation premiered in Venice just before her passing in 2016 following a battle with lung cancer.
“When I asked her to take a look at the first cut of the film, she said, ‘This is the most mediocre thing I've ever seen. Do yourself a favor and find a point of view.’ That opened my eyes on the importance of always trying to find a point of view,” Carrozzini recalls. “In a regular relationship between mother and son, that might have been excruciating. In ours, it wasn't, because we treated each other like friends.”
Since Franca’s passing, Carrozzini has been working to transform memory into meaning. He co-founded the Franca Fund for Preventive Genomics — an initiative advancing genomic screening to prevent the disease that took his mother’s life.
BoF founder and CEO Imran Amed met Carrozzini in Doha, Qatar, where last weekend he hosted the fund’s first-ever gala and they spoke about what it means to honour someone not by preserving their legacy, but by evolving it.
Key Insights:
- Growing up inside Vogue Italia shaped Carrozzini's eye and his expectations of 'normal'. He recalls going to the offices, and making his own magazines. "This was a time before computers so they were cutting up pictures and there was spray glue. [...] That's how magazines were made. I would go and do the same,” he says. "That was my special big extended family, because my mother's job was her life."
- Beyond the film itself, Carrozzini shared that it was the end-of-life collaboration that mattered the most. “The actual big stories were those last months of our relationship, finishing the film and then screening it in Venice,” he says. “All of a sudden the lights turn on and everyone's crying because some people know, some people don't, but we look at each other and we're like, ‘This is sort of like our last big moment together.’”
- Carrozzini clearly distinguishes tribute from true legacy. “Memory and legacy often get confused. Just remembering someone feels like you're carrying their legacy, but it's not. I really wanted something meaningful, as an act of love, taking something personal and making it collective.” That impulse led Carrozzini to genomics research with Harvard geneticist Dr Robert Green, backing pioneering newborn-genome studies and accelerating grants.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi, this is Imran Ahmed founder and CEO of the Business of Fashion. |
| 0:08.1 | Welcome to the BOF podcast. It's Friday, November 28th. |
| 0:12.8 | Francesco Carozini grew up in the rarefied world of Vogue Italia, not just observing it, but living it every day. |
| 0:20.9 | As the son of Franco Sutsani, the magazine's legendary editor-in-chief, fashion wasn't just part of his surroundings. |
| 0:28.6 | It was a language he was exposed to every day. |
| 0:31.8 | He became a photographer and filmmaker, but it was only later that he turned the camera |
| 0:35.8 | towards the most personal and complicated subject in his life, his relationship with his mother. |
| 0:42.3 | The documentary, Franca, Chaos and Creation, premiered in Venice just before her passing in 2016 following a battle with lung cancer. |
| 0:52.0 | When I asked her to take a look at the first cut of that, she said, this is the most mediocre |
| 0:58.0 | thing I've ever seen. |
| 0:59.4 | Do yourself a favor. |
| 1:01.5 | Find a point of view. |
| 1:03.2 | And that opened my eyes not only on the film, but in general, in life, you know, on the |
| 1:08.1 | importance of that lesson, which is always try and find a |
| 1:11.9 | point of view, don't, you know, don't do anything without that. In a regular relationship |
| 1:17.0 | between my mother and son, that might have been, you know, something excruciating in ours, |
| 1:21.3 | wasn't, because we were so on the same level. We treated each other like friends. |
| 1:25.4 | Since Franco's passing, Francesco has been working to transform her memory into meaning. |
| 1:30.9 | He co-founded the Franco Fund for Preventive Genomics, an initiative advancing genomic screening |
| 1:36.6 | to prevent the disease that took his mother's life. |
| 1:40.3 | We met in Doha, Qatar, where last weekend he hosted the Fonz First at Regala, |
| 1:44.9 | and we spoke about what it means to honor someone not just by preserving their legacy, but by evolving it. |
... |
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