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Luciano Manganella’s Final Sale

His beloved Jasmine Sola stores are slated to close next month, done in by a bad corporate marriage and a less-publicized sexual harassment scandal with him squarely at its center. To hear the chain’s brash founder tell it, though, the real victim in this sordid affair is him.

January 2008
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Photos by Peter Tannenbaum.

Let me tell you something: Luciano Manganella is a broken man.

At the Abe & Louie’s steakhouse on Boylston Street, he sips club soda and leans forward in the brown leather booth, bags under his eyes. He is smaller than his persona would suggest, and speaks in a voice too squeaky to be intimidating. Sixty-one now, and long ago gone gray, he still wears his fitted Seven jeans, paired today with a tight black T-shirt and a leather jacket. A few blocks away is the Jasmine Sola flagship store, the showpiece of the retail company Manganella built into an empire of expensive denim, designer loungewear, and cocktail dresses perfect for sorority formals. A month earlier, in October, New York & Company, Jasmine’s owner since 2005, announced it would shutter all 23 locations by February 2008. The prospect disgusts Manganella. He spent 35 years growing Jasmine into a multimillion-dollar boutique, and it took just two for New York & Company to run it into the ground. “They have done what I cannot even imagine people would do,” he says, in his thick Italian inflection.

But while he calls himself a victim, others say he is the one to blame for his stores’ downfall. With money came power, and with power—so say his accusers—came privileges for Manganella. Though he categorically denies all charges against him, six young women he employed both before and after New York & Company bought his chain allege that he sexually harassed them, his legendary temper keeping them quiet. Manganella was, and remains, a genius in his field. But it seems he failed to appreciate that the impulsive way he did business while turning Jasmine Sola into a Boston institution would be the very thing that would come back to doom his chance to turn it into something even bigger.

Now let Luciano Manganella tell you something: He is a passionate guy. Always has been.

When he arrived in Boston from the south of Italy in 1966, everything about New England excited him. Who knew that there were religions other than Catholicism, that there were cultures other than his native Salerno’s? The 20-year-old, unable to speak a lick of English, reveled in the adventure, the energy, the wealth of the place. “This country grabbed me like the wind,” he says.

Fashion wasn’t his plan then. But fashion was in his blood. In Salerno, Manganella’s father and brother sold fabric. One sister was a designer, and another worked in retail. In 1970, after a stint as a machinist, he heeded the family calling and opened a women’s clothing boutique with his new sweetheart, Vanda, a style maven herself, on Boylston Street (now JFK Street) in Harvard Square. Inspired by the flower-child vibe of the time, they called it Jasmine, adding the Sola when they introduced footwear to the inventory a few years later. The 275-square-foot nook held only 32 pieces of clothing on opening day, all stitched by their mothers.

Two years later, Manganella’s 18-hour workdays—mornings spent on the retail floor, afternoons in a Volkswagen bus buying fabric, evenings cutting the material, the rest of the time overseeing a growing team of seamstresses—began to pay off. He charmed his way into a lease on nearby Brattle Street. Now offering outside labels alongside Manganella’s own creations, the shop did solid sales.

He and Vanda, married now, moved to New York in 1983. By 1986 they’d separated, filing for divorce a year later. That same year, drawn to the other side of the business, Manganella started a fashion line of his own, Gruppo Americano. Ritzy department stores like Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus snapped up his collections, unable to resist the mix of Italian cuts and American sensibility, or Manganella’s seductively accented sales pitch. And as the rag trade fell for him, women did, too. “He was always charming and likable, and the girls working for me would say, ‘Oh, Luciano’s coming!’” says Tom Snowdon, a vendor who’s known Manganella for decades. “They were always flirting with him.”

Stacey Lehne was one of them. The striking 25-year-old from New Jersey was working in a designer’s showroom neighboring Manganella’s in Manhattan’s Garment District. A recent graduate of the Fashion Institute of Technology, she was eager to learn the trade. Manganella was apparently just as eager to instruct her. At a modelesque 5 foot 10, she was a knockout in any outfit, and for Manganella it was love at first sight. Stacey Lehne became Mrs. Manganella in 1994.


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User Comments:

Finally in writing...
Posted by Melanie | Dec. 31, 2007 at 11:07 AM
COMMENT:
I worked at 2 locations of Jasmine Sola for a total of 2 1/2 years. Rumors were constantly swirling and here they are all in writing. I can not say that the allegations against Luciano are true, because I was not a witness. I'll tell you what is true, Luciano did act inappropriately on numerous occasions. He did yell at you like a two year old in front of customers, fire people on the spot for silly reasons, compliment you on your looks, etc.. He would make unexpected visits to your store and change the entire store around within a few short hours. You would feel as if a tornado just ripped through your home and you were left to pick up the pieces. It was not a healthy environment to work in, but everyone felt a promise to move up in the fast growing company. Everyone wanted to be successful within the company and they always felt if they hung in there a little longer they would get there. Luciano did have talent. He would change the store around as I said and make it look a
shame on Boston Magazine for publishing names
Posted by anon | Dec. 31, 2007 at 12:42 PM
COMMENT:
As a former JS employee, I am outraged at the inclusion of D.Burgess' name in this article. Adding her name does nothing to this article except serve to further embarass a woman who was engaged in some improper activities with her boss. Not assigning blame but there is no need to bring public embarrassment to a private matter. Shame on you, Boston Magazine
jasmine/sola
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 31, 2007 at 4:27 PM
COMMENT:
Having worked at Jasmine during the 80's I can assure you that everything these ladies have said is probably true. It seemed to be common practice to hit on the employees, especially if they were young. He had one employee as a mistress even when married to Vanda. (it made doing the schedule a bit difficult!) Partying with the staff was also the norm...I remember some fun parties. He is a smart person...just can't keep it in his pants. Lingerie store...please! The only other comment I have is, I wonder how his FIRST daughter feels about not being mentioned...probably happy.
This gossip should be kept out of the media, for the family's sake
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 2, 2008 at 6:02 PM
COMMENT:
I do not personally know the cast of characters in the article, however, I do know that this type of reporting is not healthy for Mr. Manganella's three daughters, who are all at very impressionable ages and who now have to hear about and read this in a public forum. It is shameful, I think. In our society, aren't you supposed to be innocent until proven guilty? I don't know who's telling the truth here; perhaps the truth is somewhere between the lines. However, I wish all of this was kept out of the public eye, for the sake of Luciano's family.
Can you write better than a fifth grader?
Posted by Stella | Jan. 4, 2008 at 12:58 PM
COMMENT:
Wow- I'm flabbergasted. Not by the article, which is basically a soaped-up version of the same information that was printed without bias and much more discreetly in the Globe not long ago... but did Boston Magazine suddenly fire all of the editors? Let me tell YOU something, Rachel Baker and Rebecca Dorr: it's time to go back to Writing 101. God awful doesn't do you justice.
Sad
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 6, 2008 at 1:53 AM
COMMENT:
What a sad story; I don't know how true these allegations about Luciano are, but having worked at a JS store for a year, I have to say that the stores really were a wonderful place to work and to shop. It's terrible that NY&Co destroyed that -- if not for Luciano, then for all the people who enjoyed it. The people I worked with were happy, it was a very optimistic and positive professional environment, and of course the merchandise was rad. What a shame.
It all went down hill after Luciano left
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 10, 2008 at 7:25 PM
COMMENT:
You could see the writing on the wall. I would beg for more product and better product. This information ws bubbled up to the Director of Stores for Jasmine Sola. She failed the company. Everything become about corporate ways. Meetings, Poicy and Procedure Binders, Jas Club etc..... If the Director of the Stores would just listen to the store managers and there needs we wouldn't be in this situation. NYCO is a very unprofessional co. They have screwed us out of our jobs! Stop putting the blame on Luciano. I hope all you Coporate people enjoy your cozy jobs. Don't worry about us who lost ours leaving us with a 1 months severance. What a joke and a big slap in the face. Thank you NYCO for nothing.
Assigning blame
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 11, 2008 at 8:58 AM
COMMENT:
To the ANON poster who sandbagged the Dir of Stores: Since I personally know who you are trashing, just know this: She shared in your frustrations. She was handcuffed by NYCO's stifling rules and regulations, along with the SVP of HR's micromanagement of policies and procedures. Jasmine was acquired to GROW and there are always growing pains. Hanging it on those who were left after Luciano was ousted isn't fair; they were doing their best with NO Senior level support. Ron and Richard (CFO/COO, CEO of NYC) never hired a President to replace Luciano and their egos told them they could handle it along with the sinking NYCO stores. They could not. They promised to grow/invest in Jasmine and at the first sign of bad news, they panicked and scuttled the whole strategy. This left the operating management in a no-chance-of-success position. NYCO did screw you. They failed Jasmine, all of it. The employees, the loyal shoppers. They had no idea what to expect once they acquired Jasm
Assigning blame (pt2)
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 11, 2008 at 9:09 AM
COMMENT:
(was cut off): They had no idea what to expect once they acquired JS: how to deal with an eccentric entrepeneur who only knows how to be the boss, how to grow a boutique that doesn't belong in malls, how to treat and talk to people in a non-condescending manner. How Ron & Richard remain employed is beyond me. Besides treating their staff (both NYCO and JS) like crap, they have DESTROYED shareholder value by over $700M in about 3 yrs as NYCO was worth $1B market cap when JS was acquired and it's now worth a hair over $300million. Good work, guys. Then you moved the Boston office to NYCO's in 4/07, having the staffers sign contracts and apartment leases, only to FIRE THEM within a year. Shame on you. Have you no conscience?
ARE YOU KIDDING ME
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 12, 2008 at 6:10 AM
COMMENT:
If Luciano did not sexually assault 6 inacent women JS would not be going out of business. His ego has always been the same do on to others as I see fit. He loves having power over the inocent. He would fire you in a heart beat for not responding to his flirtaish ways, touching you as he saw fit and embarrassing you infront of everyone. If you were 200pds please, he would escort you out of the building himself. Nyco did do one thing right kick him to the curb. I was a JS employee and heard and had these happen to me first hand. NYCO should of heard the cries from the begining but let this ego centered man run the company the same old ways. I believe had they placed a new president in place ASAP. This company would of survived. Lastly, to all the victims I feel for all of you!!!!! And wish you well.
Yay
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 22, 2008 at 2:02 PM
COMMENT:
I always thought Jasmine Sola was a putrid excuse of a clothing store. Terrible return policy, sickening customer service, insane mark ups. I couldn't be happier that it is gone!
Thanks for nothing NY & CO
Posted by Meg | Jan. 27, 2008 at 5:30 PM
COMMENT:
NY & CO is by far the worst company I have ever worked for. They do not listen to their employees and they continued to fill their stores with horrible cheap clothing that did not sell. They would tell us that there was gonig to be a big store visit and we would stay well after hours cleaning and making everything perfect and 9 out of 10 times they never showed.Most of the time they wouldn't even call to say they were not gonig to show. Managers worked well over 50 hours a week with nothing to show for it. They did not care at all about the employees. NY &CO would lead us on to believe that they were gonig to update our store to make it better, then a month later we found out that they were closing Jasmine down. It was out of the blue. Employees got their commission taken away and no compensation after the store closed. If it wasn't for our amazing managers they would not have had any employees working at the Hingham store. Sandy Hayes was the worst head of stores that you could ever i
Holy Cow !
Posted by Anonymous | Feb. 1, 2008 at 6:08 AM
COMMENT:
Ladies, I feel really sorry for you. After hearing rumors, now seeing them in print and with Luciano's windfall payout we have all lost something. NYCO never intended to drive JS into the ground but rather saw opportunity and growth in a business very different from its core. The problem is they don't know how to run a boutique business. Luciano did, all be it at his female employees expense. What he did was disgusting, degrading and can never be condoned. NYCO runs on razor thin margins and relies on discounts, something that LM pledged never to do. The wrong business model at the wrong time! We all really tried to integrate and systemize a business that should have been left alone. It would have been better to keep cash in a cigar box and make shady deals in back alleys but that’s not what a public company is allowed to do. Suggestion to other corporations, stay private!
What was he thinking??
Posted by Anonymous | Apr. 10, 2008 at 9:20 PM
COMMENT:
This guy is nuts...Stacey Manganella is one hot piece of ass. She is a big time MILF. I would be more than pleased to hit that every night.
Rachel Backer Con Artist !
Posted by Thomas | Jul. 10, 2008 at 1:44 PM
COMMENT:
When Rachel Backer contacted me about writing a story,she led me to believe it was going to be a positive one.She is a fraud and a con artist.
Baker the"writer" and these anonymous morons
Posted by Thomas | Jul. 10, 2008 at 2:37 PM
COMMENT:
I have known Luchiano for many years,and have only good things to say about him. It's a really sad day,when companies use the legal system to try and screw somebody out seven million bucks!
It seems odd to me!
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 14, 2008 at 8:58 AM
COMMENT:
Why would arbitrators award someone seven million dollars plus legal fees on just a small technacality as giving notice etc.Could it possibly be that they made up a lot of nonsense so that they would not have to give the guy those seven million dollars! I can't immagine what kind of people would do that! This guy is 61 years old. He must have a never ending supply of Viarga! God bless him.
Who is Richard Crystal???
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 15, 2008 at 8:45 AM
COMMENT:
Has anyone bothered to look into the background of this guy Richard Crystal. It seems to me that a guy who would use these sexual charges as an excuse not to pay someone 7 million owed,must have more than a shady background. It's a real shame,when New York and Company has to resort to such low tactecs to not live up to a contract they both went into with open eyes.
So you can't take a joke
Posted by Richard | Jul. 15, 2008 at 3:05 PM
COMMENT:
O.K. the stock of New York and Co. has tanked.I can't be responsible for everything.We make business decisions based on the what we know,and the truth is I don't know much at all
Manganella is worse than described here
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 30, 2008 at 12:25 PM
COMMENT:
This description of Manganella is very kind. I can only imagine that Baker and Dorr simply refused to look too deeply into his life. They did not, for example, find out how many wives he has had, or how many children he has had. If they interviewed his first wife (not mentioned her) or daughter (not mentioned here), they would have gotten a criminal characterization of a guy who ought to be in prison.
Work for Luciano at own risk
Posted by J | Jul. 30, 2008 at 12:58 PM
COMMENT:
I am related to Luciano Manganella and I wont let my daughters, his granddaughters, near him. I would never advise any woman to work for him.
Barbara O
Posted by Barbara | Dec. 5, 2009 at 12:05 AM
COMMENT:
I worked at Jasmine Sola in Harvard Square as Luciano's Executive Assistant for 4 years from 1993 - 1997. He and his wife were in the process of moving from New York to Boston to expand Jasmine Sola. This was a time when Harvard Square was moving towards the young hipster due to Urban Outfiters, etc. I have always know Luciano to be a passionate and smart businessman who is very loyal and trustworthy. He always treated me with the upmost respect. I was close enough to all aspects of his business life to know what was real and what was not truth. It is now 2009 and I have just learned of this article. Yes, indeed, I remember Luciano as a confrontational person who made sure his employees and vendors met his expectations. I also remember him being demanding and at times difficult, however, he stayed true to his goals and he met them, hence, look at the intrigue of this article. Luciano has always employed lovely young woman with interests in beauty and fashion. It is predictalb
 
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