ROME — Daniela Petroff, the esteemed journalist whose distinctive voice and expertise shaped The Associated Press’s coverage of both Vatican affairs and Milan’s fashion industry for nearly four decades, has passed away at her home in Rome. She was 80 years old.
According to her husband, Victor Simpson—the retired AP Rome bureau chief—Petroff died peacefully on Tuesday while recuperating from a recent fall. Simpson noted that she had gone to sleep after lunch and chose not to wake, a poignant end to a life marked by both profound achievement and personal tragedy.
Petroff’s career was characterized by intellectual rigor and linguistic fluency. Fluent in Italian, German, French, and English, she initially wrote for The Chicago Tribune and Time magazine before joining the AP. There, she pioneered the news agency’s Milan fashion reporting just as Giorgio Armani emerged as a global design force. Her dispatches were widely respected for their factual precision, avoiding subjective critiques in favor of insightful, context-rich analysis.
Lisa Anderson, a fellow fashion correspondent for The Chicago Tribune, reflected on Petroff’s unique approach: ‘She had a gift for placing facts within a very artful context. She regarded the fashion industry—which often takes itself too seriously—with both amusement and respect, a balanced perspective essential for quality reporting.’
Petroff’s professional legacy includes chronicling the rise of iconic fashion houses such as Versace, Gucci under Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld’s work at Fendi, and the Missoni dynasty. Her final byline for the AP, published in September, was an authoritative profile of Armani following the designer’s death.
In a remarkable demonstration of versatility, Petroff also applied her sharp observational skills and eloquence to Vatican reporting. She covered papal transitions, ecclesiastical appointments, and even drew witty comparisons between sartorial and sacred choices, once musing on how Pope Francis’s cardinals might dress given their diverse global origins.
Beyond fashion and faith, she reported on significant cultural events, including the emotional reopening of Venice’s La Fenice opera house after a devastating fire.
Born in Mecklenburg, Germany in 1945, Petroff spent her early years in Paris and New York. She attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart before moving to Rome for her final high school years at Marymount International School. After studying at Manhattanville College and graduating from Rome’s La Sapienza University with a degree in modern languages, she met Victor Simpson, then a news editor for AP. They married in 1973.
The couple endured an unimaginable loss in 1985 when their 11-year-old daughter, Natasha, was killed in a terrorist attack at Rome’s airport—an event that also injured their son, Michael. Their youngest daughter, Debbie, was born two years later, an occasion that prompted a personal congratulatory call from Pope John Paul II.
After retiring from the AP in 2017, Petroff dedicated herself to Marymount International School, serving as chair of the board. She is survived by her husband, Victor Simpson, son Michael, and daughter Debbie.
A private funeral is scheduled for Thursday, with a memorial service to be held at Marymount on Monday.
