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Fluff Pieces: Fall’s Top Faux Fur and Shearling Looks Are a Woman’s Best Friend
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Fluff Pieces: Fall’s Top Faux Fur and Shearling Looks Are a Woman’s Best Friend
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Bob Mackie was never much for nightlife. “I was in my studio, working away, and I couldn’t have been happier,” he says. But perhaps no designer is more responsible than he is for broadcasting glamour, pizzazz, and pure spectacle into Americans’ living rooms. Born and raised in the suburbs of Los Angeles, Mackie always knew he wanted to be a designer. Encouraged early on by the legendary costumer Edith Head, Mackie worked for a time under the midcentury pioneer Jean Louis before breaking through on his own with the outfits for Mitzi Gaynor’s Las Vegas revue in 1966. He went on to help shape the stage and screen image of a Mount Rushmore of legendary divas: Carol Burnett, Diana Ross, Tina Turner, Whitney Houston, Diahann Carroll, and, perhaps most iconically, Cher.
In time, his clients wanted to wear his designs in everyday life—and so did their fans. Runway collections and some of the most eye-popping red carpet gowns of all time followed, but Hollywood remained his true love. (He has a Tony, nine Emmys, and three Oscar nominations to prove it.) Mackie’s life story will be told in the documentary Bob Mackie: Naked Illusion, to be released later this year; in the meantime, the designer takes us behind the scenes of his dream factory and the glittering moments that defined his career.
“I tried out for cheerleading because I knew I wasn’t going to be a football player,” says Mackie (top right). “I thought to myself, Well, it’s the closest thing to show business without being in show business.” Though Mackie remembers those times fondly, he did have one fashion note for his alma mater: “We had the worst school colors. They were maroon and gray. Can you imagine?”
Mackie, seen here with his elder sister, Patricia, grew up with a supportive family, but they didn’t quite understand his Hollywood dream. So he took matters into his own hands by studying the careers of those who came before him. “I always wanted to go to Chouinard Art Institute,” he says. “Many of the designers in Hollywood had gone to that school back in the 1920s.” Originally enrolled at Pasadena City College, Mackie made it to Chouinard after winning a scholarship.
In 1961, Mackie left Chouinard after a year and worked as a sketch artist for Edith Head and Jean Louis. He was often at the NBC costume workroom, having outfits made. He was so excited he ended up decorating the workroom’s door with his drawings for Christmas.
Mackie first encountered Barbra Streisand in 1963, when she guested on The Judy Garland Show while he was working as an assistant costume designer. But their most significant collaboration would come on the set of 1975’s Funny Lady, where this photo was taken. “I stood behind her and I looked,” says Mackie. “She was quite amused by the fact that I was almost doing her facial pose.” She sent him this signed copy afterward.
“Diana Ross is one of the most gifted and talented and hardest to live with ladies I know,” says Mackie. They first collaborated on a television special featuring the Temptations and Ross’s group, the Supremes. “It was a big salute to Broadway, and it was so much fun to do,” says Mackie. “And I got an Emmy.” They worked together for decades, creating looks for the screen, the stage, and the red carpet. This nude-illusion bodysuit, worn on the cover of Ross’s 1970 album Everything Is Everything, has frequently been emulated but never quite duplicated in the years since.
“Bernadette Peters is my oldest friend in this business, in television especially,” says Mackie. “We had her on The Carol Burnett Show I don’t know how many times.” Here, the pair attend the 1986 Met Gala. In sharp contrast to today, he says, back then society types were still a bit stuffy about entertainers joining the event.
Mackie’s first foray into consumer fashion was a collection for the lingerie brand Glydons in 1979. Predating the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show by decades, the extravagant runway show was staged at Studio 54.
“I’m not going to say any more about the Met Gala moment,” says Mackie, referring to the Marilyn Monroe dress that Kim Kardashian infamously rewore in 2022. Mackie was the sketch artist for the Jean Louis dress, which Monroe had worn to serenade President John F. Kennedy at his 45th birthday celebration in 1962. Mackie described Kardashian’s decision to unearth it as a “big mistake.”
Madonna wasn’t a regular Mackie client, but the one time they crossed paths made pop culture history. Fashion editor Marina Schiano dolled up the Material Girl like Marilyn Monroe in a Mackie runway sample for a 1991 cover of Vanity Fair. On set, Madonna said she wanted something like it to wear to the Academy Awards, and Schiano told her to call up Mackie and ask him to make her something special. “She wore that dress all night—to perform, at the parties. We got a lot of publicity,” recalls Mackie.
“They were giving Joan a big to-do in San Francisco, where they were showing Land of the Pharaohs, in which she played an Egyptian queen of some sort,” says Mackie of this night with Joan Collins, circa 1981. “We were right in the heart of the gay district in San Francisco. That place was packed. And there she was, dressed like that, in a brand-new dress that I did for her.”
“I was on pussy patrol because Cher was stark naked except for some chains,” says Mackie of the heavy metal–inspired photo shoot for the singer’s 1979 rock album, Prisoner. “There were all these guys around with hardly anything on. She said, ‘Stay there so nobody will see anything.’ I said, ‘What do you mean, see anything? You’re naked!’ ”
The singer with Burnett on the show Cher in 1975.
Mackie did the costumes for all 11 seasons of The Carol Burnett Show, where he met Cher. “Sonny and Cher were on the very first season. We were repairing a beaded dress, and she said, ‘Someday I’d like to have a beaded dress.’ And I said, ‘Well, you could.’ She said, ‘No, we can’t afford it right now.’ I said, ‘When you’re ready, I’m ready.’ ” Here she is with Raquel Welch in 1975.
After donning Mackie at the Oscars in 1984—where she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress, for Silkwood—Cher returned in 1986 to present the Best Supporting Actor award in one of the most famous creations by the designer. “I said to her, ‘Do you think maybe it’s too much outfit? You’re pulling focus from the actual winner of this award,’ ” recalls Mackie. “And she said, ‘Oh, no. I don’t know who it’ll be, but he’ll love it.’ ” Don Ameche ended up winning for Cocoon and did, in fact, love it: “He said, ‘I would not have my picture in every paper in the country with Cher if she hadn’t dressed like that.’ ”
Mackie never really intended to show his work on the runway. “I wanted to design for movies, stage, and Broadway—anything other than fashion.” Still, so many private clients called on him that he began producing regular collections in the 1980s. How did the established New York fashion guard respond to Mackie’s arrival? “They were all very nice. Some of them made shirts that said HOLLYWOOD BOB on them.” Mackie celebrates after a show, circa 1986.
Mackie was the guest judge on the very first episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race, long before the show became an Emmy-winning machine. “I thought I’d never get out of there. Do you know how long it takes for drag queens to put on their makeup?” he asks. The show invited him back in 2023 to honor him with the first ever Giving Us Lifetime Achievement Award.
RuPaul has worn Mackie’s creations numerous times, including a silver version of the signature flame dress to the 1995 VH1 Fashion and Music Awards.
It’s not a surprise that the man recently responsible for styling some of Hollywood’s biggest superstars has a fondness for Mackie. “This dress was kind of a tribute to My Fair Lady from a Broadway collection that I did. Law Roach found it, and he was hanging on to it for something special.” Roach ended up putting it on then-client Anya Taylor-Joy for the 2020 premiere of her film Emma. “On her, it was amazing,” says Mackie.
Iman, a frequent muse and presence on his runways, closed out his 1983 show in a towering bridal ensemble.
“Miley is one of those creatures who was born to be onstage,” says Mackie. “You can’t beat her—it’s amazing.” Cyrus’s team had reached out about pulling from Mackie’s archive for her 2024 Grammys performance of “Flowers,” and she eventually settled on a one-of-a-kind beaded fringe dress from a 2002 collection. The piece fit like a glove, and she performed her choreography in front of the designer. “She’s one of the Disney kids. They’re just so well-trained. They know about rehearsal, and they know about getting everything right—the lighting and the hair. There’s never a detail she’s not worried about.”
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At the couture shows in Paris this past January, the most talked-about accessory was neither an It bag nor a statement shoe but an alien robot baby—a husky, sparkling tot constructed of electronic panels, pearl-covered circuit boards, wires, cables, and thousands of Swarovski crystals that Schiaparelli designer Daniel Roseberry sent down the runway in the arms of model Maggie Maurer. It was made from what Roseberry referred to as “prehistoric technology”—flip phones, computer chips, and motherboards dating back to the days before going viral on social media was considered the ultimate measure of success.
Such wild creations are not surprising coming from Schiaparelli. The house’s founder was the mother of surrealist fashion, known for making gloves with claws on the fingertips, trimming boots with long fringes of monkey fur, and collaborating with Salvador Dalí to turn a shoe into a hat. Roseberry, since joining the house in 2019, has continued in that same vein. But this year, as other labels began to roll out their fall ready-to-wear collections, it became clear that he wasn’t the only designer turning eye-popping materials into major runway moments.
For his first collection at the helm of McQueen, Seán McGirr took inspiration from smashed phone screens to create a black, irregularly hemmed, rectilinear dress adorned with metal thread and ribbon work, glass beads, and laser-cut shards of clear Perspex that simulated broken glass. On the opposite end of the coziness spectrum, Jonathan Anderson opened his JW Anderson show with a sunny yellow top and skirt made from giant stuffed mohair tubes that functioned as comically oversize yarn—the design team used their arms as knitting needles, stitching the squishy cylinders directly onto a mannequin. The following month, in his role as creative director of the Spanish house Loewe, Anderson sent out a sparklier and even more labor-intensive creation: a voluminous, winged A-line shift dress with a caviar-beaded image of a Brussels Griffon dog sprawled on a grass lawn. The piece—which, on a model, had the effect of a walking tapestry—took 23 embroiderers 1,600 hours to make and was inspired, Anderson said, by antique high-society paintings featuring pets. A silk Balenciaga dress, meanwhile, was “frozen in time” through a process of wetting, bunching, and applying a crystallizing fixative, which makes it look perpetually windswept even when it’s standing still.
The use of unexpected and sometimes downright odd materials to make grand fashion statements is, of course, not a 2024 phenomenon. “These designers are building on a foundation that’s been laid by their predecessors,” says Daniel James Cole, an adjunct assistant professor at New York’s Fashion Institute of Technology and the coauthor of 2015’s The History of Modern Fashion. Cole sees today’s examples as “the natural progression” of designs by sartorial provocateurs like Martin Margiela, known for such innovations as the porcelain waistcoat (1989), which was made from strung-together smashed plates, and the wig coat (2009), a wearable accumulation of faux hair. But even before fashion was an industry, dressmakers were thinking beyond the loom. In 16th- and 17th-century India, for instance, beetle wings were used as proto-sequins, affixed to fabric to produce a shimmering effect. The practice was appropriated by the Brits during the colonial period, reaching peak trendiness in Victorian England, where women flaunted what were known as “elytra dresses”—white muslin gowns that sparkled with thousands of emerald green bug parts.
At other times, designers eschewed fabric out of scarcity rather than a desire for adornment. In Japan, says Matilda McQuaid, the acting curatorial director at the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, in New York, “they were always working with interesting materials, which I think goes back to the lack of resources they had as an island nation.” One example is a 19th-century “sweat protector,” an undergarment meant to absorb perspiration and allow for air flow, which was made from recycled paper ledger books. A century later, Anglo-American designer Charles James also had to get creative when available fabrics failed to meet his needs, says the fashion and textile historian, curator, and conservator Sarah Scaturro, who ran the Costume Conservation Laboratory at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute, in New York, and is now at the Cleveland Museum of Art. “He started laminating together multiple textiles, including nylon window screening, to get the buoyancy and volume he was desiring for pieces like his four-leaf clover gown.”
Scaturro points out that, over the course of history, innovations in fashion materials have often reflected developments in science and technology. James’s invention is one such example—nylon was first introduced in 1935, just as he was establishing his name. But the 1960s were truly the heyday of this phenomenon. The rapid rise of synthetics brought fads like “paper” dresses—which were usually some blend of cellulose and man-made fibers. First introduced as part of a marketing campaign by the Scott Paper Company, the idea was eventually picked up by various apparel makers and the likes of Andy Warhol, who did a dress printed with Campbell’s Soup cans. (Though it was touted as disposable, the paper dress’s influence on fashion was surprisingly durable: Three decades later, Hussein Chalayan used Tyvek paper sheets to make a jacket trimmed with red and blue airmail envelope stripes. Björk wore it on the cover of her 1995 album, Post.)
The advent of plastics gave rise to “space age” styles made from vinyl and PVC by European designers such as Pierre Cardin, André Courrèges, and Paco Rabanne. In the U.S., Betsey Johnson attracted attention with a line of completely clear plastic dresses sold with adhesive-backed plastic shapes that could be stuck on the body to cover up private parts. To Cole, that experiment in customization brings to mind a current-season Alaïa coat with black-on-black dots that can be removed and repositioned for a different look with each wear. The technique, says Alaïa creative director Pieter Mulier, turns the garment into “a canvas for creativity.” Unlike Mulier’s design, however, Johnson’s frocks were definitely NSFW. “A big part of ’60s fashion was about shock value,” says Cole.
The pressure to raise eyebrows has only increased in the Internet age, when attention seems to be its own reward. For the Costume Institute Benefit at the Met this past May, Balmain’s Olivier Rousteing transformed the singer Tyla into a human hourglass by encasing her in a gown made from sand and micro-crystal studs that he’d molded on a cast of her body. And who could forget Lady Gaga’s infamous “meat dress,” stitched together out of raw steak? Whether these attention-grabbing experiments qualify as fashion, or even clothing, feels beside the point. Time magazine deemed the meat dress the “top fashion statement” of the year in 2010, and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame reportedly paid $6,000 to have it preserved.
McQueen by Seán McGirr dress.
Still, fashion experts aren’t ready to write off the most recent round of wild looks as mere meme-chasing stunts. Virginia Postrel, the author of the 2021 book The Fabric of Civilization: How Textiles Made the World, sees the tech-inspired pieces, in particular, as incisive cultural commentary. “These designers are calling attention to the materials, and that is a response, perhaps, to our dematerialized digital world,” she says. Scaturro sees a pushback against innovations like AI and fashion NFTs (virtual clothing solely for cyberspace) in Anderson’s work, which depends on the hands—and arms—of actual people to produce. “I love that they used their arms to put the knit onto the body,” she says of the JW Anderson yellow set. “The more technology impacts our lives, the more we need to keep in touch with what makes us human, and that’s handwork and craft.”
At Bottega Veneta, Matthieu Blazy did just that, most notably with a handmade coat of embroidered leather strips that were knotted for a shaggy, pom-pom–like effect. Marni creative director Francesco Risso was similarly inspired to imbue his collection with a personal touch: A series of stiff, high-necked dresses was hand-painted with layers upon layers of broad, heavily textured brushstrokes to look like abstract artworks. Especially after the pandemic, he says, members of his team found themselves craving a more “visceral approach to creation”—and so, this season, Risso decided to do away with visual reference points or overarching themes and instead spend “hours and hours” painting fabric in the atelier.
JW Anderson top and skirt.
“Fashion understood as a canvas, as a work of art, requires attention and sensoriality,” he says. “That’s what makes our work exciting day after day. We must protect our magic.”
Set design by Hella Keck at Webber Represents.
Produced by M.A.P Ltd.; Senior Producer: Elizabeth Cooper; Junior Producer: Saskia O’Keeffe; Production Manager: Matthieu Perdrizet; Photo Assistant: Bastien Santanoceto; Lab: Garage Film Lab; Fashion assistants: Martina Dotti, Manon Munoz; Set assistants: Nikki Lavollay, Celine Ruault.
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Maison Margiela dress; Gucci top, bra, briefs, and skirt; StockinGirl thigh-highs.
Miu Miu necklace; Cornelia James glove; All-In top.
The Row tops and slip skirt; Heather Huey headscarf; StockinGirl thigh-highs (worn as belt); Falke thigh-high.
Dolce & Gabbana halter vest, top, bralette, and bodysuit; Jennifer Behr veil headband; Wolford thigh-highs.
All-In top and skirt; Miu Miu necklace; Cornelia James gloves.
Miu Miu jacket, shirt, skirt, and necklace (worn as bracelet); Loro Piana top; Celine by Hedi Slimane hat and necklace; stylist’s own slip skirt.
Dolce & Gabbana halter vest and top; Jennifer Behr veil headband.
Prada jacket, gray skirt, and pink slip skirt; Araks bralette; Proenza Schouler red slipdress (worn as skirt); Victoria’s Secret lace-trim slip; stylist’s own purple skirt.
Balenciaga top, skirt, and pantaboots; stylist’s own veil.
Loewe coat; Polo Ralph Lauren swimsuit; Chopard Haute Joaillerie Collection ring.
Ralph Lauren Collection jacket and pants; Polo Ralph Lauren tops; The Row shoes; stylist’s own blue top and socks
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello top, skirt, briefs, earrings, bracelets, belt, and tights.
Hair by Jawara for Oribe at Art Partner; makeup by Sam Visser at Art Partner; manicure by Dawn Sterling for Nailglam at EDMA World. Entrepreneur and model: Bella Hadid.
Produced by Fresh Produce; Executive Producer: Izzy Cohan; Producer: Halle Lagatta; Production Coordinator: Chloë Harper; Photography assistants: Jordan Lee, Colin Smith, William Takahashi; Digital Technician: Atarah Atkinson; Retouching: The Hand of God; Fashion assistants: Katarina Silva, Umi Jiang, Grace Turner; Hair assistant: Roddi Walters; Makeup assistant: Shimu Takanori; Production Assistants: Gio Barba, Madeleine Thomas.
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Celine by Hedi Slimane coat, bag, and boots; stylist’s own turtleneck.
Dior top and skirt; stylist’s own tights.
Prada dress, cuff, bag, and shoes.
Prada coat, cuff, bag, and shoes.
Louis Vuitton dress, mittens, and shoes.
Celine by Hedi Slimane jacket, blouse, skirt, bag, and shoes.
Celine by Hedi Slimane coat, bag, and boots; stylist’s own turtleneck.
Miu Miu dress, necklace, gloves, and bag.
Prada coat, cuff, and bag.
Marc Jacobs peacoat, skirt, and shoes; stylist’s own tights.
Marc Jacobs top, shorts, and shoes.
Rianne Van Rompaey wears a Prada coat, cuff, bag, and shoes.
Hair by Julien d’Ys at L’Atelier NYC; makeup by Francelle Daly for Love+Craft+Beauty at 2B Management; manicure by Megumi Yamamoto for Chanel at Susan Price NYC. Model: Rianne Van Rompaey at DNA Model Management. Casting by Piergiorgio Del Moro and Samuel Ellis Scheinman at DM Casting.
Extras: Connor Reavely, Max Zeman. Produced by Farago Projects; Executive Producer: Zara Walsh; Producer: Anna Blundell; Production Coordinator: Reilly Hail; Location Manager: Matthew Dipple; Photo Assistants: Cecilia Byrne, Alec Vierra; Lab: Rapid Eye; Retouching: Simon Thistle; Fashion assistant: Conor Manning; Hair assistant: Shinya Nakagawa; Makeup assistant: Madrona Redhawk; Production assistants: Gregory Gabb, Michael Vick, Corryn Diemer, Thomas Polcaster, Alan Bell; Tailor: Hailey Desjardins.
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Looking back on her initial resistance to creating clothes for women, former menswear designer Colleen Allen laughs. When she was working at The Row, she says, “they asked me to design women’s, and I was like, ‘No, I don’t want to do that!’ I was very rigid. I felt like everything had been said in women’s and there was more to say in men’s. But, eventually, there was an itch at the back of my brain. I realized that there were ideas I wanted to explore.”
Those ideas—identity, spirituality, community—culminated in February in the 28-year-old designer’s New York Fashion Week debut, an imaginatively conceived, tenderly executed exploration of femininity anchored by that often maligned archetype: the witch. It was while she was researching how witches have been portrayed over the centuries, she says, that “something clicked for me.”
Models (from left) MJ Herrera, Ayak Veronica, Serena Wilson, Sylke Golding, and JoAni Johnson wear Colleen Allen clothing and accessories.
Allen, who is now based in Brooklyn, grew up in the suburbs of Chicago. Her grandmother, a quilter, taught her to sew, and weekend classes in illustration and clothing construction—one instructor was Shane Gabier, of Creatures of the Wind—gave her the foundation to seriously pursue becoming a fashion designer. She arrived at Parsons School of Design in 2014 but headed to Central Saint Martins, in London, for what was supposed to be a junior year abroad. She liked it so much that she persuaded the administration to let her stay on. Allen credits the combination of the two schools’ approaches—rigorous technical training at Parsons, and a studio-based format that stresses research and collaboration at Saint Martins—with giving her a solid footing in both design and production.
Three years at The Row further honed these skills. Once she started pondering womenswear, she quit, took on a few freelance design gigs, and began the process of turning her mental catalog of images and thoughts into a coherent statement. An online lecture by the art historian Susan Aberth led her to the tarot deck of the Surrealist artist Leonora Carrington, an English beauty who, in 1937, horrified her straitlaced family by running away to France with the painter and sculptor Max Ernst, who was not only married but also 26 years her elder. Brightly colored and shining with silver and gold leaf, Carrington’s cards, first created in 1955, depict feminine energy that is fecund and irrepressible: Her Empress is Medusa-haired and pregnant; her Hanged Man and the Devil have androgynous features. Carrington based her imagery in part on the practice of witchcraft in Mexico, where she spent most of her life, and on the 19th-century secret society Golden Dawn Order, from which Wicca takes inspiration.
Ayak Veronica wears a Colleen Allen dress and cap.
Allen’s interpretation of the witch is less esoteric and more immediately relevant: a woman who is independent and self-empowered. This translates into clothes that reject the bourgeois stereotypes that have bedeviled fashion recently. There are ruffled pantalettes, which sound jokey but aren’t. The collection’s standout piece is a lightly fitted jacket that resembles an intricately seamed Victorian bodice. It fastens with silver hooks and eyes, a nod to a designer whose work Allen admires: Claire McCardell, who loved the subversive appeal of visible hardware. The ruffled shorts are in cotton, while the jacket is made from polar fleece, a fabric that the forward-looking McCardell, who died in 1958, would surely have embraced. The latter piece was inspired by the garb of storybook witches—call it Salem chic—and by a trip to the Scottish Highlands, where Allen was struck by the disparity between the ancient, epic grandeur of the landscape and her 21st-century hiking gear. Wear the jacket and shorts together, and you have a renegade suit that is both practical and distinctive—and, as Allen puts it, gives you “a warm feeling, like there’s a ritualistic presence as you’re walking around doing your everyday thing.”
Less specifically witchy are an orange velvet cape that falls in deep folds from the shoulder and a magenta wrap-and-tie wool jersey top that swaddles the torso. Both, however, are linked to Allen’s interest in religious rites. Orange is associated with spiritual awareness; think of the robes of Buddhist and Hindu monks. Allen conceived of the top after observing young mothers with their babies bundled tightly against them at a Shinto shrine in Japan. “Being held that way, in a spiritual place, was really powerful,” she says. “Plus, I like having a more personal relationship with your clothes than just when you put something on.”
Ayak Veronica and Golding wear Colleen Allen clothing and accessories.
But it’s the character of the witch that animates this collection, and Allen feels that it’s time to celebrate her power. In Jungian psychology, the witch represents the shadow self, the appetites and instincts that we prefer not to acknowledge: rage, sadness, greed, loneliness. It’s a big concept—but, at its best, fashion takes inarticulate ideas and gives them physical expression. “What you put on has transformative power,” Allen says. “I wanted to access that version of myself—the witch—embody it, and then create that space for other women.” For a designer who once thought she had nothing to say about womenswear, it’s the start of a provocative conversation.
Hair by Junya Nakashima for Oribe at Streeters; Makeup by Marco Castro AMAZONICOIL at Born Artists; Models: Ayak Veronica at New York Models, JoAni Johnson at The 11:14 Agency, MJ Herrera at One Management, Serena Wilson at The Society Management, Sylke Golding at Muse Model Management; Casting by DM Casting; Casting Assistants: Brandon Contreras, Evagria Sergeeva; Produced by Photobomb Productions; Senior Creative Producer: Kevin Warner; Project Manager: Nick Lambrakis; Photo Assistants: Mark Jayson Quines, Ashley McLean; Fashion Assistant: Celeste Roh; Hair Assistants: Christine Moore, Vincent Tobias; Makeup Assistants: Shoko Kodama, Arias Roybal; Tailor: Lindsay Wright; Special Thanks to NYC Park Isham Park & Bruce’s Garden.
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Rare is the fashion model whose career has legs as long as her own. For every Carmen Dell’Orefice, Naomi Campbell, or Kate Moss, there are thousands who disappear—none, perhaps, more effectively than Iria Leino. Along with Bettina and Dovima, the Finnish American beauty was one of the first models to go by a single name; then, in 1964, she fled fashion forever.
Now Leino is having a comeback, not as a model of brief renown in Europe, but as the artist she was in New York. This month, two years after her death, at 90, from leukemia, Harper’s gallery in New York is introducing that Leino: an obsessive painter of luminous abstractions with only one solo U.S. show to her credit.
That show was in 1966.
A portrait of Iria Leino by Georges Saad, c. 1961.
Courtesy Archives of the Iria Leino Trust.
Probably no one in the art world today remembers the exhibition or its venue, the Panoras Gallery, a long defunct midtown emporium where a graduate student named Donald Judd had debuted as a painter 10 years prior. But Leino’s exhibition did not go unheeded: It brought her press, at least one big sale—to the fashion designer and art collector Larry Aldrich—and, to top it all off, a spot on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson.
Leino with her painting Garden of Eden, c. 1980.
Courtesy of Harper’s Gallery
The number of visual artists invited onto late-night television in those days was about the same as it is now: almost none, unless they were media hounds like Salvador Dalí and Andy Warhol, or painted themselves in the nude at the age of 80, as did Alice Neel. But instead of capitalizing on that acclaim, Leino went into seclusion. After a freak accident in 1968 caused a head injury that required brain surgery, she converted to Buddhism, to which she had initially been introduced by “Gurudev,” the populist Sri Swami Satchidananda. In her will, she named the two yoga centers he founded, in New York and Virginia, her only beneficiaries.
“She went to Integral Yoga Institute and sat in the back of a room with a hundred people,” says Robert Saasto, an attorney and the executor of her estate. “She felt she had an out-of-body experience with the swami, eyeball to eyeball, and she was hooked.”
Leino remained devoted to painting, however, even though she barely scraped by. Her refusal to submit to a patriarchal system that largely discounted women contributed to her obscurity. In the early 1980s, she even sent the power dealer Leo Castelli packing, and rarely permitted anyone to see her work again. “She was very ‘my way or the highway,’ ” says Varpu Sihvonen, a Finnish journalist who worked in New York and is one of the few people alive to have known the artist well. “Very, very private. If I asked to see her paintings, she would say, ‘Yes, but not now.’ That was her way of saying no.”
Leino in Paris during her modeling days, c. 1963.
Courtesy of the Archives of the Iria Leino Trust
Harper Levine is saying yes. A bookseller and art dealer who operates a hybrid gallery and rare bookstore in East Hampton, as well as two galleries in Manhattan, he is showing canvases from Leino’s “Color Field” and “Buddhist Rain” series, two distinct bodies of work that she made in the late 1960s and early ’70s, respectively. “Those paintings spoke to me,” he says. “Their strangeness makes them compelling, and this was a great opportunity to bring what I believe is a historically important voice into the current dialogue around painting.”
Nonetheless, it’s a risky proposition for a contemporary dealer to introduce a deceased 20th-century modernist with no track record to a skittish election-year market. “I think there’s a real hunger among collectors for artists who were forgotten or never known,” Levine counters. As proof, he cites Vivian Springford, an American contemporary of Leino’s who fell by the wayside; today her abstractions sell at auction for six figures. Another case is the recent runaway success of the late Dutch painter Jacqueline de Jong.
Levine did not find his way to Leino on his own. He got wind of her through Peter Hastings Falk, an art historian who is writing a critical biography about her. Falk has rather heroically cataloged the hundreds of unseen paintings that Leino left in her dusty SoHo loft, along with voluminous diaries and letters in Finnish, English, and French that he is still deciphering.
A fabric design Leino created for Marimekko, 1964–65.
Courtesy of the Archives of the Iria Leino Trust
Falk has made a specialty of resurrecting neglected artists and features them in his online magazine, Discoveries in American Art—one reason Saasto gave him the job. The lawyer describes Leino’s loft as “stacked with art everywhere, and all this cardboard! You could hardly walk. I went there with the head of the Finnish Cultural Institute in New York. He said three things were needed to make any artist successful: One was a lot of art; we had that. Second, it had to be unique. And third, we’d need a good story—and her story is beyond.”
Born Taiteilija Irja Leino in Helsinki, Leino graduated from the city’s Academy of Fine Arts in 1955 with a degree in fashion design. One mentor was Tapio Wirkkala, the acclaimed Finnish designer of glassware, stoneware, and furniture. He supported Leino’s application to the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and over two years there, she studied painting while reporting on the latest couture for Finnish magazines and newspapers.
At just five feet six, Leino was not an obvious candidate for modeling, but her broad shoulders, Nordic complexion, and high cheekbones attracted Madame Grès; the designer was soon outflanked by a young Karl Lagerfeld, who persuaded his boss, Pierre Balmain, to hire her. Soon Leino was walking for Christian Dior, Pierre Cardin, and Yves Saint Laurent. Magazine editors came calling. So did photographers such as Claire Aho, a Finnish groundbreaker in color photography, and the erotically inclined Jean Clemmer, Dalí’s frequent collaborator. By 1960, Leino had enough money to buy a one-bedroom apartment in the 6th arrondissement of Paris and a farmhouse in Taormina, Sicily, her summer retreat.
Leino at work on a large “Color Field” painting in her New York loft, 1968.
Courtesy of the Archives of the Iria Leino Trust
It wasn’t all easy, though. The constant reminders to be vigilant about her weight led Leino, who already had a compulsive nature, to anorexia and bulimia. When Saint Laurent remarked that her hourglass figure was too “sexy,” or voluptuous, she resolved to become “the thinnest girl in Paris.” Her eating disorders sent her deeper into a depression that had begun with the death of the woman who raised her. (Her mother, who had not been married to her father, died when Leino was 6.)
She longed for an escape into art. Deluding herself into believing that a move to New York would cure her, she packed up her wardrobe and her easel and left Paris in 1964. With help from an unnamed patron—possibly Wirkkala—she sublet an Upper East Side apartment and began classes at the Art Students League on a scholarship. Her favorite teacher was the irascible (and still active) Larry Poons, then widely celebrated for his vibrant “dot” paintings. (In 2018, he reemerged as the poignant 80-year-old star of The Price of Everything, a documentary on HBO about the contemporary art market.) “All I remember about Iria,” he says, “is that hers was a very lively class, and that she was attractive but very quiet.”
Though barely conversant in English, Leino learned of artists colonizing raw, high-ceilinged lofts in SoHo and snagged a 4,000-square-foot space on the sixth floor of a cast-iron building that had no elevator. The rent was $650 a month—or $350 with the subsidy she received from a foundation. New York was Fun City then, and Leino was attending “tie-only” parties with the best of the art crowd, never as short of boyfriends as she was of money.
For years, her only income came from leasing her apartment in Paris—a collaboration with Marimekko for the use of her designs did not pan out—but still she continued to maintain that she didn’t need to exhibit or promote her paintings. “When the time is right,” she told Sihvonen, “people will come to me.” What money she had went into making her art, which at first entailed her staining unprimed canvas, Morris Louis– and Helen Frankenthaler–style, by pouring paint. Later on, she made what Falk describes as a thick gruel of powdered pigment and an acrylic emulsion that she slathered on canvas with a trowel, her hands, or a stucco applicator, sometimes embedding the surface with stones. (She also seems to have anticipated Gerhard Richter’s use of a squeegee.) Throughout, she grew increasingly withdrawn—something that, for Levine, seems supremely ironic. As he points out, “Iria repudiated the New York art world while living at its center.”
In her diaries, she noted every morsel of her vegetarian diet. “She loved Chinese food,” Sihvonen says. “Especially tofu. She didn’t drink coffee—only green tea or water. No alcohol or even fruit juice. But she always wore high heels, even at home. In her last years, she always wore black and purple, and I never saw her without makeup.” Nor did a day go by without the meditations she had learned from Gurudev. “She would repeat and repeat a chant, and then start painting and be in another world,” says Saasto, one of the rare people who have ever watched her work. She did continue to visit galleries and attract men—an affair with the married painter Stanley Boxer went on for years—but she never wed anyone. “I love to love,” she confessed, “but I’m saving my energy for painting.”
Leino in a modeling shot, c. 1963.
Courtesy of the Archives of the Iria Leino Trust
The fashion pendulum briefly swung her way again in 2000, when the streetwise Moroccan French designer Claude Sabbah opened a store in NoLIta selling avant-garde, made-to-order clothes that were catnip for hip-hop stars such as Lauryn Hill and Eve, as well as downtown style cognoscenti. The artist Laurie Simmons still has her silk camouflage suit overlaid with fishnet. “My first-ever piece of couture!” she declares.
“Iria came to the opening of Da House of Sabbah,” the designer says. “I felt blessed! She was very modern, even at her age—68—and was not only a friend but a muse who wore many outfits of mine.” When he asked her to return to the catwalk for a Fashion Week show of young designers, she did not hesitate to don the dramatic black satin and silk spandex ensemble he’d made for her: voluminous harem pants, a boatneck blouse, a signature do-rag cap—and, of course, spike-heeled black boots. “It was quite shocking to be back on the stage after all these years,” she remarked in a journal recovered by Falk. “But my love to be the center of attention on the stage has not disappeared.”
Sihvonen says that Leino hoped Sabbah would revive her modeling career and felt abandoned when he returned to Paris in 2004. “An angel of integrity” is the way he remembers Leino. “A person gifted to life! I hope she gets the recognition she deserves.”
Leino with pastel works from her “Buddhist Rain” series, 1972.
Courtesy of the Archives of the Iria Leino Trust
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Oh my god!” exclaimed Zoë Kravitz. She was about to change clothes at the W photo shoot when a brightly colored lizard crawled into a corner of the dressing room. The shoot was happening in a modernist 1970s house high in the canyons of Beverly Hills, and somehow the reptile had decided to visit. “Did he come through the window?” joked Kravitz. She was dressed in a short Saint Laurent cream-colored slipdress, and her hair was slicked back into a tight bun. Although Kravitz is only five feet two, she has a commanding presence and seems taller. She is simultaneously funny, curious, and absolutely certain about her beliefs, on every subject from politics to fashion to art. People close to her were not surprised that she wanted to direct a movie. “Everyone said, ‘You are a control freak, and you’re super bossy—directing is perfect for you,’” Kravitz told me, as she leaned into the carpet where the lizard had been.
Kravitz’s debut film, which she cowrote with E.T. Feigenbaum, is called Blink Twice (the original title was Pussy Island, but that name proved too controversial). It centers on Frida, played by Naomi Ackie, a young woman who falls under the spell of a handsome tycoon played by Channing Tatum, who happens to be Kravitz’s real-life fiancé. He brings Frida and her friend to his private island, which at first seems like a dream come true—the meals are spectacular, the setting is stunning, and the zillionaire has chosen Frida above all other women to be his lover. But almost immediately, bizarre, violent, and mysterious events start taking place.
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello slipdress, bracelets, and shoes.
Kravitz was inspired to write Blink Twice by the Me Too movement, which was shocked into life by the horrific behavior of Harvey Weinstein. “In the summer of 2017, I had come to a place of frustration with society and culture power dynamics,” she explained. “I went home one day after talking to a friend, and I wrote down the original title of the film: Pussy Island. Then—when was it? October, I think, when everything happened with Har—actually, I don’t want to say his name. I don’t want to give him any power.”
Initially, Kravitz wrote a short, stream-of-consciousness story, and that, over four years, morphed into the script. Interestingly, the film still has a kind of surrealist, experimental quality—the distinction between reality and fantasy is often unclear. “This was something that needed to come out,” Kravitz recalled. “I wanted this thriller to be bright and beautiful—so beautiful that it was almost oppressive. I was interested in a world that is seductive and vibrant and then turns into something terrifying. The sun, if you’re in it too long, burns you. If you eat too much, you feel sick. The thing that you think you want can be the thing that destroys you.” And yes, there’s a reptile in the film. “I think this lizard showing up today is a sign,” said Kravitz. “I am going to see this as a lucky thing—the universe sent him.”
Jacquemus dress, skirt, headscarf, belt, and shoes; Jessica McCormack drop earrings and ring (both throughout).
Although she’s only 35, there have been many distinct chapters in Kravitz’s life. She’s been through the famous-child phase (her parents are the actor Lisa Bonet and the musician Lenny Kravitz) and the superhero phase (she was both Angel Salvadore, who sprouted beautiful gossamer wings in X-Men: First Class, and a wonderfully sly and sexy Catwoman in The Batman). There was a more-serious-actor time (she starred in the series Big Little Lies and in Kimi, directed by Steven Soderbergh), and there was even a rock star chapter, when she played in her band Elevator Fight. Through it all, Kravitz has always been a fashion icon and a favorite of big-name designers. “I did have one bad moment,” she told me. “I plucked my eyebrows scarily thin. My mom said, ‘If you ever touch your eyebrows again, I will kill you.’ Thank god they grew back.”
As a child, Kravitz was theatrical. “The first movie I fell in love with was Grease,” she said. “I drove everyone crazy with the songs, with leather jackets, talking about Danny Zuko. I would put on shows in my grandmother’s or my mom’s house. I’d perform songs with my cousins. I would cut up little tickets—I’d make the family pay me money! I was like, ‘It’s one dollar to get in.’ They’d say, ‘We live here; this is crazy,’ but they’d give me the dollar.”
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello shirt, pants, and shoes; stylist’s own headscarf.
Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, one of Kravitz’s close friends, first met her at the Grammys in 2000. “Zoë doesn’t remember this, but it was the first year that I was nominated, and she was sitting in front of us next to her dad and Chevy Chase,” Thompson told me, calling from Berlin, where his band, the Roots, was on tour. “I was sure we were going to lose that night, and the way I coped back then was to repeat ‘We’re not getting anything’ over and over. At that moment, Zoë shot me a strong look, like, ‘Shut the fuck up.’ Zoë doesn’t remember this at all. She says, ‘I was a polite kid and would never do that.’ But at the exact same moment she gave me the look, they announced from the stage, ‘The winner is the Roots!’ We won. And I became instant friends with Zoë Kravitz!”
When Thompson went to an early screening of Blink Twice, he was overwhelmed. “The narrative in my head was, she’s the magic child, but over the years I had seen so much more complexity in Zoë. And when I saw the film, it was a Six Flags roller coaster experience for me. I went from the screening straight to her apartment, and I didn’t care if I woke her up. I may have underestimated Zoë’s power: Seeing her film was like meeting her for the first time. I now think she is going to take the ball further than both her parents combined.”
Miu Miu dress, necklace, and gloves; Selima Optique by Jack Spade sunglasses; The Row shoes.
Part of what intrigued Thompson about Blink Twice was what he viewed as female code-switching. In the movie—as in life—women constantly reinvent themselves. “It was really interesting to write about this living, breathing thing,” Kravitz explained. “We kept on having to adjust and change the relationship of the characters to the world we were depicting.”
As an actor, Ackie instantly saw the parallels between the film’s power dynamics and her own life. “Zoë sent the script when I was quite overwhelmed,” said Ackie. “I was playing Whitney Houston and was completely immersed, but when I heard the title Pussy Island, I knew I had to read the script immediately. We had a Zoom meeting and I said, ‘Please, can I do this movie?!’ I was prepared to do backflips—it was that important to me. And, luckily, Zoë and I share the same interest in questions about power, especially between men and women, and how we navigate that.”
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello jacket, swimsuit, and shoes.
Issey Miyake poncho and skirt; Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello shoes; stylist’s own headscarf.
The Blink Twice shoot was fast—around 26 days—and the crew and cast lived together on set in a resort location in Mexico. “We were like this weird, culty summer camp group,” said Kravitz. As always, she had a chic look: “I bought 10 pairs of Patagonia shorts in different colors. I wore dresses sometimes, and I was really into loafers with socks. And hats. My ’fits were pretty cool. I didn’t think about it a lot, but when I looked back, I was like, ‘These are pretty cool.’ ”
At the W set, Kravitz was on her fifth look: a black one-piece bathing suit topped with a loose men’s-style blazer. “I know I should wear high heels with this,” Kravitz said to no one in particular. “If it were up to me, I would be wearing comfortable shoes at all times. I think comfortable shoes are necessary in life.” When Kravitz speaks this way—quietly but authoritatively—it’s easy to see how she would make a great director. (Or, perhaps, the ruler of a nation.)
Jacquemus dress and headscarf.
Saint Laurent by Anthony Vaccarello slipdress; stylist’s own headscarf.
Throughout the photo shoot, Kravitz was very careful about the image she was projecting. For this chapter of her life, she is not playing an established character like Catwoman or performing with a group. In this moment, she’s trying to get as large an audience as possible to watch, think about, and respond to the ideas in her movie. “Zoë is after nothing less than a galvanizing effect,” Ackie told me. “And I applaud that goal—my family and friends were exhausted after watching Blink Twice, and Zoë loved that. She wants that kind of major reaction.”
As Kravitz meticulously tied and retied a long light blue scarf around her head, I asked her if she had played any particular music during filming. “I was listening to women who I found very powerful,” she said. “A lot of Nina Simone—her intensity!” Kravitz studied her reflection in the mirror. “Who doesn’t like the way Nina Simone sings? She’s an absolute vision.” She patted the scarf on the sides of her head, smoothing down the fabric. “Yeah, I’m really fascinated with people who are so themselves that they don’t have a choice.” Kravitz paused. “People like her, they burn so bright. The way she sees the world, the way she feels things—I think that’s so beautiful.”
Hair by Nikki Nelms at the Only Agency; makeup by Yukari Bush for YSL Beauty; manicure by Betina Goldstein at the Wall Group. Set design by Nicholas Des Jardins at Streeters.
Produced by AP Studio, Inc.; Producer: Anneliese Kristedja; Production Manager: Hayley Stephon; First photography assistant: Zack Forsyth; Photography assistants: Brandon Yee, Essence Moseley, Nick Haaf; Retouching: May Six; Fashion assistants: Tyler VanVranken, Kaley Azambuja, Sage M. McKee; Hair assistant: Ar’tavia Harris; Production assistants: Laicia Bouali, Gigi Rosenfield, Anderson Renno, Tommy Murray, Jeung Bok Holmquist; Set assistant: Josh Puklavetz; Tailor: Irina Tshartaryan at Susie’s Custom Designs, Inc.
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On a humid day, at about 3 p.m., Sabrina Carpenter was standing on the expansive front lawn of a house in Pasadena, California, trying to commune with a family of peacocks. For decades, peacocks have been allowed to breed and fly freely in the area, and they are everywhere—parading across streets and through gardens, their plumage trailing behind them. “Look at the babies!” Carpenter exclaimed, as three peachicks walked confidently behind their mother. Carpenter, who is tiny, with cascading blonde hair and a surprisingly low, sexy voice, was wearing a tan Gucci ensemble. She was in between setups at the W photo shoot, licking a mango-flavored ice pop. “Maybe you should sing to the peacocks!” someone suggested. Carpenter considered this for a second, but the avian family seemed much more interested in the frozen treat in her hand. Apparently, they were the only ones in this cul de sac—or on this planet—who hadn’t been humming “Espresso” or “Please Please Please,” Carpenter’s two massively popular summer songs. Even the pop icon Adele has spoken about singing “Espresso” compulsively.
Before the peacocks could get too close, Carpenter was called back to the house to touch up her makeup for the next photo. Although she is having a huge moment—at one point in June, she simultaneously had the No. 1 and No. 4 pop singles in America—Carpenter, who is 25, has been working since she was a child and is extremely comfortable in front of the camera. “I can’t even remember when I started singing and performing and entertaining, because I was really, really little,” she told me. “I did my first audition when I was around 11 years old. The second or third audition was for the first job that I booked—Law & Order: SVU. I was thrown off by that booking because I always wanted to do comedy. And on that show, I was a victim. I remember running the lines with my dad and asking, ‘Is this what acting is?’ And then I booked Orange Is the New Black. Can I swear? That episode was called ‘Fucksgiving.’” Carpenter laughed. Her next gigs were all wholesome. “I went from raunchy to Disney!”
Loewe dress; Jimmy Choo shoes; her own ring (throughout).
Even while pursuing acting, at 9 years old Carpenter was posting videos of herself singing on YouTube. At first, she did versions of other artists’ songs, but she quickly began writing her own music. While she was costarring in Disney shows like Girl Meets World, music was not her main pursuit. “But when I was 16,” she said, “I put out my first project. Ever since, music has been my whole life.”
On set, while she was having her hair combed into a smooth Brigitte Bardot–esque look, Carpenter was listening to music that she had chosen—most of which was released before she was born. She was singing along to the likes of the Beach Boys, Shania Twain, and the Human League. “I sing ‘Don’t You Want Me’ in the shower!” said Carpenter. “The lyrics are so funny. It has been stuck in my head.” Carpenter wrote her own addictive earworm, “Espresso,” in France. She was opening for Taylor Swift and had 10 days off. “I was in a ghost town that had one little creperie down the road. I had my shot of espresso, and then I might have had some champagne, and before I knew it the song was written.” She paused. “I definitely hear it now in every car I get into, and being on the radio, to me, is still—it’s like fate. You have to be at the right place at the right time.”
Celine by Hedi Slimane jacket and sunglasses.
Versace dress; Van Cleef & Arpels earrings; Roger Vivier shoes.
“Please Please Please,” the second single off her album Short n’ Sweet, was cowritten and produced by Jack Antonoff, the three-time Grammy Award winner for Producer of the Year. “I just adore Sabrina,” said Antonoff. “And she’s going to be around forever because she’s such a great songwriter.” The video for “Please Please Please” features Carpenter’s real-life boyfriend, Barry Keoghan, who is best known for starring in Saltburn, last year’s hit film. In the video, Keoghan is a recently released convict attempting to reform his bad-boy ways while Carpenter pleads with him to respect her. She wins. It’s a sly, deft take on what some people believe to be the dynamic in their relationship.
Carpenter’s video for “Espresso” is similarly clever. In the clip, she’s had the better of a boy and is rejoicing in a series of beach tableaux—sunning with her friends, dancing in the sand and on top of a surfboard. “My favorite bathing suit was the black one-piece on the surfboard,” Carpenter recalled. “I did that video because I thought the clock was ticking on how much longer I had to do my beach music video. To me, ‘Espresso’ sounded like when you turn on a vintage radio at the beach. And I did want to make it a little bit ridiculous, because that’s up my alley.”
Carpenter was summoned to the white picket fence on the side of the house. Although she can project a girl-next-door quality, she smartly leans into her innate sex appeal. When she appeared on the season finale of SNL, she wore a feather cape for one of her songs, only to toss it off and reveal a sparkly showgirl-esque micro mini. “They made me a redhead for a skit,” said Carpenter. “And I realized that I am definitely happier as a blonde!”
N21 by Alessandro Dell’Acqua dress; Van Cleef & Arpels earrings; Celine by Hedi Slimane sandals.
Around four years ago, Carpenter’s blondeness was used against her. She was allegedly the subject of Olivia Rodrigo’s massive hit “Drivers License,” as “that blonde girl” who had supposedly captured the heart of Rodrigo’s ex-boyfriend, Joshua Bassett (who has since come out as gay, but that’s a different story). Carpenter released a hit song of her own, titled “Because I Liked a Boy,” with lyrics like “I’m a home-wrecker, I’m a slut/I got death threats filling up semi-trucks.” The backlash from “Drivers License” has only inspired Carpenter to create more personal music, but she definitely doesn’t want to turn her romantic life into a public discussion. “I get why people are interested,” she said. “But they can listen to my album and decide for themselves what the songs are about.”
After taking the photograph, Carpenter and her older sister, Sarah, who works with her, returned to a small guesthouse, where Carpenter changed into a Loewe gown. As she checked her phone, I asked if she had ever been starstruck. “Oh god—I had a really dangerous Zac Efron phase, when he was in Hairspray,” she said. “I was 12 years old, and I was on a beach for the Fourth of July. He would never remember this, but I saw him and said, ‘I’m a big fan of your work!’ He gave me a hug. And I remember thinking, Oh my god—he wasn’t wearing a shirt and he gave me a hug! I was like, This is amazing. I’m never washing my body!”
Marc Jacobs dress and shoes.
Dior coat; Van Cleef & Arpels earrings.
Carpenter laughed again and headed outside. She posed near the front door of the house. It was the penultimate look of the day—the final shot would be among the sprinklers on the front lawn. It was hot out, and Carpenter was looking forward to being in the wet grass. “It will ruin my hair, but who cares?” she said. “I like water, but I’m definitely more like a cat. I’m smart, I love a little cat eye, I’m soft sometimes, I love a nap, and I can jump.” Carpenter smiled. “And I’ve got so many lives.”
Loewe dress; Jimmy Choo shoes; her own ring.
Hair by James Pecis for Blu & Green Beauty at Bryant Artists; makeup by Fara Homidi for Fara Homidi Beauty at the Good Company; manicure by Zola Ganzorigt for OPI at the Wall Group. Set design by Spencer Vrooman for SVS.
Produced by Connect The Dots; Producer: Jane Oh; Production Coordinators: Nicole Morra, Alison Yardley; Photography assistants: Milan Aguirre, Bailey Beckstead, Arvin Rusanganwa; Retouching: Studio RM; Fashion assistant: Antonina Getmanova; Hair assistant: Ramon Fuertes; Makeup assistant: Jason Case; Production Assistants: Jack Fish, Danielle Rouleau, Juanes Montoya, Soheyl Hamzavi; Set assistants: Christian Duff, Hannah Murphy; Tailor: Irina Tshartaryan at Susie’s Custom Designs, Inc.
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For a special summer issue of W, we asked a few of our favorite photographers—who are all inveterate travelers—to suggest some of their go-to destinations, cherished memories, and personal snapshots. The results were as varied as they were surprising and, hopefully, will inspire you to take a journey of your own.
Somewhere Along the Road to Inverness, Scotland, 2021
“This was my first time traveling with my dog in the camper van around the U.K.…lots of bones, lots of beaches. Glorious.”
Côte d’Azur, France, 2023
“When I look at this photograph, I remember thinking about my daughter becoming a big sister. At the time, my wife was pregnant with our second child, and I was thinking how moments like this would soon be much different as our family was expanding. Our daughter was obsessed with having a baby brother on the way, and we were focused on giving her and ourselves the best summer we could before he arrived.”
Ibiza, 2014
“Night and day with Kate in July.”
Switzerland, 2024
“This was my first time in Switzerland. But it felt like the most elevated, pure water, pure air version of the lakes I grew up going to with friends in the Metro Atlanta area. It gave me an immense sense of calm and inspiration.”
Puglia, Italy, and North Cornwall, England, 2023
“My father is from Puglia, so I’ve been going there for as long as I can remember. The top photograph was taken at Ponte Ciolo, which is a deep canyon at the end of a hiking trail called Sentiero delle Cipolliane. My partner, Fran, and I recently renovated an old stone mill cottage in North Cornwall, close to where her family lives. The photo below was taken from the coastal path, which takes you to lots of remote bays and tidal beaches.”
Madison County, Montana, 2020
“I first went to Montana in the summer of 1979. My wife, Ginger, and I spent three months camping and fly-fishing there. In the spring of 2020, we drove there from New York and spent five months at our house in the hills outside of Bozeman. I gave myself two projects: to write a memoir and to begin photographing with a drone.”
Superior, Wisconsin, 2017
“There was an eclipse—barely saw it, but it happened. Nobody cared much. We were all still aglow from the monarch butterflies my mom had hatched that afternoon with my brother’s kids. One nature miracle a day will do the trick, even on vacation.”
Italy, 2022
“These are memories of wonderful sensations and emotions. Precious moments. I was feeling free. Surrounded by joy, comfort, nature, adventure, music, dance, and friends.”
The South of France, Various Years
“The South of France is only a three-hour train ride from Paris. It’s mostly a place I go when nothing has been organized but we still want to go somewhere nice. Every summer, I travel with a group of friends and make it not about the destination but about the time we have together.”
Sun Valley, Idaho, 1979
“I lived in Sun Valley during the school year from 1974 to 1982, and the best fun of all after skiing downhill almost every day was to cross-country ski up north, where there were spots you could have a picnic by a stream or find a hot tub.”
Westerly, Rhode Island, 1979
“The lifeguard seemed as if he were conducting an orchestra. This photograph was taken at a water slide we used to go to on days we wanted an alternative to the beach where we usually hung out. It was on a strip filled with games, rides, and places to grab an ice cream cone or some popcorn.”
Accra, Ghana, 2021
“This was my second time in Ghana, when I got the rare chance to photograph the fashion designer Ozwald Boateng. It’s a special place. As an African American, I find exploring the history and lands of the ancestors is always healing to the soul.”
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Few It bags better define an era than the Balenciaga Motorcycle. Introduced during the fall/winter 2001 show, toward the beginning of creative director Nicolas Ghesquière’s 15-year run at the hallowed fashion house, the Motorcycle soon became a fixture on the arm of every starlet and celebutante.
As ubiquitous as low-slung jeans and Uggs, the slouchy tote, with its signature lariats, zippers, and rugged hardware, was an oft-photographed red carpet and music-festival staple—carried by everyone from Hilary Duff and Sienna Miller to Nicole Richie and the Hilton sisters. The decade’s much-copied fashion plate du jour, Mary-Kate Olsen, famously sported a minty green version that was as much a part of her fabulously disheveled mien as her oversize sweaters. (Like Richie, who owned a Motorcycle in a range of bubble gum colors, Olsen would go on to acquire a veritable collection of the carryalls.)
For all its high-profile visibility, the Motorcycle almost didn’t come to be. When it was first shown as a prototype on the runway, Balenciaga bigwigs were reluctant to put the unstructured, logo-less model into production. They feared it was out of step with the era’s strict, status-conscious offerings such as the Fendi Baguette and the Dior Saddle. But the history of fashion is filled with serendipitous Sliding Doors moments. Kate Moss asked Ghesquière for one after the show, and when the brass got wind that the trendsetting model approved, they decided to commit. (It didn’t hurt that the rest of the prototypes were gifted to other fashion influencers of the time, such as the power stylists and editors Carine Roitfeld, Emmanuelle Alt, and Marie-Amélie Sauvé.)
Lindsay Lohan, Kate Moss, and Ashley and Mary-Kate Olsen.
The Motorcycle was eventually renamed the City, and has been tweaked and released under different guises, notably as the streamlined Le Cagole in 2021. Now, as references from the noughties dominate the fashion dialogue—even Richie and Paris Hilton are enjoying another pop culture moment—the bag has again been reissued, this time as the Frenchified Le City. The new version remains faithful to the original: The biker-chick menace is still writ large in every stitch, and like a Perfecto motorcycle jacket, the supple lambskin leather only gets better with age. The lariats and studded hardware are still there, and there are different sizes and a kaleidoscope of colors on offer. One feature, however, is noticeably absent: The miniature mirror that used to hang from the top of the bag has gone the way of trucker hats. In its place are a host of customization options, including new key rings and charms.
Kim Kardashian and Lucy Liu.
Not surprisingly, celebrities are once again contributing to the bag’s popularity. Superstars including Bella Hadid, Dua Lipa, and Kim Kardashian, as well as newcomers like Rachel Sennott, Devon Lee Carlson, and Joey King, have all recently been photographed toting Le City. And a new advertising campaign features Nicole Kidman, Amelia Gray, Kit Butler, and the bag’s fairy godmother, Kate Moss. Talk about cult status…
Collage credits, clockwise from top left: Kate Moss, Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images; Sarah Jessica Parker, Ray Tamarra/Getty Images; Lucy Liu, PA IMAGES/Alamy; LeAnn Rimes, Jean Baptiste Lacroix/WireImage; Paris & Nicky Hilton, Gregorio Binuya/Everett Collection; Gisele Bundchen, WENN Rights Ltd.; Nicole Richie, Shutterstock; Ashley & Mary-Kate Olsen, M. Von Holden/FilmMagic; Cameron Diaz, James Devaney/WireImage; Emma Roberts, Jason Merritt/FilmMagic; Jessica Alba, Chris Polk/FilmMagic; Ashley Tisdale, WENN Rights Ltd.; Emma Bunton aka Baby Spice, C. Uncle/FilmMagic; Heidi Montag, Michael Bezjian/WireImage; Kourtney Kardashian, Ray Tamarra/Getty Images; Hilary Duff, Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic; Lindsay Lohan, Mark Mainz/Getty Images; Vanessa Hudgens, Jeff Vespa; Kim Kardashian, Larry Marano/Getty Images; Sienna Miller, Jamie Tregidgo/WireImage; Lauren Conrad, Alo Ceballos/FilmMagic. Center: Courtesy of Balenciaga.
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Giorgio Armani cape; Gina Couture shoes (throughout); stylist’s own briefs.
Lùchen gown.
Yuhan Wang top; Philip Treacy Archive hat; stylist’s own briefs.
ChenPeng dress; custom head wrap styled by hairstylist Mustafa Yanaz.
Balenciaga coat and top.
Fila hooded sweatshirt.
Supriya Lele top and skirt; Emily-London headpiece.
Prada cardigan and skirt.
Feben – Supported by Dolce & Gabbana coat.
Andreādamo jacket and skirt.
Bottega Veneta coat and earrings.
Sheila Bawar wears a Supriya Lele dress; stylist’s own briefs.
Hair by Mustafa Yanaz for Dyson at Art+Commerce; makeup by Lucy Bridge at Streeters; manicure by Lauren Michelle Pires for CND at Future Rep. Model: Sheila Bawar at Ford Models. Casting by Piergiorgio Del Moro and Samuel Ellis Scheinman at DM Casting. Set design by Ibby Njoya at New School.
Produced by Ragi Dholakia Productions; Executive Producer: Ragi Dholakia; Producer: Claire Huish; Fashion assistants: Julia Veitch, Ben Spelman; Production assistants: Libby Adams, Szilard Orban, Tom Beck, Oli Stockwell; Hair assistants: Krisztian Szalay, Tommy Stayton; Makeup assistants: Kyle Dominic, Jana Reininger, Esme Horn, Jemma Whittaker; Manicure assistant: Megan Cummings; Set assistants: Axel Drury, Toby Broughton; Tailor: Alison O’Brien.

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In Oh, Mary!, a historical fever dream written by and starring Cole Escola, they portray former first lady Mary Todd Lincoln as a narcissistic problem drinker and would-be cabaret singer in the weeks leading up to Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. “Unrequited yearning, alcoholism, and suppressed desires abound in this one-act play that finally examines the forgotten life and dreams of Mrs. Lincoln through the lens of an idiot,” state the play’s press notes.
Inhabiting the role of wife of the 16th president of the United States with a thirsty black wig and frothing-at-the-mouth lunacy, Escola is the hottest of hot messes onstage, flashing the audience bloomers one moment and chugging paint thinner the next. The acclaimed 2012 biographical historical drama Lincoln this is not. It should be noted, however, that Steven Spielberg (the director of Lincoln), Sally Field (who played Mary Todd in the film), and Tony Kushner (who wrote the screenplay) all swung by the Lucille Lortel Theatre in Manhattan’s West Village one evening to catch Escola’s bonkers spin on the shared source material.
Prada cardigan, sweater, pants, and hat; stylist’s own shoes.
After selling out nightly and twice extending its run, the play transferred to Broadway this summer. It’s been a whirlwind—and, dare one say, unexpected—main-stage moment for Escola. A performer as unabashedly queer as they are crackers, they are best known for their cult YouTube parodies of Little House on the Prairie, called “Our Home Out West,” and for playing a diabolical twink in the HBO Max series Search Party.
Sitting in Bryant Park one recent afternoon, Escola discussed the writing process behind Oh, Mary!, the emotional stakes of imposter syndrome, and manifesting a rich better half—while accidentally swallowing a fly mid-conversation.
Oh, Mary! is a play that wonders: What if the wife of Lincoln had been nuttier than a fruitcake?
I like to say, very glibly, that I did no research for this play about Mary Todd Lincoln. But I have been developing it for years. All the shows—solo comedy shows, sketch shows, everything that I’ve written for myself and self-produced—have been getting me ready for this.
What did you model your vision of Mary Todd on, if not the annals of history?
Well, I just thought, What would be the dumbest thing that First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln could dream of and want with her life? And cabaret made me laugh really hard. But also I, Cole Escola, do secretly want to be a cabaret star, desperately. Mary is just me. She cares so deeply about what people think of her, but she has a huge blind spot and doesn’t realize that people actually find her grating and annoying and hate her. And that is me.
Looking back, when did you first notice that the general population finds you grating and annoying?
I think around the time I started vocalizing, which was maybe two months.
The Row belted dress, bag, and shoes; Oliver Peoples sunglasses; Assael necklace; Fogal tights.
Critics, at least, are effusive in their praise of Oh, Mary! The play recently swept the Dorian Theater Awards, hosted by GALECA: The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics.
The thing is that the play is also about being gay. I think we all—“we all” meaning queer people—have that experience of being a kid, saying something, and the whole room turning and looking at you like you just took a shit on the floor, and realizing, Oh, I guess I’m not supposed to like the color pink. Wait, that’s so annoying. Please don’t print that. Or if you do, you can add a headline: “It’s Okay to Wear Pink.”
Do you see performing as an inherently autobiographical act?
With all of my characters, I don’t go into it thinking I want to explore this part of myself. Anytime I feel like I want to do a character like this, afterwards I can unpack it and it’s like, Oh, the goblin commuter of Hoboken is me exploring how I feel in romantic situations—which is like a disgusting creature trying to flirt.
Who needs romance? Theatergoers are swooning over you.
The early audiences were very, very enthusiastic. But I thought, Oh, that’s just my friends, aka drunk homosexuals. I didn’t know if other people would like it, but I was very pleased that the people I wrote it for got it and love it. And now more people are getting it and enjoying it—or at least buying tickets to it—and that’s really all that matters.
What has been the response to some of the show’s more deranged scenes, such as when the former first lady drinks her own vomit?
I mean, one joke is Mary’s skirt goes up and there is underwear with hearts all over it. No one laughs at that, but it’s something that means a lot to me, so it stays. The best part of this whole experience has been the people who come up to me after the show, people I worked with at Joe’s Pub or who came to see my shows at the Duplex. They look at me, and they’re so proud and excited. It makes me really, really emotional, as if I scored a goal for the team. It makes me want to cry. [Tears up]
It’s okay, take your time if you need a moment.
No, sorry, it’s—I just swallowed a bug. I literally just swallowed a bug! [Starts singing] “I know an old lady who swallowed a fly.”
Prada cardigan, sweater, pants, and hat; stylist’s own shoes
You not only star in Oh, Mary!, you wrote it. What was that process like?
I wrote myself an email in 2009 with an idea: Abe’s assassination wasn’t such a bad thing for Mary. That was the seed. I loved the idea so much. I was so excited by it that I was afraid to write it. I was afraid that once I got it on paper, it wouldn’t work. Then, in 2020, during lockdown, I made myself sit down and write it. It reminded me of a movie when a writer gets a burst of inspiration and stays up day and night writing. One morning, it just came out of me. I was like, “I can’t stop. I have to write this as long as I can.” That happens about once every seven years, if you’re lucky.
Flash forward to today, and your “short legs and long medleys,” as you put it in the play, are on Broadway.
I’m worried that moving to Broadway is trying to milk the moment too much, as if we had goodwill from people and now they will want to take us down a few notches. I’m terrified that I’m done. I peaked. It’s over.
That’s the attitude! So, what’s next for Cole Escola?
I’m looking for love. I think my next partner should be rich. Rich people are always nice and grounded and funny.
Hair by Walton Nunez for R+Co at See Management; Makeup by Mical Klip for Makeup by Mario; Fashion Assistant: Celeste Roh; Hair Assistant: Leah MacKay; Tailor: Elise Fife at Altered Mgmt; Special Thanks to Hurley’s Saloon.
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