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Tag: Karl Lagerfeld

  • The Glamorous History of The Pierre: Manhattan’s Iconic Hotel Turns 95

    When The Pierre Hotel opened its doors in 1930, it instantly became a playground for Manhattan’s elite. Over the past 95 years, this iconic hotel has witnessed everything from the repeal of Prohibition to jewel heists and Hollywood scandals, all while maintaining its reputation as one of New York’s most glamorous destinations. From its $15 million debut to hosting Hollywood royalty and surviving the Great Depression, The Pierre has remained a beacon of glamour in the heart of New York City since 1930.

    A Complete History of The Pierre Hotel

    Image by Nextrecord Archives / G

    The Early Days: A Playground for Manhattan’s Elite

    When The Pierre Hotel opened on October 1, 1930, casting its 714-room shadow over Central Park, it instantly became the playground for Manhattan’s elite. Merely four months later, E.B. White’s Ballad of the Hotel Pierre was published in the New Yorker, describing it as home to “The little band that nothing daunts/this year’s most popular debutantes.” This was true. Prospective debutantes had started booking the ballroom for their November entrances in June, months before the luxury hotel opened. 

    Gabrielle ‘Coco’ Chanel posing in her suite at The Pierre during her first visit to New York City, on March 10, 1931.
    Getty Images

    Within a year, the film and stage star Ina Claire was sinking into a club chair at the hotel as she discussed with journalists whether she would be divorcing John Gilbert. (She claimed she would not. She would.) In 1932, Coco Chanel called The Pierre home during her first visit to New York. And that same year, the famed “Tobacco King” Arthur Mower refused to leave his Pierre bed for his stepdaughter’s early morning wedding . 

    Little wonder no one wanted to leave. Every inch of the 41-story hotel offered an almost otherworldly spectacle. The 60-by-100-foot ballroom where those debutantes waltzed was paneled in mirrors flanked by rose marble columns imported from French quarries. The chandeliers above sparkled with traces of ruby crystals from the room that would become known for the “swankest presentation balls” given for the city’s “spoiled darlings.” Attendees might make their way to the Grill Room, which was decorated to resemble an “undersea garden.” Wall panels and ceiling murals replicated ocean foliage, and the carpet was woven with images of seashells and sea urchins. In the upstairs dining room, paneled in hand-carved French walnut, interspersed with gold brocade hangings, Auguste Escoffier, the father of French cooking, prepared the hotel’s first meal.

    Bettmann Archive Miss Elizabeth R. G. Duval, a prominent member of New York society, and Sidney Wood, a well-known tennis star, sit on the steps inside The Pierre in 1933.

    From Waiter to Hotelier: The Story of Charles Pierre

    But The Pierre didn’t begin in those gilded rooms. It began in a kitchen, with a Corsican waiter named Charles Pierre Casalasco, who learned the trade from his father. When Louis Sherry dined at the Savoy Hotel in London in 1903, the American restaurateur noted a young waiter watching him with eager attention. Casalasco was “awed by this former waiter who had become proprietor of a smart dining room in New York.” Sherry was so impressed with the waiter’s desire to learn more about the hospitality business that, when he returned to New York, he made Casalasco his assistant. There, the waiter quickly dropped his surname in favor of being known simply as Charles Pierre. At that time, it was almost a forgone conclusion that New York’s debutantes were introduced at Sherry’s ballroom. Charles Pierre, tasked with organizing these splendid events, became “the favorite of the younger set, married matrons and the dowagers.” 

    Smart set, Mrs. Robert Goddard and Mrs. Roland Hazzard, in front of The Pierre.
    Bettmann Archive

    When Charles Pierre opened his own Park Avenue restaurant in 1920, his devoted group followed him. In 1930, their social set husbands, like Walter Chrysler, Edward Hutton, and C.K.G. Billings, helped finance his dream, The Pierre Hotel, which reputedly cost a staggering $15 million to build. In retrospect, too much may have been spent on those underwater-themed murals. By 1932, during the Great Depression, a petition of bankruptcy was filed—but Charles Pierre was kept on as managing director to run the hotel. 

    Disciplined and knowledgeable with a European flair, Charles Pierre ran the hotel with aplomb.

    Penske Media via Getty Images

    The Return of the ‘High-Class Hotel’

    When the repeal of Prohibition came in 1933, he rejoiced. No hotel man was more excited by the prospect of liquor coming back on the menu again. He declared that Prohibition had destroyed American appreciation for wine—and really any liquor that did not come from a bathtub. Now, a “new generation will have to learn all over again how to drink.” He intended to outfit The Pierre with a wonderful cellar to teach them. He planned gala celebrations. People could now gather for cocktails at his newly opened supper club, the Corinthian Room. He promised, “The next few years will see the rejuvenation of the high-class hotel.” 

    A young woman enjoys the luxuries of room service at The Pierre in 1943.
    Getty Images

    He was correct. But sadly, Charles Pierre would never see the heights to which his hotel would climb. He passed away in 1934 at the age of 55 from appendicitis. He was too weak from an abdominal infection to be saved by medicine flown in from Florida in what was described as a “13-hour airplane race against death.”  

    But his legacy lived on in The Pierre Hotel.

    Bettmann Archive Joan Crawford at The Pierre on January 22, 1959.

    Celebrities like Joan Crawford and Claudette Colbert would flock there, as well as younger disciples. By 1938, following her father’s death, the 13-year-old heiress Lucetta Cotton Thomas was spending $1,416 a month (approximately $32,000 today) to live at the hotel. Eloise at The Plaza had nothing on her. By that time, the hotel belonged to oilman John Paul Getty, who quipped that it was his “only above-ground asset.” 

    In 1944, the hotel—and the room prices—were the subject of scandal. It was found that munitions manufacturer Murray Garsson had housed and paid the hotel bills for key personnel in the army’s Chemical Warfare Service in what was known as “Operation Pierre.” In 1942, the decorator Samuel Marx had redone the hotel’s dining room in red, white and blue, and commissioned murals of early American life for the Grill Room, so it was certainly a patriotic wartime pick. However, officers knew that, when traveling to New York City, they had a $6 daily stipend. As even young Lucetta Cotton Thomas could have told them, rooms at the Pierre cost somewhat more. Garsson may have received $78 million in government contracts, but was imprisoned for bribery in 1949. Still, no one at the trials said that they did not like staying at The Pierre.   

    Bettmann Archive Ginger Rogers gets her Daiquiri-toned French lace dress fitted by its designer, Richard Meril, in preparation for the “Prestige Award from France” fashion show at The Pierre Pierre.

    1950s Glamour and The Birdcage Bar

    By the 1950s, the hotel had reached new heights of glamour. Chief among the novelties was The Birdcage, a plexiglass bar suspended above the rotunda. It was splashily advertised as “a rendezvous for cocktails.” Charles Pierre, who once prophesied that people would flock to his hotel for drinks, would have been pleased.  

    In the coming years, the hotel would not only be home to the city’s toniest citizens, but Hollywood royalty. Joan Blondell noted that, when her dog “gave birth to seven puppies, the manager of the Pierre hotel assisted the vet in delivery.” Audrey Hepburn stayed there throughout the filming of that quintessential New York movie, Breakfast at Tiffany’s. During those years, she was feted at the hotel with a gala hosted by Countess Alexandra Tolstoy. The meeting would inspire one of her future roles in War and Peace.  

    Audrey Hepburn, who won Hollywood’s Academy Award for her performance in the film “Roman Holiday,” is ecstatic after finally receiving her Oscar at a special ceremony in at The Pierre. Sharing her enthusiasm is fellow winner William Holden
    Bettmann Archive via Getty Images

    The fact that in 1958 the hotel became a co-op, where guests could buy apartments, only added to its appeal. Especially as those apartment owners included Aristotle Onassis and Elizabeth Taylor, the thought of visiting New York from Middle America may have been exciting on its own. The thought of running into Elizabeth Taylor in the lobby of the hotel you were staying at was almost overwhelming.

    Penske Media via Getty Images Bill Buckley and Nan Kempner at an annual gala held at The Pierre.

    Jewel Heists and Fashion Royalty

    By 1967, the hotel underwent a transformation also fit for royalty. The new owner, Peter Dowling, commissioned Edward Melcarth to paint the rotunda’s iconic trompe l’oeil mural. Inspired by 17th-century palaces, Melcarth claimed that he wanted to “make people feel very special and important when they walk into this room. The figures are heroic in scale because I want to rehumanize man as an individual. We’re not digits on a computer card.” The people in the mural, accordingly, were not confined to the past. The painting features columns and Greek gods in recline, alongside “a hippie boy and mini-skirted girl” meant to depict a modern Adam and Eve. Rather to her surprise, Melcarth’s mural also boasted a depiction of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. (Kennedy asked to be removed from the picture. Melcarth accommodated by partially disguising her, but a discerning visitor can still spot her image.)

    Pat Nixon leaving The Pierre to go shopping.
    Penske Media via Getty Images

    Visitors would get a less agreeable thrill when burglars broke into the hotel on January 2, 1972. On that day, four reportedly well-dressed gunmen pulled up to the hotel in a limousine. They handcuffed a variety of employees and guests. After, they proceeded to clean out 47 safe deposit boxes containing approximately $3 million in jewels, before departing, again, in a limousine. The men were arrested within a week, and the jewels recovered, though police recalled it as being one of “the biggest and slickest hotel robberies ever.”

    Penske Media via Getty Images Karl Lagerfeld at The Pierre in the 1970s.

    The flurry of reportage around the jewel theft only increased the hotel’s allure to the fashionable set. In 1970, the designer Karl Lagerfeld, a habitué of the hotel, would say, “I discovered New York from The Pierre . . . Distances in the city were measured only by how far they were from The Pierre.” He did not have to go far to see his friends. Givency, Yves Saint Laurent and Valentino were all regulars—Valentino even bought St. Laurent’s Pierre apartment in 2007. 

    Getty Images Andy Warhol outside of The Pierre in 1985.

    Pat Nixon, not to be outdone by Jackie, had designers bring their creations to her while staying in a suite at the hotel. In 1975, Betty Ford went to see the first Chanel Fashion show in the country, held, predictably, at the hotel Coco herself had loved. By 1976, Jackie Kennedy was on the premises once more, this time with Valentino for his show benefiting the Special Olympics. Television Dynasty star Joan Collins showcased her hats at the hotel in 1985, with Andy Warhol in attendance. The hats were lovely, but did prompt a reporter to wonder, “When, besides for lunch at the Pierre, would someone wear a large straw hat?” This seemed as much an inducement for many to lunch at The Pierre as it was for them to do away with hats.

    Getty Images Richard Nixon at The Pierre in January 1969.

    The Pierre on the Silver Screen

    By the 1990s, the hotel again found itself connected to Hollywood, although this time in front of the scenes. Al Pacino twirled in The Pierre ballroom for the famed tango scene in 1995’s Scent of a Woman. The penthouse served as the Anthony Hopkins character’s home in 1998’s Meet Joe Black. And, following the $100 million renovation The Pierre underwent in 2013, it was featured in the heist movie Ocean’s 8. Considering its legacy, there could certainly be no more fitting hotel for a film about a group of well-dressed female jewel thieves. 

    Jacqueline Kennedy with American diplomat/businessman Sol Linowitz outside of The Pierre.
    Penske Media via Getty Images

    Ron Galella Collection via Getty Dionne Warwick and Burt Bacharach at The Pierre.

    Today, the hotel is celebrating 95 years, an admirable accomplishment in a city where new establishments seem to pop up nightly. Perhaps part of its success has to do with the respect its owners have shown towards its storied legacy. Right now, the restaurant offers a tribute to Auguste Escoffier, and the mural, lovingly repainted in 2016, ensures that the rotunda is considered one of the most romantic rooms in New York. The details and owners may have changed, but The Pierre remains as glamorous and beloved as it was by those long-ago debutantes and Charles Pierre Casalasco himself. 

    Getty Images A view from Central Park of the Pierre (left) and Sherry Netherland hotels on Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York City. Both buildings were designed by Schultze and Weaver.

    Jennifer Ashley Wright

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  • Daniel Brühl On The Time He Swerved A Karl Lagerfeld Photo Shoot & Becoming A “Fearless” Actor

    Daniel Brühl On The Time He Swerved A Karl Lagerfeld Photo Shoot & Becoming A “Fearless” Actor

    Daniel Brühl has recalled the time he swerved a Karl Lagerfeld photo shoot two decades before playing him in the eponymous Disney+ series that airs out of competition at tonight’s Canneseries.

    The BAFTA-nominated Rush star met the fashion icon in the early noughties but it has had a long lasting effect on him, and he was later to discover that this was true in the reverse.

    Speaking to Deadline on the day of the Becoming Karl Lagerfeld premiere, the German-Spanish actor detailed how he was taking part in a photo shoot at the Berlinale right after announcing himself on the world stage with his critically-acclaimed performance in Wolfgang Becker’s Good Bye, Lenin!.

    “There was this Karl Lagerfeld photo shoot and all the German actors were stood together cramped like sausages and my Spanish pride kicked in, and I just thought, ‘This is embarrassing’,” Brühl explained. “But [Lagerfeld] saw it out the corner of his eye and gave me a nod and smile as if to say, ‘That’s cool’.”

    The pair spoke later, Brühl added, with Lagerfeld making a “young and nervous” Brühl feel at ease. Two decades on, Brühl’s German publicist was looking for images Lagerfeld took from that time and discovered that Lagerfeld had seen Good Bye, Lenin!.

    “He didn’t mention this to me [when I met him] but after those photos were taken he realized he had watched Goodbye Lenin and said, ‘I’m a fan of this boy’,” added Brühl.

    Becoming Karl Lagerfeld is set in 1972, prior to Lagerfeld taking the fashion world by storm but when he was a ready-to-wear designer, unknown to the general public. While he meets and falls in love with the sultry Jacques de Bascher (Théodore Pellerin), an ambitious and troubling young dandy, the most mysterious of fashion designers dares to take on friend and rival Yves Saint Laurent (Arnaud Valois), a genius of haute couture backed by the redoubtable businessman Pierre Bergé (Alex Lutz).

    The portrayal was made trickier by the fact that Lagerfeld – who died in 2019 – lived a life of “contradiction,” Bruhl explained, and often told lies about his private life, such as regularly altering the year of his birth.

    “I only met him once and I really just met the persona he created,” Brühl said. “I wanted to crack through that shield and find out who the person was.”

    In order to do this, Brühl read three biographies, which admittedly “all contradicted each other,” found old interviews of Lagerfeld and spoke to people he had been close with in Paris.

    Becoming a “fearless” actor

    Becoming Karl Lagerfeld. Image: Disney+

    The 45-year-old star, whose back catalog includes All Quiet on the Western Front and Inglourious Basterds, is conscious that his portrayal of the icon may be met with disapproval. But he said he has learned to embrace criticism over the years and is prepared for people to react by saying, ‘Eurgh, Karl Lagerfeld wasn’t like that.’

    “The danger is something that thrills me,” he added. “The safety belt and driving at 20 to 30 kilometres has become a bit boring and I have become more fearless. David Bowie said if it is slightly outside your comfort zone and if your instinct tells you then you can get there somehow. There are some parts I would not accept if the weight felt too heavy but in this case I had the feeling that somehow, eventually, I will find something.”

    On how Lagerfeld would have responded to the series, Brühl said he imagines a cool reaction of, ‘Oh it’s great that you’re playing me,’ with Lagerfeld’s “trademark sense of humor.” But “the only question is whether I would have believed the answer or not,” he added.

    Next up for Brühl is Sam Mendes and Armando Iannucci’s HBO series The Franchise, which returns to filming in London after being paused due to the U.S. labor strikes.

    Becoming Karl Lagerfeld will screen tonight out of competition at Canneseries and was preceded last night by Kyle MacLachlan and Ella Purnell-starrer Fallout. Later in the week, Michael Douglas’ Benjamin Franklin biopic for Apple TV+ will take center stage.

    Max Goldbart

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  • The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

    The Met Gala 2024 Theme, Explained

    Every year, on the first Monday in May, comes the most exclusive party of the year: The Met Gala.
    VogueEditor-In-Chief Anna Wintour hand-picks the creme-de-la-creme of the highest profile celebs — a coveted who’s who list of exciting new names and A-listers alike. Together, these celebs congregate at New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art donning (literally) their Monday best.


    On the surface,
    the Met Gala is a fundraising event hosted by Vogue to raise funds for the Met Museum’s Costume Institute. You have to be invited to attend (normally by a brand or by Anna herself), and what goes on inside the elusive Met Gala is one of fashion’s best-kept secrets. What happens at the Gala, truly stays at the Gala.

    @metmuseum DYK: When garments enter The Met collection, they can no longer be worn on the human body. So how can we understand the movement and energy of these masterpieces of fashion? This May, explore 250 pieces from The Met’s Costume Institute collection in “Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion,” opening to the public on May 10 and celebrated at the 2024 Met Gala on May 6. Join us to see them spring to life. 🌿 🌸 🌊 #ReawakeningFashion #TheMetGala ♬ original sound – The Met

    Today, the buzz around the 2024 Met Gala officially begins with the announcement of the theme: Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion. And, like with
    any Met Gala theme, this needs a bit of explanation.

    What Does Sleeping Beauties: Reawakening Fashion Mean?

    In collaboration with the Costume Institute, every Met Gala also comes with an exhibit at the Met that’s curated to emulate the year’s theme. This year, 250 rare items from the Costume Institute’s permanent collection will be featured — including designs from Schiaparelli, Dior, and Givenchy.

    “Sleeping beauties” refers to the pieces that are so rare that they can only be worn once. Some of these “sleeping beauty” gowns, like an 1877 Charles Frederick Worth gown, will be shown via CGI and AI virtual showcasing.

    It’s an all-encompassing theme spanning over 400 years of fashion. The exhibit itself will have three “zones” dedicated to land, sea, and sky, according to Andrew Bolton, Wendy Yu Curator in charge of the Costume Institute.

    What Can We Expect People To Wear At The 2024 Met Gala?

    While your mind may have gone straight to Disney’s
    Sleeping Beauty, the Met Gala is going to be leaning heavy into how fashion and nature coincide. These pieces on display have been sitting in the Met’s collection for eons, some can’t even be hung upright or they’ll disintegrate.

    Since many of these clothing artifacts were made with natural materials (like a bodice made from peas in a pod), you will expect to see this mimicked in attendees’ attire. Sure, there will be 1800s-inspired gowns and lace appliques…but remember: nature is emphasized.

    People are thinking of florals and birds, as the exhibit will feature both a black tulle dress embroidered with blackbirds and an Alexander McQueen jacket inspired by Alfred Hitchcocks’
    The Birds. But everything nature has to offer — nothing’s off the table! We might see snakes and leaves and everything in between.

    And while we don’t know the hosts, or the guests, quite yet…we’re looking forward to this theme and hope we can reawaken the excitement of the Met Gala after some lackluster showings in the past few years.

    Jai Phillips

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  • After the Met Gala Red Carpet, the Night’s Top Beauty Artists Dish at Mr. Chow

    After the Met Gala Red Carpet, the Night’s Top Beauty Artists Dish at Mr. Chow

    Twenty-five blocks south of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, at the waning end of another long first Monday in May, a lively offshoot of the 2023 Met Gala is just getting started. The setting is Mr. Chow, the swank Chinese restaurant that Michael Chow opened on 57th Street in 1979—two years after nearby Studio 54, and four years before Karl Lagerfeld’s debut collection for Chanel. As for the guests, trickling in from the Upper East Side, they are the definition of glamour itself. Hairstylist Sam McKnight, in town from London, has just teased Kate Moss’s blonde lengths. Erykah Badu’s sublime energy is still radiating through Jawara, who styled hair for the musician and her daughter, Puma Curry. Angela Levin, responsible for Nicole Kidman’s makeup, watched the actress slip effortlessly into the same dress she wore for her 2004 Chanel No. 5 campaign. The two talents behind Gisele’s bombshell look—David von Cannon on hair, Georgi Sandev on that incandescent face—are here too, along with a sizable contingent of the beauty industry’s top tier. In lieu of a bustling coat check, suitcase-size kits are tucked into a quiet corner of the bar.  

    Dinner in full swing at Mr. Chow.

    By David Benthal/BFA.com.

    The occasion is the Met artists dinner, a tradition set in motion nearly a decade ago by makeup artist Troy Surratt. “The idea was born out of the fact that this is really one of the most glamorous events to happen annually in New York City, and it put a lot of our friends and colleagues all in the same place at the same time,” says Surratt, soft-spoken and silver-haired in a white button-down and Chanel necklace—a nod to the Costume Institute’s Karl Lagerfeld exhibition. It’s rare to have a quorum in this business, when beauty teams usually consist of a single makeup artist and hairstylist, like two oppositely charged ends of a battery. By contrast, the crowd at Mr. Chow feels like a cross-generational yearbook come to life. “It’s the greatest people ever—past, present, and future, everybody in one room,” says Sarah Brown, executive director of Violet Grey’s Violet Lab, who brought the beauty platform onboard as a co-sponsor in 2022. Augustinus Bader, the industry’s skin care darling, is supporting this year’s dinner as well. “What I love about the evening is these are real working people,” says Brown, a former Vogue beauty director with a deep appreciation for behind-the-scenes legends. She paints a Mission: Impossible kind of picture: “They are literally in a van outside the Met, waiting to see if fill-in-the-blank Oscar winner needs her ponytail fluffed up before the after-party.”  

    Makeup artist Troy Surratt and Violet Grey’s Sarah Brown.

    By David Benthal/BFA.com.

    Mr. Chow marks the intermission between red-carpet prep and after-party touchups: a refueling for gossip and Champagne and chicken satay. Makeup artist Sam Visser (who looked after Balenciaga’s Demna) and Raoúl Alejandre (behind Nicola Peltz Beckham’s crisp cat eye) catch up on the upstairs balcony. Colorist Jenna Perry recaps her handiwork (Maude Apatow’s copper; rich brown on Karlie Kloss) and shouts out Florence Pugh’s fresh buzz cut by the “amazing” Peter Lux. “That woman is striking,” Violet Grey founder Cassandra Grey agrees, nodding in her shearling Chanel jacket: “You have to have the right head shape.” Facialist Lord Gavin McLeod-Valentine, who bookended his day with Kim Petras and Olivier Rousteing, clinks glasses with Milk cofounder Mazdack Rassi, sending out a splash of Mexican martini. “I’m just excited for King Charles’s coronation, okay?” he quips—and in fact he’ll be a Today show commentator for this weekend’s occasion, beaming in bright and early from LA. Zanna Roberts Rassi, recovering from three-and-a-half hours of live coverage for E!, scrolls through her phone, filled with dress sketches and archival images—weeks’ worth of prep for red-carpet commentary. “I actually wish I had been in this room before I went on air,” she exhales, “because my gossip would have been so much better!” Hairstylist Mara Roszak spent the day with Olivia Wilde (“a goddess through and through”), while Adir Abergel perfected the shag on Lagerfeld muse Kristen Stewart, a regular in his chair since the first Twilight movie. Fara Homidi, whose handsome new makeup line is a topic of conversation, describes the glam for her friend Paloma Elsesser—“a dirty cat eye, with antique Swarovskis that I placed in random spots”—as an all-day affair. “It was like, makeup, hair, makeup, hair, eat some food, hang out, laugh a lot,” she says. “Then we took her to the red carpet, and then we came here!”

    Laura Regensdorf

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  • Inside the Met Gala: A furry feline star, a tardy Cinderella

    Inside the Met Gala: A furry feline star, a tardy Cinderella

    By JOCELYN NOVECK

    May 2, 2023 GMT

    Jared Leto was looking for a place to hang his hat. Er, actually his head.

    Leto was walking around the cocktail reception at the Met Gala, not long after his big entrance on the carpet as Choupette, designer Karl Lagerfeld’s famous cat, in a full-on white fur suit with very real-looking eyes. Once inside cocktails, it was too hot to keep the whole suit on, but he would not abandon the head.

    Some friends wanted to check out the head, carried like a war trophy. Rami Malek, for example, and director Taika Waititi, who tried it on.

    But what would happen at dinner? Leto said he was going to “find a nice quiet seat, so that Chou Chou can take a little rest.”

    And so it went at the Met Gala, where an Oscar-winning actor carrying a huge cat head seeking a nap still had to compete with lots of other things, and people, and clothes, for attention.

    Here are some moments and scenes from inside Monday’s Met Gala:

    A LOT TO RECYCLE

    As guests entered the Metropolitan Museum’s Great Hall, they passed a towering centerpiece — flanked by an orchestra playing tunes — and then climbed the huge staircase up to the receiving line, with hosts Anna Wintour, Michaela Coel, Penéope Cruz, Dua Lipa and Roger Federer awaiting. Last year, the centerpiece and staircase were carpeted with bright pink roses — 275,000 of them. This time it was recycled water bottles. Met officials estimated the number at 100,000, obtained from a recycling plant — and headed back to a recycling plant. It was the inspiration of exhibit designer Tadao Ando.

    REMEMBERING KARL

    Often, celebrity guests skip the exhibit and head straight to cocktails. This year, museum officials really wanted them to see the sumptuous show on Lagerfeld — so they helped things along by routing the crowd from the receiving line to the exhibit, with cocktails and dinner down one floor.

    The exhibit was indeed more crowded than usual during the gala, and one of the first to visit was Baz Luhrmann. The Australian director had worked with Lagerfeld on a Chanel No. 5 commercial starring Nicole Kidman and had fond memories, saying the designer was constantly working, learning, and creating. He also praised his smarts: “Too often we don’t celebrate the intellect.” He was wearing a high-collared, starched white shirt, part of Lagerfeld’s personal uniform, with his Thom Browne ensemble. He recalled visiting Lagerfeld at his home in Biarritz, where, he said. “there was a whole entire room of these shirts.”

    BROADWAY REUNION

    The Met Gala is filled with stars of film, music, sports, fashion and more, but Wintour also has a fondness for Broadway, and often invites actors from shows she loves to the gala. At this gala, a spot on one side of the airy Charles Engelhard Court became the site of a joyous reunion of Broadway actors. Among the group gathering, laughing and hugging were Josh Groban (“Sweeney Todd”), Phillipa Soo (“Camelot”), Ben Platt (“Parade”), and Jonathan Groff (“Merrily We Roll Along”). Soo called the party “wonderful and whimsical. I feel so lucky to be here with these artists and celebrate another artist.”

    For Platt, it was his fifth Met Gala, and he looked like he couldn’t believe his luck. “Anna is a huge champion of the theater!” he said. He added that this was his favorite gala because he was able to enjoy it with his friend and co-star in “Parade,” Micaela Diamond.

    AN EDUCATION IN FASHION

    Platt got a big greeting from Groban, who plays the murderous barber in “Sweeney Todd.” He was at his second Met Gala, and said he appreciated learning about Lagerfeld, the German-born designer who worked in luxury fashion for 65 years until his death in 2019. “It’s impossible when you get to an exhibit like this not to appreciate the impact and the inspiration and influence that he’s had on all forms of fashion,” he said. “This is very educational for me.”

    TENNIS, ANYONE?

    It’s also no secret that Wintour also loves tennis. She’s a fixture at the U.S. Open, and is especially close to Federer, the Swiss superstar who recently retired. A host this year, Federer said he was having a much more relaxed experience at his second Met Gala. “It’s a much more relaxed lifestyle now so you can also get really into it,” he said. “I could really look forward to it, prepare for it.” Federer strolled to dinner from cocktails alongside Serena Williams, who also recently stepped back from tennis, and announced her pregnancy at the gala along with husband Alexis Ohanian. Also at the gala was Mary Jo Fernandez, former women’s star and now commentator, who’d brought her college daughter as her date.

    AND SOME BASKETBALL

    NBA star Russell Westbrook, attending his third gala, said it was still amazing to meet “so many style icons” on fashion’s biggest night. But a key new face from the sport this year was Brittney Griner, who smiled at the cocktail reception when expressing how happy she was to be attending. On the carpet, the WNBA star spoke about helping support families working to free Americans jailed in foreign prisons through the organization Bring Our Families Home.

    LETO, STILL CARRYING THE CAT’S HEAD

    Actor Leto, never letting go of Choupette’s head, explained that his attachment to Lagerfeld (and the cat) was both personal and professional. “It was done with a lot of love,” he said of the costume. “I knew Karl. And one of the first times I met him I said ‘I am going to have to play you in a movie,’ and he said, ‘ONLY you my love, only you.’ And now we’re developing a film. I just feel that if Karl were here, and I saw Karl, in full Choupette glory, he would have the biggest smile on his face.”

    A CHANCE MEETING IN THE RAIN

    Many guests reflected on past associations with Lagerfeld — some of them only one-time encounters. Hugh Jackman explained while sampling the exhibit that he’d met the designer at a dinner and was struck by a man who never stopped, whose ethos was “Keep creating, keep creating, keep creating.” Also describing a one-time meeting was rapper Pusha T, like many decked out in Thom Browne, who said he encountered Lagerfeld in Paris, walking out of his store. “He was walking in, I was walking out. I was like ‘OMG Karl, I gotta take a picture.’ He was nice. He took the picture — and then said ‘Its raining on me, I’ve got to go!’”

    WAITING ON CINDERELLA

    The clock was soon to strike midnight, and Cinderella was yet to arrive at the ball. Well, it felt like midnight. It wasn’t just the crowds outside on Fifth Avenue or the crews on the red carpet that were waiting for Rihanna to show up. Inside the museum, while most guests were well into dinner, a hardy crew of wait staff, photographers, and museum staffers were waiting, too. They listened to screams outside, hoping it signaled Rihanna’s arrival — but in one case, it was a roach that caused the commotion.

    Finally, the singer showed up, past 10 p.m. as some guests were already leaving dinner. She posed inside in her dramatic Valentino ensemble in white, accompanied by partner A$AP Rocky in a kilt-type layer over jeans, then vanished down a hallway. But Cinderella had finally arrived, and everyone else could consider turning into pumpkins.

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  • It’s Met Gala time again — here’s what we know so far

    It’s Met Gala time again — here’s what we know so far

    NEW YORK (AP) — Last year, it took 275,000 bright pink roses to adorn the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the Met Gala, the biggest night in fashion and one of the biggest concentrations of star power anywhere.

    It remains to be seen how the museum’s Great Hall will be decorated on Monday, but one thing is not in question: those entering it will look spectacular. The theme centers on the late designer Karl Lagerfeld, who made an indelible mark on luxury fashion in his long career at Chanel, Fendi and elsewhere. It is a theme not without controversy — Lagerfeld was known for contentious remarks about everything from #MeToo to curvy bodies.

    Want to know what to expect now that the big day is here? Not to worry. We’ve dusted off our annual guide for you here, with some key updates.

    WHAT IS THE MET GALA ANYWAY?

    It started in 1948 as a society midnight supper, and wasn’t even at the Met.

    Fast forward 70-plus years, and the Met Gala is something totally different, one of the most photographed events in the world for its head-spinning red carpet — though the carpet isn’t always red.

    We’re talking Rihanna as a bejeweled pope. Zendaya as Cinderella with a light-up gown. Katy Perry as a chandelier morphing into a hamburger. Also: Beyoncé in her “naked dress.”Billy Porter as an Egyptian sun god, carried on a litter by six shirtless men.Lady Gaga’s 16-minute striptease. And, last year, host Blake Lively’s Versace dress — a tribute to iconic New York architecture — that changed colors in front of our eyes.

    Then there’s Kim Kardashian, bringing commitment to a whole other level. One year, she wore a dress so tight, she admitted she had to take breathing lessons beforehand. Two years ago, she wore a dark bodysuit that covered even her face. And last year she truly stole the carpet, showing up in Marilyn Monroe’s actual, rhinestone-studded “Happy Birthday, Mr. President” dress (borrowed from Ripley’s Believe It or Not! museum), changing the minute she got inside to protect it. There was controversy later over suspicions, denied by Ripley’s, that she’d caused some damage. But still — that was an entrance. (And, folks, she’s coming back — she posted a photo from Paris with Lagerfeld’s famous cat, Choupette, noting she was in the French capital scoping out possibilities for this year’s attire.)

    It’s important to note that the party has a purpose — last year, the evening earned $17.4 million for the Met’s Costume Institute, a self-funding department. Yes, that’s a heckuva lot for a gala. It also launches the annual spring exhibit that brings hundreds of thousands of visitors to the museum.

    But it’s the carpet itself that draws the world’s eyes, with the guest list — strategically withheld until the last minute — featuring a collection of notables from movies, music, fashion, sports, politics and social media that arguably makes for the highest celebrity wattage-per-square-foot of any party in the world.

    WHO’S HOSTING THIS YEAR?

    This year’s five hosts are drawn from television (Emmy-winning writer, actor and producer Michaela Coel ); the movies (Oscar-winning actor Penélope Cruz, who has worked with Chanel for more than 20 years); sports ( recently retired tennis superstar Roger Federer ); and music (Grammy-winning songstress Dua Lipa ). Finally there is Vogue’s Anna Wintour (do we need to tell you she’s in fashion?) running the whole thing as usual.

    IS THERE ALWAYS A THEME?

    Yes. As mentioned above, the theme is Karl Lagerfeld, and the exhibit, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” looks at “the designer’s stylistic vocabulary as expressed in aesthetic themes that appear time and again in his fashions from the 1950s to his final collection in 2019.” Once again, it has been created by the Met’s star curator, Andrew Bolton.

    DOES EVERYONE FOLLOW THE THEME?

    Not really. Some eschew it and just go for big and crazy. But expect some guests to carefully research the theme and come in perfect sync. It was hard to beat the carpet, for example, when the theme was “Heavenly Bodies: Fashion and the Catholic Imagination” and Rihanna came as the pope, Zendaya channeled Joan of Arc, and Perry navigated the crowd with a set of enormous angel wings. For Lagerfeld, the clothes may be a bit more, er, down to earth.

    HOW MUCH DO I HAVE TO PAY FOR A MET GALA TICKET?

    Wrong question. You cannot just buy a ticket. The right question is: If I were famous or powerful and got invited, how much would it cost?

    OK, IF I WERE FAMOUS OR POWERFUL AND GOT INVITED, HOW MUCH WOULD IT COST?

    Well, you might not pay yourself. Generally companies buy tables. A fashion label would then host its desired celebrities. This year, the cost has gone up, as it does every few years due to rising expenses: It’s now $50,000 for an individual ticket, and tables start at $300,000.

    SO WHO GETS INVITED?

    This year, there will be roughly 400 guests — similar to recent years but still lower than pre-pandemic highs of 500-600. Wintour and her team still get to approve every guest.

    Trying to predict? Take out your pen and jot down some of your favorite names, the buzzier the better. Newly minted Oscar winners, for example, are a good bet. Broadway is a special favorite of Wintour’s. She also loves tennis — this is not fashionable Federer’s first Met Gala. Now, cross everyone off your list except the very top. At this gala, everybody’s A-list.

    THAT MUST BE AN EXAGGERATION.

    Not really. Ask Tina Fey. She went in 2010 and later described walking around trying to find somebody “normal” to sit and talk with. That ended up being Barbara Walters.

    HOW CAN I WATCH?

    You can watch the whole carpet unfold on a Vogue livestream. If you’re in New York, you can also join fans across the street, behind barricades, on Fifth Avenue or even further east on Madison. Timothée Chalamet has been known to greet fans. And the AP will have a livestream of departures from the Mark Hotel, where many gala guests get ready.

    DO WE KNOW WHO’S COMING? AND WHO ISN’T?

    It’s secret. But reports slip out. You can count on various celebrity Chanel ambassadors showing up. Lively left some fashion fans disappointed when she revealed she’s not attending this year.

    WHAT HAPPENS INSIDE?

    Entering the museum, guests walk past what is usually an impossibly enormous flower arrangement in the lobby, with perhaps an orchestra playing nearby, and over to cocktails. Or, they head to view the exhibit. Cocktails are 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., but the most famous — or those who plan to make the biggest entrance — sometimes come (fashionably) later.

    Around 8 p.m., guests are summoned to dinner — perhaps by a team of buglers (“Are they going to do that between every course?” actor Gary Oldman asked aloud one year).

    IS IT FUN FOR EVERYONE?

    Occasionally, someone says no. Fey, in a comic rant to David Letterman in 2015, described the gala as a “jerk parade” and said it included everyone you’d ever want to punch, if you had millions of arms. Amy Schumer left early in 2016 and said later she felt awkward and like it was “a punishment.”

    SO THEY NEVER CAME BACK, RIGHT?

    Wrong. Schumer was back in 2017. And then last year again.

    Hey, this is the Met Gala.

    ___

    For more coverage of the 2023 Met Gala, visit https://apnews.com/hub/met-gala

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  • Met Gala 2023: The biggest, boldest looks to walk fashion’s finest red carpet – National | Globalnews.ca

    Met Gala 2023: The biggest, boldest looks to walk fashion’s finest red carpet – National | Globalnews.ca

    It was a night of glitz, glamour and wild sartorial selections as Hollywood’s most fashionable stars descended on the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City on Monday for the Met Gala.

    The theme of the evening’s annual fundraiser, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” was dedicated to the late fashion designer, who died in 2019.

    (The theme faced significant pushback from the fashion industry due to Lagerfeld’s occasional problematic views. He was known to make quips that were misogynistic, racist and fatphobic.)

    Despite the backlash, Lagerfeld’s contributions to fashion have been plentiful and attendees had no shortage of inspiration. He designed not only for his eponymous brand, but also worked with prominent fashion houses Chanel, Fendi, Balmain, Patou and Chloé.


    Click to play video: 'All the ‘Gilded Glamour’ and top looks from the Met Gala'


    All the ‘Gilded Glamour’ and top looks from the Met Gala


    The result was a feast of memorable moments with Anne Hathaway and Janelle Monáe providing particularly notable ensembles. Bad Bunny and Rihanna also turned out odes to Parisian fashion.

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    As expected, several stars took inspiration from Lagerfeld’s beloved feline, Choupette. Doja Cat arrived in a high-fashion, glittering look inspired by the white cat, while others like Jared Leto took a much more literal — and furrier — approach.

    There was even a bit of drama on the carpet this year, with both actor and director Olivia Wilde and Vogue China’s editor-in-chief, Margaret Zhang, arriving in the same dress designed by Chloé.

    The real fun of the Met Gala, at least for non-attendees, is judging the fashion of all of Hollywood’s biggest celebs. There was a special kind of irony this year as viewers around the world tuned in wearing sweatpants to watch an event in honour of the designer who notoriously despised the loungewear. (Lagerfeld once said, “Sweatpants are a sign of defeat.”)

    Whether you’re wearing sweatpants or not, let’s round up some of the most fun, elegant and outrageous looks of the night.

    Anne Hathaway

    Ashley Graham


    Kevin Mazur/MG23/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Brian Tyree Henry


    Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Lizzo

    Pedro Pascal

    Doja Cat


    Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Jared Leto

    Jessica Chastain


    Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images

    Kim Kardashian


    Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Bad Bunny

    Kendall Jenner


    Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Michelle Yeoh

    Jeremy Pope


    Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

    Janelle Monáe


    Taylor Hill/Getty Images and Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

    Cardi B


    Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images

    Sora Choi


    Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Lil Nas X


    Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Karl Lagerfeld

    Rihanna and A$AP Rocky


    Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

    Jenna Ortega

    Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse


    Kevin Mazur/MG23/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Billie Eilish

    Anna Wintour and Bill Nighy

    Margot Robbie

    Florence Pugh

    Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban


    Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Karl Lagerfeld

    Barry Keoghan


    Christopher Polk/WWD via Getty Images

    Gisele Bündchen

    Olivia Wilde and Margaret Zhang

    Olivia Wilde and Margaret Zhang wear the same dress, Wilde in white and Zhang in black. The dress is full-length with a gold motif in the middle and cut outs along the hips.


    Taylor Hill/Getty Images and Kevin Mazur/MG23/Getty Images for The Met Museum/Vogue

    Finally, one last honourable mention to A$AP Rocky, who appeared to forgo the event’s line at the door in favour of hopping the barrier onto the carpet (and using one unsuspecting woman’s face for balance).

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    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Michelle Butterfield

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  • Karl: The Last to Get the “Separate the Art from the Artist” Sanction

    Karl: The Last to Get the “Separate the Art from the Artist” Sanction

    Among the many pop culturally-attuned industries that have been oh so careful to shore up their displays of wokeness post-#MeToo is the fashion biz. Some would call the Met Gala the true Oscars of that particular business, despite no awards actually being given out. Nonetheless, it’s a time for A-listers in fashion, film, music and “influencing” to gather in their best, most over-the-top homage to whatever the theme might be. This year, it was, oddly enough: Karl Lagerfeld. Anna Wintour, who has co-chaired and organized the event for almost three decades, was obviously a friend of the man best known for resuscitating Chanel’s cachet during his long reign as creative director…that is, when he wasn’t best known for doling out some major verbal lashings. And, being that there’s a book and movie based on working for Wintour called The Devil Wears Prada, the editor-in-chief of Vogue is no stranger to being deemed polarizing and controversial herself. Though not nearly to the extent that Lagerfeld was…and is.

    Evidently, however, some of his more problematic views and comments weren’t enough to get him onto the “cancellation” list in this climate. Which perhaps only goes to show that, in death, everything is forgiven (just look at Michael Jackson, whose music is still played freely as though he didn’t have any pedophilic proclivities whatsoever). At the same time, not everyone has embraced this year’s theme—specifically named Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty (not to be confused with the 2011 theme: Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty). This includes the High Fashion Met Gala Twitter account. Although not associated with the Met Costume Institute or the Met Gala, their commentary on the event over the years has garnered forty thousand followers. Followers they were sure to declare their views about the theme to: “…we will not be celebrating this year’s Met Gala as our values don’t align with the selection of Karl Lagerfeld as the theme. We hope to celebrate with our community again soon.”

    In the meantime, they, like many others, will simply have to “deal with it”—as most orbiting the fashion industry had to whenever Lagerfeld engaged in one of his notorious outbursts. Usually aimed at critiquing body types that didn’t “fit the mold” (literally). To those who would complain about not seeing more inclusivity in the industry, Karl would provide such ripostes as, “You’ve got fat mothers with their bags of chips sitting in front of the television and saying that thin models are ugly. The world of beautiful clothing is about ‘dreams and illusions.’” Having also declared fashion as “the healthiest motivation for losing weight,” Lagerfeld himself dropped ninety-two pounds in the early 00s and released a cunty diet book inspired by that rapid physical transformation. This, too, seemed to give him further license to make generally unchecked comments about women’s bodies before a gag order had been placed on such forms of free speech. And some, of course, still secretly couldn’t agree more with Lagerfeld’s takes on the grotesquerie of being fat, and how it has no place in the world of high fashion.

    Embodying blatant tropes of gay male misogyny, Lagerfeld lived long enough to be able to add to his problematic list of female-aimed comments when asked what his thoughts were on making amendments to previously accepted comportment as a result #MeToo. To which he replied, “If you don’t want to have your pants pulled about, don’t become a model! Join a nunnery, there’ll always be a place for you in the convent. They’re recruiting even!” Lagerfeld’s sanctioning of sexually predatory behavior as par for the course to those who want to “succeed” is exactly the kind of thinking that has allowed it to flourish for so long without consequence.

    Naturally, Karl provides plenty of Psych 101 analysis in terms of being hateful toward others because he likely hated those qualities in himself (see also: Death Becomes Her and Beef). His continued assertions of being “working-class” as he rose through the ranks of high fashion, therefore the ranks of class, also likely stemmed from simultaneously loving and hating the vapidity of such an alternate realm. Wanting to cling to some semblance of “reality.” And yet, as his staunch views became increasingly antiquated in a world where Kim Kardashian’s curves were embraced and emulated (though Karl notoriously said in 2009 that no one wants to see curvy women on the runway), he seemed to want to have no grasp on the concept of “reality” anymore. As for Kardashian, who has no issue with problematic people or things (herself being a Blackfishing fiend, for a start), she was quick to re-emphasize her connection to Karl by posting photos of herself visiting Choupette ahead of the Met Gala.

    Indeed, Karl’s beloved Birman cat inspired the costumes of Lil Nas X, Jared Leto and Doja Cat for the night in question. Because perhaps focusing on his cat is easier than focusing on some of the more unseemly aspects of his personal life and personality. Thus, both Wintour and curator Andrew Bolton have reiterated in multiple interviews about the exhibition that its focus is on “the work.” It’s the phrase that keeps being repeated in an era during which few are actually still capable of separating “the work” from the person who created it. And yet, Karl appears to be getting that rare pass as he’s fêted by one of the premier institutions in fashion.

    To further mitigate the barrage of horrible things Lagerfeld had no trouble verbalizing, Bolton goes back to that Psych 101 theory by noting “…did he mean it? Or was it a deflection? I don’t know, it’s hard to know.” And, of course, for the sake of promoting this event, he likely really doesn’t want to know. Even the title of the theme, however, brings up an unpleasant subject matter: Karl’s myopic, often patriarchal vision of what constitutes beauty.

    By way of defense of the gala’s theme, Wintour additionally offered, “Karl was provocative, and he was full of paradoxes. And I think sometimes he would say things to shock, and not necessarily things that he believed in. Karl was a complicated man.” That word, “complicated,” having no place in a world of such black-and-white views at this point in time. Not to mention it does happen to be a word that serves as a pass to anyone who does or says unforgivable things. One could also call Kanye West a “complicated man.” Does that mean his work can still be celebrated and enjoyed after all the pain he’s caused? More and more, we can see that the answer, surprisingly, is yes. Because for all the posturing about wanting to stamp out anything or anyone problematic, it seems as though people are realizing how little that would actually leave behind. As for those groups Karl often maligned (e.g., non-thin people, Black people, Jewish people, etc.) who showed up to the event, well, perhaps it just proves that one’s principles can be easily bought off by visions of media coverage and clout increase. And with fashion being a tenuous network of interconnected tentacles, when one person—even if dead—gets cancelled, it can have far-reaching effects on multiple people’s money bag.

    What’s more, Karl being able to eke by with an honor like this is more telling of the fashion industry at large, and what it still ultimately represents, than anything else. And that is: exclusivity. Whether through sizeist or classist attitudes, there are so many ways to exclude people. To keep them from getting their greasy, overworked hands on the couture. Fashion tending to attract racist designers is no coincidence either (see also: John Galliano, miraculously forgiven for his sins). For it still behooves the industry’s bottom line to sell high fashion as something “aspirational” and “just out of reach.” While it might be an epoch of “democratization” for all mediums, fashion gatekeeping is what allows a magazine like Vogue to still even exist. And a man like Karl to be lauded even despite claims that it’s just about “the work.” But “the work” is always an extension of its creator.

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Rihanna Arrives Very Fashionably Late to Met Gala 2023

    Rihanna Arrives Very Fashionably Late to Met Gala 2023

    Rihanna‘s arrival at the Met Gala is always highly anticipated, her over-the-top looks solidifying her status as fashion icon. Her Met Gala 2023 look is no exception in her string of fashion wins: Rihanna and partner A$AP Rocky were the very last arrivals to walk the Met steps, but even showing up well after the official close of the red carpet didn’t stop her from nailing the evening’s theme.

    Rihanna arrived at the annual celebration wearing a dramatic white Valentino gown festooned with giant white sculptural flowers that swathed her torso, arms, and head, while A$AP wore a Gucci ensemble including a plaid kilt and a stack of belts around his waist. Rihanna kept up the Big Train Energy she’s demonstrated in the past: It’s a good thing she walked the steps solo, because there was so much skirt floating over the stairs that there may not have been room for the other A-listers. She capped off the look with white fingerless gloves—a favorite accessory of Lagerfeld’s—, white cateye sunglasses with mega-long false lashes attached, and, of course, the boldest, mattest, reddest lip you’ve ever seen. 

    By Theo Wargo/Getty Images.

    Earlier in the evening, she was spotted ducking into her hotel to get ready when most stars were already leaving for the red carpet, and the Twittersphere waited with bated breath as shots of her approaching the event while wrapped in a long fur coat began emerging ahead of her official outfit reveal.

    This year’s Costume Institute exhibit honored the work of late designer Karl Lagerfeld, who left an indelible mark on the fashion world. In his long career, Lagerfeld designed for Chanel, Chloé, Fendi, and more, including his eponymous line. For this year, guests were instructed to outfit themselves to a dress code defined as “in honor of Karl.” 

    While Rihanna showed up to the party itself fashionably late, she also celebrated early, in a way: On Saturday, two days before the Met Gala, she stepped out in an ensemble featuring heaps of vintage Chanel designed by Lagerfeld himself. “Not even Monday,” she captioned the photos on her Instagram

    Instagram content

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    Rihanna first attended the Met Gala in 2007, shortly after her song “Umbrella” topped the pop charts. It was her appearance in 2015 in a canary yellow ballgown by Guo Pei that cemented her status as a must-see at the annual event, even though she once admitted that she felt like a “clown,” and worried before getting out of the car that everyone would laugh at her. Of course, that wasn’t the case, as she topped the year’s best-dressed lists. Since then, she’s continued to crush the carpet: She wore a bedazzled Pope hat in 2018 and an absolute architectural wonder in 2017, to name just two. 

    Make sure to follow along with Vanity Fair for all the red carpet looks from the Met Gala 2023.

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    Kase Wickman

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  • Met Gala 2023: Priyanka Chopra twins with Nick Jonas in Valentino black and white slit gown; WATCH

    Met Gala 2023: Priyanka Chopra twins with Nick Jonas in Valentino black and white slit gown; WATCH

    Actress and global star Priyanka Chopra is known for her stunning looks on the Met Gala carpet and this year is no surprise with her adding another lovely look to her diverse fashion portfolio. The 40-year-old made an appearance at Met Gala 2023 with her singer-songwriter husband Nick Jonas, and here’s what she wore to the much-awaited event.

    Priyanka Chopra stuns in a black and white Valentino gown

    Chopra wore a thigh-high-slit black and white Valentino gown with a dramatic trail at this year’s Met Ball. The actress wore white gloves and bell sleeves to dramatize the outfit as she strutted on the carpet with her husband. Jonas, on the other hand, kept it understated with a Valentino leather blazer, a white shirt, black pants, and a watch.

    ALSO READ: Priyanka Chopra CONFIRMS she will attend the Met Gala 2023; To join Alia Bhatt, who will make her debut

    The twinning couple twinned walked hand in hand on the carpet of the Met Gala as fans swooned over their looks. Chopra accessorized her dramatic look with Bvlgari jewelry including an 11-carat diamond necklace, earrings, and ear cuffs. The Citadel star completed her look with a unique side-parted bun. Chopra’s makeup artist posted a picture of the actress getting ready for the Gala and shared the thought behind the look.

    “I love this quote by Karl Lagerfeld and it inspired our beauty look tonight. ‘I love classic beauty. It’s an idea of beauty with no standard.’ Priyanka is incredibly glamorous, we wanted to lean into that with a classic and modern glam with gorgeous skin, fluffy lashes, a rose-toned lip and cheeks, and a classic winged liner,” Sarah Tano captioned the post.

    Chopra made her Met Gala debut in 2017 though she was also invited to the 2016 event but was unable to make it then. Her look at her debut appearance made waves as she wore a Ralph Lauren trench coat dress with a massive train and was listed as the best dressed on multiple fashion lists. She made an entrance with her now husband Nick Jonas sparking dating rumours. But the two were only making an appearance as clients of the same designer.

    In 2018, Chopra made it to the best-dressed lists once again as she wore a gorgeous deep ruby-red velvet gown and stunned the fans. In 2019, Chopra, who is known to always be on theme, upped the bar when she wore a customized and dramatic Dior gown. This year’s theme is ‘Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty’ in homage to the late fashion designer.

    ALSO READ: Priyanka Chopra, Nick Jonas go on a dinner date in New York ahead of Met Gala; Fans can’t wait to see them

    1136922

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  • “My First Thought Is, How Do I Honor Karl?”: Christine Chiu Preps for Her Met Gala Debut

    “My First Thought Is, How Do I Honor Karl?”: Christine Chiu Preps for Her Met Gala Debut

    We’re here to discuss her closet, but Christine Chiu seems more interested in mine. With what seems to be genuine enthusiasm, the Bling Empire breakout star and businesswoman asks me for a virtual look book of my outfits for Coachella—the music and arts festival that takes over the desert in Indio, California, every April. As it turns out, Chiu is pro-Chella, but what she is against is the increasingly casual sartorial approach of its A-list attendees. 

    “I think Karl would be disappointed,” Chiu says, referencing the former creative director of Chanel and Fendi, Karl Lagerfeld. 

    When we connect via Zoom, both Chiu and I are aligned in our choice of sequins: she in a structured overcoat (Chanel), me in a backless butterfly top (Amazon). The contrast is stark, but navigating contradictions is nothing new for Chiu. Without previous experience in the entertainment industry, she produced and starred in Netflix’s Bling Empire, the first reality show to feature an exclusively Asian core cast. She is the co-owner and cofounder of two aesthetic surgical clinics, Beverly Hills Plastic Surgery and the Regenerative and Anti-aging Institute of Beverly Hills. Her Dancing With the Stars bio (she appeared on season 30 in 2021) acknowledges her as one of the world’s youngest haute couture collectors, a notable feat considering its clientele usually find their foothold in middle age. Chiu, alternatively, was in her early 20s when she began her collection.

    Now, Chiu is not only a haute couture mainstay, but a powerful force in the fashion community. In June, she’ll host the West Coast Friends of the Costume Institute dinner, and she’s served on the boards of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s Costume Council and the Museum of Contemporary Art’s Contemporaries. She frequently receives exclusive invites from luxury fashion houses—even visiting landmarks like Louis Vuitton’s home in Asnières-sur-Seine and Coco Chanel’s Parisian apartment. Her relationship with Chanel is particularly special, as she commissions multiple made-to-order pieces that take between six to nine months to create. Eagerly, she follows the atelier’s progress via the brand’s app for couture clients. Sometimes, the seamstress, having worked with her for over 10 years, will surprise her, using metallic thread or attaching crystals. Over Zoom, Chiu unveils one of her more affordable garments, a “less labor-intensive” crepe-like skirt in an eggshell cream. She approximates couture’s starting price at 150,000 euros, which is around $166,000.

    Monday will mark her Met Gala debut, where Chiu’s love of Lagerfeld-led fashion houses will be on full display. She will donate up to 10 couture pieces from her archive to the Costume Institute and will be rewearing one of her most treasured Chanel couture gowns for the occasion, complete with a 65-pound cape. It’s the first time the gown will leave her temperature-controlled closet since she wore it to meet then Prince Charles, and she selected it tonight to honor Lagerfeld. It’s no Amazon sequin butterfly top, but it will do. 

    In the days leading up to the Met Gala, Vanity Fair spoke with Chiu about her relationship with fashion, her extensive haute couture collection, and what it’s like to see her late friend Lagerfeld honored in such a way. 

    The below interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. 

    Vanity Fair: We know now that every fashionista has an origin story, what’s yours?

    I grew up very much starved from fashion. My father was a big collector of Issey Miyake, my mother collected Chanel. But being an only child, they wanted me to be very studious so they kept me at schools that only had uniforms. So I lived in a very black and white world, while I tried to play in the shades of gray. I was almost suspended for taking my uniforms to a local tailor and having them reconfigure my skirts or my pants. It was really in college, in Malibu, where I really got to play. I approached fashion as a way to understand culture, and community. I feel like through fashion – as with any other traditional forms of art – it keeps the conversation going and going.

    It’s cultural commentary. 

    Exactly. It’s influenced by the politics and pop culture of the time. We’re in a woke era now, right? So many things that they were able to get away with back then, we can’t now — with fur being at the top of the list, which was so much a part of Karl at Fendi. I think fashion is my encyclopedia, my entry into the world.

    Beatrice Hazlehurst

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  • High Fashion Meets Fast Fashion: H&M’s Collab With Mugler

    High Fashion Meets Fast Fashion: H&M’s Collab With Mugler

    One of the most elusive parts about luxury fashion brands like Louis Vuitton, Mugler, or Dior is that they don’t produce their clothing in a timely manner with cheaper fabrics to fit trends. They dictate the trends, while fast fashion brands like Shein, Forever 21, and H&M rush to copy them. Fast fashion is always more affordable, but is equally guaranteed to fall apart within three washes.


    Mugler is known for their architectural style. Think corsets, broad shoulders, and cinched waists – it’s about illusions and futuristic looks, and Thierry Mugler’s visions have been worn by celebrities like Cardi B and Bella Hadid on red carpets and runways across the world. And now, they’ve decided to collaborate with fast fashion’s finest: H&M.

    It’s a bit of a peculiar mashup that doesn’t quite make sense. While I love the preview of the H&Mugler collection, which drops May 11, I can’t help but wonder why it’s happening. First of all, fast fashion is controversial on its own. Bad for the environment, bad conditions for their workers, bad materials, bad everything.

    But to attach Mugler’s precious luxury name to fast fashion is eyebrow-raising. H&M has some of the lowest-priced clothing available in your local mall, while Mugler is often sold in standalone stores surrounded by Gucci and St. Laurent buildings. However, for this collection, they’re said to be meeting in the middle, price-wise.

    Mugler’s creative director Casey Cadwallader has designed the collection to stay true to Mugler while bringing it into the homes of those who can’t normally afford the brand’s steep pricing.

    “I was determined for this collection to be true Mugler. The details and quality of every piece had to be exactly as we do them, and I wanted to showcase the energy of Mugler, which has always been about clothes that allow for personal liberation. You can be so many different versions of yourself in Mugler.”

    This collaboration isn’t that surprising for H&M, who has had several successful luxury collaborations in the past with brands like Karl Lagerfeld, Versace, and Kenzo. For this Mugler collab, H&M was looking to hone in on the silhouette-hugging, confidence-inducing Mugler classic look.

    “We are proud to celebrate the legacy of Manfred Thierry Mugler with this collection,” says Ann-Sofie Johansson, creative advisor at H&M. “We were all honored to get to know Manfred, and it feels very special that he was involved at the initial stages together with Casey and the house of Mugler. Casey has done such an incredible job at paying homage to history, and to the archive while making the collection totally contemporary. Under him, Mugler has become one of the most innovative and exciting houses on today’s fashion landscape.”

    Thierry Mugler was a favorite among all celebrities. He returned from a 20-year hiatus in 2019 to create Kim Kardashian’s wet Met Gala look. After passing away last January, this collab is said to honor Mugler’s iconic looks in his memory.

    Jai Phillips

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  • Apple Martin Is Gwyneth Paltrow’s Lookalike In Paris Fashion Week Debut

    Apple Martin Is Gwyneth Paltrow’s Lookalike In Paris Fashion Week Debut

    Apple Martin appeared to fulfill a famed designer’s prophecy this week while making her Paris Fashion Week debut.

    Martin, the daughter of Academy Award-winning actor Gwyneth Paltrow and Coldplay singer Chris Martin, joined a bevy of stars at Chanel’s Haute Couture Spring/Summer 2023 show on Monday.

    The 18-year-old bore a striking resemblance to her famous mother in a black-and-white Chanel jacket and minidress. She was seated in the front row, alongside actors Lucy Boynton and Sadie Sink.

    Apple Martin at Paris Fashion Week.

    Stephane Cardinale – Corbis via Getty Images

    Also reportedly in attendance: director Baz Luhrmann, whose latest film, “Elvis,” nabbed eight Academy Award nominations itself the next day.

    Journalist Derek Blasberg shared a few behind-the-scenes photos that showed Martin happily posing with Boynton and Sink and, later, enjoying an intimate dinner on Instagram. In the accompanying caption, Blasberg noted that legendary Chanel designer Karl Lagerfeld, who died in 2019, had recognized Martin’s sense of style early on.

    From left: Sadie Sink, Lucy Boynton and Martin.
    From left: Sadie Sink, Lucy Boynton and Martin.

    Stephane Cardinale – Corbis via Getty Images

    “Karl Lagerfeld met Apple Martin when she was 4 years old and declared that one day she’d be a Chanel girl,” he wrote. “It happened today!”

    Blasberg’s photos drew a plethora of compliments from some of his famous pals, as well as a playful correction courtesy of Paltrow.

    “Actually, she was ONE,” the “Shakespeare in Love” and “Royal Tenenbaums” actor quipped in a comment.

    Martin, 18, bore a striking resemblance to her famous mother, Academy Award-winning actor Gwyneth Paltrow, in a black-and-white Chanel jacket and minidress.
    Martin, 18, bore a striking resemblance to her famous mother, Academy Award-winning actor Gwyneth Paltrow, in a black-and-white Chanel jacket and minidress.

    Stephane Cardinale – Corbis via Getty Images

    Predictably, Martin’s presence at the show prompted a number of media outlets to once again stoke the debate over so-called nepotism babies. The buzzy term, often abbreviated to “nepo babies,” has been used to derogatorily describe children born to rich, powerful or famous families, especially those who go on to enjoy success in a field one of their relatives also worked in.

    Compared to many of her contemporaries, though, Martin has mostly avoided the spotlight: Paltrow recently confirmed that her daughter began college last fall, but she hasn’t specified which school she’s attending or her field of study.

    With the 2023 Met Gala planned as a tribute to Lagerfeld’s work, only time will tell if Martin will once again fulfill her apparent destiny by attending the high-profile event in May.

    Paltrow recently confirmed that Martin started college last fall, but she hasn't shared her daughter's field of study.
    Paltrow recently confirmed that Martin started college last fall, but she hasn’t shared her daughter’s field of study.

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  • Don’t Pay Full Price: Best Sales Happening Right Now

    Don’t Pay Full Price: Best Sales Happening Right Now

    It feels like there’s literally always a sale…and I’m the first to miss it. Sure, I get millions of promotional emails from brands because I sign up for 10%-off-your-first-purchase offers all the time. But, that doesn’t mean I read them.


    However, there’s never a bad time to save money on my favorite products…or buy something I’ve been wanting for a while but couldn’t afford full price. Look, either way, a sale is a sale.

    When you are balling on a budget, your eyes should be constantly scanning the internet for those red letters indicating a big discount. Permanently set your search settings filter at “priced: low to high.” We’re looking for the cheapest possible price here – go ahead and cry if you find a lower price elsewhere after you buy.

    Artem Beliaikin via Unsplash

    If you’re like me, you have trouble finding this week’s hottest sale. In fact, you often only hear about them from your friends when it’s long over. And while I may not generally be the most credible source, I’ve taken the liberty of doing The Dirty Work.

    I’ve compiled a list of the best sales happening right now – so you can treat yourself. It’s post-holiday season so that arm-long laundry list of gifts to purchase for others is gone. That’s right…it’s time to start buying yourself silly little gifties again.

    Ulta

    Ulta

    Ulta is at the tail end of their Love Your Skin event, where you get half off skincare must-haves every day from some of the best brands. Wellness brands like Kitsch, The Body Shop, and Keys Soulcare are all 30% off as well.

    Here are my picks:

    FarFetch

    FarFetch has an insane sale with items up to 70% off. This gets you a designer item on mega-discount…Dolce & Gabbana, Off-White, Jimmy Choo, and Balmain for literally a fraction of the price? I’m in. Always.

    SSENSE

    Nike, Maison Margiela, Jacquemus, and Versace are current features on the SSENSE sale. Up to 70% off designer clothing – right now. You can most definitely treat yourself to luxury on this shopping trip.

    Zappos

    Hoka

    We love a good shoe sale, but scrolling through every website is a hassle. Zappos always has a solid selection of your favorite brands. This week’s sale choices do not disappoint.

    QUAY Sunglasses

    With 20% off your first purchase, QUAY already lands you a great deal off the bat. Right now they have 30% off two or more sunglasses. Plus, their sale section has deals close to 50% off.

    Abercrombie & Fitch

    Doesn’t Abercrombie have a sale every other day? But I’m here for it. Right now, it’s up to 50% off select sale items…that’s double the amount off the original price. Abercrombie has the best basics and has become the staple place to buy jeans. A rebrand to end all rebrands.

    Jai Phillips

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  • Introducing Your 2023 Met Gala Co-Chairs

    Introducing Your 2023 Met Gala Co-Chairs

    Forget awards season, don’t even think about NFL playoffs, fashion’s version of the Super Bowl just announced their co-chairs. May 1, 2023 marks the 75th Met Gala, where the top-of-the-top celebrities are invited to wear the most egregious outfits in the world – all for millions to critique.


    Today, Vogue announced that the annual fundraising gala for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute will be hosted by Penelope Cruz, Roger Federer, Michaela Coel, and Dua Lipa. And then . . . there’s Vogue’s leading lady, Anna Wintour. 2023’s Met Gala theme will be Karl Lagerfeld: A Line Of Beauty.

    Lagerfeld – who passed away in 2019 – was Chanel’s designer who contributed to their legendary black-and-white style. The Parisian influence will take over the Met Gala’s red carpet – one of fashion’s most highly anticipated nights.

    It comes as no surprise that Penelope Cruz will be co-chair for this year’s Met. Not only did she just receive her fourth Oscar nomination for Parallel Mothers, but she was one of Karl Lagerfeld’s Chanel muses.

    Gina Lollobrigida and Karl Lagerfeld

    APS-Medias/ABACA/Shutterstock

    The three other chairs chosen are currently at the pinnacle of pop culture: Dua Lipa’s rise to superstardom with Future Nostalgia, Roger Federer retired as one of the greatest tennis players in history, and Michaela Coel’s demand after his stellar role in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.

    The exhibit will showcase over 150 of Lagerfeld’s original looks – spanning 1950-2019. Lagerfeld notoriously sketched everything…and hated fashion on display. But from May 5-July 16, you’ll see some of his finest work with Fendi, Chanel, and Chloe.

    Jai Phillips

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  • The 31 Best Books Fashion People Read in 2022

    The 31 Best Books Fashion People Read in 2022

    Between the covers of any good book are pages that transport and enrich the mind of its reader. In 2022, leaders in the fashion industry turned to various texts to inspire their upcoming collections, deepen the knowledge behind their curations and find personal liberty within their identity.

    Major book releases swept the fashion community this year, like Editor-in-Chief of British Vogue’s Edward Enninful’s memoir, “A Visible Man,” in September. Other books like Safia Minney’s made an urgent call to regenerative fashion and a closer look at today’s fashion system. 

    Andrea Bossi

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