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Chanel channels golden age Hollywood in glitzy Paris fashion show

Oct 08,2020 - Last updated at Oct 08,2020

A model presents a creation for Chanel during the women's Spring/Summer 2020/2021 collection fashion shows in Paris on Tuesday (AFP photo by Stephane de Sakutin)

PARIS —Chanel went back to the timeless glamour of black and white Hollywood movies in its blockbuster show on the last day of Paris fashion week.

In its biggest catwalk spectacle on Tuesday since designer Virginie Viard took over the fabled French house from Karl Lagerfeld after his death last year, an army of the world's top supermodels walked under a huge Hollywood-style sign spelling out Chanel's name.

They included the body positive pin-up, Jill Kortleve, the Dutch model who is a voluptuous size 16.

COVID-19 restrictions may have limited the number of fashionistas allowed into the immense Grand Palais in central Paris, but like the decor, Viard wrote her ambitions large.

Her collection felt like no less than a grand sweep through the long history of the label founded by Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel, with a giant nod to Chanel's time in Tinseltown in the 1930s when she dressed stars like Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Marlene Dietrich and Gloria Swanson.

"I was thinking of actresses on the red carpet... some of whom we haven't seen in a long time... their faces a little somewhere else as the photographers call out to them," Viard said afterwards.

"And the fans behind the barriers, that very lively side of cinema outside cinemas, which I love," she added.

The show -- dominated by black and white interspersed with splashes of bold colour -- coincides with the first ever museum exhibition dedicated to Coco Chanel in the French capital, which opened last week to rave reviews.

 

Big screen glamour

Viard recreated and updated some of her most beloved looks, with a nod to her predecessor Lagerfeld's more street fashion sensibility with logos a gogo.

"Gabrielle Chanel and Karl Lagerfeld dressed so many actresses in their films and in their lives," Viard added. "They made us dream."

"Without redoing clothes exactly and falling into vintage, I wanted it to be very joyous and colourful and full of life."

With Paris fashion week forced largely online by the coronavirus, Chanel streamed the show live for fashion fans.

"Lights, cameras, action!" it declared on Instagram as it aped the opening of a silent black and white film, placing a huge Chanel sign on the Hollywood Hills.

Viard kept up the theme of the brand's long association with the silver screen with video clips of models reclining in luxury hotels like movie idols about to attend premieres.

On Instagram, it also ran clips of French screen goddesses like Jeanne Moreau, Anna Karina and the Vienna-born Romy Schneider wearing Chanel in classic movies.

The brand's association with Hollywood began in 1930 when studio mogul Sam Goldwyn begged Coco Chanel to come to Los Angeles to give his stable of stars some "class".

Chanel resisted at first even as Goldwyn offered her $1 million to come twice a year, before finally succumbing to his blandishments.

At a party to greet her, the great German director Erich von Stroheim clicked his heels before kissing her hand, declaring, "You are a seamstress, I believe?"

Chanel forgave his snobbery, saying, "Such a ham, but what style!"

By Fiachra Gibbons

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