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- <text id=93TT2452>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: Mais Oui, Oscar!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FASHION, Page 68
- Mais Oui, Oscar!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The first American to head a Paris couture house, Oscar De la
- Renta scores in his debut show
- </p>
- <p>By MARTHA DUFFY/PARIS
- </p>
- <p> It is Sunday in Paris, just three working days before the
- classic couture house of Pierre Balmain presents its spring
- collection to the fashion world. A lot is riding on this event:
- Balmain, long known for the sumptuousness and taste of its
- creations, has been hurt since the 1982 death of couturier
- Pierre Balmain by the inroads that ready-to-wear clothes have
- made on couture. The house needs a lot more sparkle to revive
- its sagging fortunes and prestige.
- </p>
- <p> The sewing rooms are teeming with the work that remains to
- be done at the last minute, which in the couture industry means
- virtually everything. Seamstresses are hunched over exquisite
- embroidery. Bodice? Belt? So far the delicate pieces have no
- discernible shape. The designer, a robust, immaculately
- tailored figure who seems to be everywhere yet remains cool amid
- the hubbub, warns two tailors not to put so many stitches in a
- vibrant aqua trench coat. "Every stitch can pull," he sighs.
- "Silk is a very hard fabric to tailor."
- </p>
- <p> In the main workroom staffers are looking at semi-finished
- garments on the house models. Everybody speaks up--about the
- width of a belt, the choice of footwear ("I hate those shoes!").
- Staring into the mirrors with the intensity of a dancer in a
- practice studio, the designer ponders. A filmy navy chiffon
- skirt gets an instant reaction: "Georgette." It seems that the
- diaphanous chiffon is too light; the slightly heavier georgette
- will hang better. So an order is placed with the fabric house
- in Italy. It will take 24 hours for delivery--if the fabric
- house has an acceptable navy.
- </p>
- <p> The designer is obviously the key to the entire
- enterprise, and in choosing one, Balmain has taken a major
- gamble. Not only is he brand new to the house, but he isn't even
- French. He's--mon Dieu!--an American. Oscar de la Renta, 60,
- the elegant, experienced hand who has practically cornered the
- U.S. market on splendid evening clothes, is the first American
- ever to take over a French couture business.
- </p>
- <p> Balmain's choice apparently signals a decision to keep its
- middle-of-the-road image. There are young French designers who
- look more to the iconoclastic creations of Jean-Paul Gaultier
- or Gianni Versace, others who are openly nostalgic for the
- glories of the past. Balmain's new man is unlikely to plunge in
- either direction. His talent lies in translating the traditional
- into the distinctly contemporary. He emphasizes wearable
- clothes, however luxurious they may be. If Balmain wants to
- catch up to the 1990s without leaping into the 21st century, the
- house made a very shrewd choice.
- </p>
- <p> Oscar, as everybody calls him, fits perfectly into the
- Balmain aesthetic. He is not an innovator--his few enemies
- call him a copyist--but he executes gorgeous costumes with a
- peerless eye for fabric, detail and nuance. He understands the
- exotic world of couture from his youthful years working for
- Balenciaga and Lanvin. His private life has provided him with
- a window into the life-styles of luxury. His first wife, who
- died several years ago, was Francoise de Langlade, editor in
- chief of the French Vogue. He is now married to Annette Reed,
- a daughter of the late metals industrialist Charles Engelhard.
- </p>
- <p> Born in the Dominican Republic, de la Renta has spent most
- of his adult life in New York City and became a U.S. citizen in
- 1971. He and his wife embody the ideal that wealthy, socially
- ambitious Manhattanites aspire to: a combination of grand luxe
- and good works. Annette is vice chairman of the board of
- trustees of the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Oscar is on the
- Metropolitan Opera and Carnegie Hall boards. With friends
- ranging from Henry Kissinger to Brooke Astor to Isaac Stern, the
- couple's evenings are a round of rarefied dinners and benefit
- galas. These days, de la Renta likes to retreat to his spread
- in northwest Connecticut, where his eight-year-old adopted son,
- a Santo Domingo foundling, lives. But the family is looking for
- a place in Paris too; one can put up at the Ritz for only so
- long.
- </p>
- <p> Roughly 36 hours to go before the collection has to be
- packed up for the defile, or fashion show. The action has picked
- up. The main salon is littered with piles of cartwheel raffia
- hats and with shoes that definitely were not made for walking.
- Almost none of the outfits is complete, but the runway models--pricey, preening, lovely--are arriving for fittings.
- </p>
- <p> Shalom, an Israeli who appears to be made of porcelain, is
- clearly de la Renta's favorite. "Shalom, Shalom, Shalom," he
- sings as he dances around her, pinning and adjusting. She is
- wearing the wedding dress that traditionally ends couture shows.
- De la Renta's gossamer touch with wedding dresses is so
- renowned that Pebbles Flintstone, Fred and Wilma's daughter, has
- chosen him to create the gown for her marriage to Bamm-Bamm
- Rubble (Feb. 7, abc ).
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly, Shalom's agency calls: she is overdue at
- Valentino's show, and "he is freaking." She is unimpressed;
- maybe Valentino does not sing to her. Her last costume is a sexy
- sheath with a deep decolletage. There is some consternation
- because she does not fill it. Perhaps another model should
- cruise the runway in this slinky number. "Are your tits as big
- as Kristin's?" demands one of the American assistants. More
- ruffled than she was by Valentino's summons, she whispers, "I
- think so."
- </p>
- <p> De la Renta seized upon the Balmain offer in part because
- he felt he needed a fresh challenge. He has certainly found
- one. The fashion world has been wringing its hands over the
- troubles of couture--handmade clothing fitted specifically to
- the customer's body--for more than two decades now. The
- creations are expensive: roughly $5,500 for a suit, $13,000 for
- a simple evening dress, up to $75,000 for a ball gown. To call
- the industry labor-intensive is a grand understatement. No
- couturier makes money out of the enterprise. As Pierre Berge,
- Yves Saint Laurent's business partner, puts it, "You lose money
- every day, and the more you sell the more you lose. There are
- just not enough customers."
- </p>
- <p> So why would Balmain be pinning such high hopes on De la
- Renta--or on anyone? Because the prestige and glamour of
- couture help a fashion house sell its more profitable
- ready-to-wear clothing, accessories such as scarves and jewelry,
- and perfume (on which Saint Laurent, among many others, has made
- millions). Some designers also sell their name in lucrative
- franchise deals involving goods like sheets and chocolates. Says
- de la Renta: "In the luxury business, couture is still the best
- way to create and sustain an image."
- </p>
- <p> Twenty minutes after the show was supposed to begin,
- little white panel trucks carrying the clothes are still
- threading their way through traffic. The defile gets started
- nearly an hour late. By that time, the covered courtyard of the
- Ecole des Beaux-Arts is jammed with the press and the fashion
- faithful--a tribute to the stir that de la Renta and Balmain
- are causing. On hand are a healthy number of designers and
- well-known customers: Valentino, Claude Pompidou, some major
- Agnellis and Rothschilds and a generous sprinkling of American
- celebrities, among them Marisa Berenson, Paloma Picasso, Mica
- Ertegun and Barbara Walters.
- </p>
- <p> The clothes are just what they should be: exquisite but
- distinctly unfancy, rich but wearable. American insistence on
- the contemporary, the focus on the way we live now, is the
- spirit of the show. The daytime suits, several in navy, manage
- to be both impeccable and just sexy enough.
- </p>
- <p> The assumption in France, though, is that while a designer
- makes daytime clothing, his real arena is the evening. In a very
- successful show, Christian Lacroix produced dazzling ball gowns,
- grand, inventive yet harmonious. Erik Mortensen, of Jean-Louis
- Scherrer, had a couple of extravaganzas worthy of an Edith
- Wharton parvenu. Compared with these flights into fairyland, the
- Balmain show is almost severe. De la Renta's gowns show the most
- exquisite materials and embroidery but are presented, as it
- were, in translation--to a modern idiom. The last-minute bolts
- of georgette appear in a series of elegant sheaths, delicately
- layered, that have the cool beauty of a waterfall. One knockout
- skirt is of raffia--the straw-hat material--that looks
- amazingly like embroidery.
- </p>
- <p> The week ended in triumph for De la Renta. After the
- defile, he and his assistants swept into Cafe de Flore for a
- celebratory lunch, and the whole room stood and cheered. Even
- better news awaited back at the atelier, where phones were
- jammed with clients ringing for fittings. The French press gave
- its blessing, predicting that the tasteful collection would
- ensure a steady clientele for Balmain. So the old house has been
- restored to life.
- </p>
- <p> Still, its savior faces the daunting prospect of endless
- encores: four Paris collections (including ready-to-wear) a
- year, plus two more for New York City. The day after his show,
- he was busy ordering shoes for the fall couture collection. How
- is it all possible? De la Renta is blase: "If a tycoon can run
- several companies, so can I."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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