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- <text id=90TT0912>
- <title>
- Apr. 09, 1990: Dressed To Kill -- And Die
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FASHION, Page 81
- Dressed to Kill--and Die
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As more and more designers succumb, AIDS takes a devastating
- toll on the fashion industry
- </p>
- <p> When Halston died last week at the age of 57, the first
- reports gave the cause simply as cancer. The designer's
- brother, Robert Frowick, however, quickly confirmed the rumors
- that for months had rippled through the fitting rooms and
- executive suites of the glittering haute couture world. The
- truth was that Halston, who introduced U.S. women to the
- pillbox hat, slinky jerseys, tunics and Ultrasuede, who dressed
- Betty Ford, Liza Minnelli, Jackie Kennedy Onassis and Elizabeth
- Taylor, and who partied hard with the best of the jet set, had
- succumbed to AIDS.
- </p>
- <p> The initial reluctance to name the cause of Halston's death
- was not unusual in the close-knit fashion industry. Broadway
- and Hollywood may have organized to combat the disease that is
- decimating their ranks, but the couture business--increasingly nervous about its image with consumers and
- investors, and struggling to find a new direction in a sluggish
- retail market--remains nearly silent about the disease that
- is carrying off some of its most famous names in their creative
- prime.
- </p>
- <p> And they are losses that resonate beyond the runway. Says
- writer Jonathan Moor, the biographer of designer Perry Ellis:
- "What is different about the fashion industry, compared to
- theater or film or music, is that the whole thrust of fashion
- is really under the influence of about ten major people in the
- world. Their ideas are the ideas that come down the runways at
- $10,000 a kick, which are within six months translated into
- something that comes out at J.C. Penney for $100. And those
- people are at risk."
- </p>
- <p> AIDS has thrown a cloud over the fashion industry. It is
- blurring the images that expensive clothing so carefully
- nurtures: beauty, health, vitality, success and, of course, sex
- appeal. The industry's creative energy is being dissipated--and diminished--by AIDS. Many designers are finding it more
- difficult to finance their lines; others complain they cannot
- get life or medical insurance. "The industry has been reticent
- to speak outwardly about AIDS," says Annie Flanders, founder
- of the trendy New York City-based fashion magazine Details and
- a board member of Design Industries Foundation for AIDS (DIFA),
- a group that assists sufferers. "It is terrified of the effect
- on business."
- </p>
- <p> The fashion industry is especially vulnerable to AIDS
- because it employs the talents of many gay men, from top
- designers to hairdressers, makeup people and assistant window
- dressers. It is impossible to gauge exactly how many
- AIDS-related illnesses and deaths have occurred in the fashion
- business, but among the stars who have been extinguished since
- 1986 are Perry Ellis, Angel Estrada and Willi Smith. Paris-based
- American designer Patrick Kelly died of a brain tumor in
- January, but some in the fashion world believe his death was
- AIDS-related. The death of Italy's Giorgio Sant' Angelo from
- lung cancer has also been the subject of gossip. Says
- Paris-based fashion critic Carol Mongo: "So many name designers
- are dying that one wonders what direction the industry will
- take over the next ten to 15 years."
- </p>
- <p> Every illness or absence fuels rumors in the industry. When
- Yves Saint Laurent was hospitalized for exhaustion last month
- and failed for the first time to appear at his Paris
- ready-to-wear show, there was some gossip of AIDS. But Saint
- Laurent has long suffered from a delicate constitution and is
- prone to overwork. Rumors that Calvin Klein had AIDS surfaced
- about seven years ago. Klein, who is married for a second time,
- strongly denied the rumors.
- </p>
- <p> Fashion businesses like Klein's make a sizable contribution
- to the U.S. economy. Total apparel and accessories sales last
- year accounted for $91.2 billion, making fashion one of the
- nation's major industries. American firms exported $2.6 billion
- worth of apparel, making up an important segment of the balance
- of trade. Many corporations and banks in both the U.S. and
- Japan are investing in fashion houses, providing needed
- operating cash and funding ambitious new projects. They are,
- says Barry Landau, a public relations executive and friend of
- Halston's, "buying motion picture companies or fashion houses.
- These are the glamour industries that give them good profiles
- and visibility."
- </p>
- <p> But AIDS is straining the relationship and causing some
- investors to look elsewhere. "We have looked into 20 or so
- creative companies where we have seen a real effect [of AIDS],
- and we're just going to stay away," says Howard Davidowitz, who
- owns a national retailing consultancy. "In a creative
- situation, you're really investing in one or two people. In a
- department store you may have a hundred vice presidents."
- Nonsense, says Frank Mori of Takihyo, a U.S. firm that owns
- 100% of the Anne Klein label, which is designed by Louis
- Dell'Olio, and 50% of the hot and successful Donna Karan line,
- "there is still as much risk of a name designer being run over
- by a car."
- </p>
- <p> Some fashion houses have thrived since their namesakes'
- deaths; others have struggled along. Chanel and Dior have
- prospered long after their originators passed on. The Perry
- Ellis lines continue, though on a more modest level, since the
- designer's death in 1986. His menswear and casual sportswear
- have done well, but the women's fashion business, a portion of
- the heart of any major couture house, has faltered. Williwear,
- Willi Smith's sports-clothes line, is doing a booming business.
- Says the designer's flamboyant sister Toukie: "There are
- hundreds of other talented young people out there, and the
- spirit can continue. And that's what's important, that the
- spirit does not die once the person is dead."
- </p>
- <p> Yet dealing with AIDS is clearly sapping fashion's creative
- energies. People are worried that co-workers will disappear
- into the hospital from one day to the next. In smaller
- ateliers, such twists of fate can demoralize the staff and
- derail a whole collection. In an effort to survive in the
- business, some men are reportedly getting married to cover up
- the fact that they are gay. Health and life insurers, as well
- as banks and financiers, increasingly demand that men, and even
- women, be tested for AIDS as part of fashion-business
- arrangements. Says designer Betsey Johnson: "I can't get life
- insurance. I can't open a door without getting an AIDS test."
- </p>
- <p> So far, the problem has not discouraged young people from
- entering the troubled industry. Applications to New York City's
- renowned Fashion Institute of Technology have remained steady.
- Says Richard Martin, dean of graduate studies: "Most people
- come into fashion really out of a fierce kind of devotion to
- it."
- </p>
- <p> Because of the concern about men's vulnerability to AIDS,
- women designers are attracting new interest from the financial
- community. New York designer Rebecca Moses, for one, has been
- approached by investors about expanding her line. Says DIFA's
- Flanders: "It's been notoriously frustrating for women to get
- the backing. Now investors are looking at women with very open
- eyes and in a very different way than they did before." The
- human cost of winning that new interest, however, is tragic.
- </p>
- <p>By J.D. Reed. Reported by Kathryn Jackson Fallon/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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