Early in March 2015, almost exactly four years since he
spontaneously combusted with a booze-fuelled, anti-Semitic rant in a
Parisian café, John Galliano presented his comeback collection on the
catwalks at the Grand Palais. His collection was called “Défilé” –
defiled? Spoiled? Violated? – and comprised 30 looks created for his new
employer, Maison Margiela.
There were neon makeup and accessories, Mary-Jane shoes and
fake-fur slippers, short skirts, long coats, patent finishes – most of
that more wearable than it might sound – and a few odd hobo-ish poses –
models scuttling down the catwalk clutching large handbags as if gripped
in a fit of consumption. At the end, two rounds of applause failed to
entice the designer – who used to appear in a blaze of costume and
posing at the end of all his shows – to take a bow at all. A new age of
Galliano had begun: his stealth period.
The show was actually Galliano’s second of the year. Before
Defile, January had seen a womenswear couture show in London, the
“Artisanal” collection, presented not only to press and buyers but also
supportive friends and fashion designers from Christopher Bailey from
Burberry to Alber Elbaz of Lanvin. The reviews were broadly positive; as
Plum Sykes of US Vogue says: “It was a very modern take on
couture, rather amazing. His clothes often make more sense when
photographed or taken apart … they looked beautiful in American Vogue.”
Hired in October last year by Italian-born Renzo Rosso to
head the hip Margiela brand founded by the Belgian Martin Margiela,
Galliano is undoubtedly back in the saddle. The fashion crowd wanted to
know whether his designs could successfully marry the frayed-hem,
plain-yet-arty aesthetic of Maison Margiela with his signature
flamboyant theatricality – or whether he would choose between the
axioms.
But the question for everyone else was this: how has
Galliano managed to return to the front line of fashion after his
spectacular fall from grace? Can a man so hell-bent on self-destruction
put himself back together again in the increasingly complex world of
high fashion, where creativity meets commercial reality, sometimes in a
brutal fashion?
‘I love Hitler’
Today Café La Perle, situated around the corner from the
Picasso Museum, on a street junction in Paris’s fashionable, originally
Jewish quarter, Le Marais – where Galliano still lives in a first-floor
apartment – is bustling with young men in suits and women in mini-skirts
in the early spring sunshine. There are formica table tops and orange,
worn banquettes, and Heineken in plastic cups; the place is popular with
fashion types now but it is neither expensive nor flashy.
This is Galliano’s local brasserie. And it was here that
he, on more than one occasion, launched into drunken anti-Semitic
tirades against other guests, total strangers, who he claimed he thought
were being either too noisy, or too ugly.
In October 2010, he called a fellow customer an “ugly
Jewish” woman; in December he told two women “I love Hitler” and “your
mothers and ancestors would all be gassed”; and, in the final outburst
in February 2011, he told an art historian called Geraldine Bloch she
had a “dirty Jewish face”. He insulted her “ugly eyebrows”, her “cheap
thigh boots” and then struck one of the pouting “rock star” poses he
used to relish at the end of his fashion shows.
And that was that. A video of one of these rants went
viral. Galliano’s bosses at Christian Dior, where he had been creative
director for 14 years, sacked him; he would later be found guilty of
anti-Semitism in a Paris court. Many – from Natalie Portman, the face of
Miss Dior Cherie scent, to Suzanne Johnson, then general manager of
Saks department store – were quick to say they would not be associated
with him.
Meltdown in Paris
It is hard to gauge the current mood of Paris’s Jewish
community, still reeling in shock at the Charlie Hebdo and Jewish
supermarket murders earlier this year; Paris is understandably even more
sensitive about anti-Semitism than it was when Galliano had his rant.
Yet Richard Prasquier, who was president of CRIF (Conseil Représentatif
des Institutions juives de France) at the time, is forgiving.
“I strongly supported the reaction of Dior at the time to
strip him of his position because I was appalled by his comments. But I
met him – he wanted to see me – six months later. He told me he was
extremely sorry and was doing work on himself. I told him that was good
news. I haven’t seen him since. I always like to give people the benefit
of the doubt and I appreciated that he wanted to see me.” The current
president of CRIF would not comment.
The fashion industry has been mostly supportive of
Galliano’s attempts at recovery. Sykes says: “Everyone in the fashion
business really admires the way John Galliano has worked hard to get
back on his feet. A lot of people are extraordinarily fond of him and
very happy to see he’s recovered.” The industry is accustomed to stories
of addiction.
Aside from Alexander McQueen, who hanged himself in 2010,
Marc Jacobs, Donatella Versace and Calvin Klein all struggled with
addiction – they know the acute stress the industry can cause.
The fashion world also missed his talent. A Galliano show
was a theatrical event, says Sykes, “like the first night of a play.
Only a McQueen show was the same. You would wait for two hours, maybe –
but it would be mesmerising”. At the Opera Comique in Paris at the last
show for his own label in October 2010, just before his first rant, gold
confetti fluttered down from the ceiling as 1920s-style models paraded
in the old theatre. Galliano came on last, hobbled, shy, yet defiant.
The clothes were exquisite, eclipsing the rumours about his wellbeing
that had already begun to fly.
Galliano’s collections for Dior always
had a theatrical touch. Above, pictured with models at the end of his
Haute-Couture S/S 2010 show Benoit Tessier/Reuters
Guns for hire
Born in 1960 in Gibraltar to a Gibraltarian
policeman-turned-plumber and a Spanish woman who later became a dinner
lady, Galliano moved to south London at the age of six. Years ago I went
to his parents’ house to interview his mother, a glamorous woman in an
ordinary terraced house with a heavy, Spanish Catholic interior – shiny
wood furniture, antimacassars, crucifixes and huge framed photographs of
the Gallianos’ beloved son, grinning from ear to ear with his dyed
blonde hair. Bright, creative, he went to grammar school and then to St
Martin’s, London’s training ground for fashion designers.
His entire 1984 graduation collection – “Les Incroyables”
(The Incredibles), inspired by the French Revolution – was bought by
Joan Burstein, owner of London’s premier talent-spotting boutique,
Browns, in South Molton Street. Diana Ross was the first buyer. Burstein
has said many times that seeing his collection was the most exciting
fashion moment of her entire career.
Galliano’s meteoric beginnings coincided with Anna Wintour’s tenure as editor of British Vogue
– “they grew up together in a way,” says Sykes – and Wintour has
supported him ever since. With fashion stylist Amanda Harlech and
milliner Stephen Jones, he founded his own label. Thrillingly
imaginative yet never financially robust, he went through several
backers and even bankruptcy until a seminal show at socialite São
Schlumberger’s house in Paris in 1993 fixed his own label (with new
backers, again through Wintour). Two years later he landed a plum job at
the house of Givenchy, owned by Bernard Arnault’s fashion conglomerate
LVMH. He was the first British designer to head a French couture house.
The next year he moved on to Dior. Under his tenure the stores and
revenue grew tenfold.
But running parallel to this story of career highs and
increasing influence – which saw him dress Princess Diana for the Met
Ball (a blue and black slip bias-cut dress compared to a nightie by
some, seen as refreshingly different for Diana by others) and Nicole
Kidman in a chartreuse gown still named as a top 10 Oscars dress – lay
an immense battle for personal lucidity.
Wintour and friends had already performed some kind of
intervention in 1990. An addictive personality, his friend and business
partner Steven Robinson had become the man who did nearly everything for
him but eventually tempers frayed, Galliano’s behaviour became erratic
and Steven died of a cocaine overdose in 2007, whether deliberate or
accidental, nobody knows.
In 2003, Galliano’s father died. Relations with Arnault and
Sidney Toledano – the boss of Dior – were strained. Fashion design had
become increasingly stressful. Aside from the imperative to create
clothes that sold, there was a new demand for other high margin products
– the accessories and branded scent – and the relentless desire for
publicity and editorial coverage that would secure sales in boutiques.
Designers had become celebrities, but they were also artists, business
people, employees, employers and ambassadors for themselves and their
brands, all at once. Many – like McQueen and Galliano – were running
more than one label, their own and also another brand as a gun for hire.
By 2007 Galliano found himself alone. Harlech had been
poached by his rival, Karl Lagerfeld, at Chanel, and Robinson was dead.
Eccentricity had become a personal trademark – at his first show a girl
had thrown a dead mackerel into the audience – but it was less charming
seen away from the “divine decadence” of his fashion (his words). He had
often seemed “annoyed by other people”, wrote Dana Thomas in her recent
book about McQueen and Galliano, Gods and Kings. Staying in bed when he
shouldn’t – for example, when asked to a state dinner at Buckingham
Palace – had become a regular occurrence. There was also the matter of
his questionable taste; his obsession with the homeless, ruined and
derelict could be seen as boundary-pushing or just plain wrong.
Reining in the beast
After his fateful rant had exploded in Galliano’s face, he
fled Paris and went into rehab, in Arizona and then Switzerland. There
are some who think Dior could have sent him there before sacking him,
although Galliano eventually lost his unfair dismissal case. He was
sacked from his eponymous label too – also owned by LVMH – and his old
friend and helpmate Bill Gaytten, originally a pattern cutter from
Manchester, took over in his stead.
Galliano had lost both his fashion houses and also,
unusually, his own name. The steps to recovery were not smooth. First,
there was silence. After rehab, he sank into what friends called a “deep
depression”. Kate Moss – like Wintour – was a supporter. She had
organised a surprise 50th birthday party for him at the Savoy hotel in
London a few weeks before doomsday, at which an old London friend says
he had been “a shadow of himself”. Galliano was wearing “a
near-invisible headband that pulled the skin on his face and smoothed
out his wrinkles”. The ageing process was never going to come easily to a
self-styled enfant terrible.
Moss also asked him to design her wedding dress in July
2011. It was a classic bias-cut Galliano number – a hit. And where Moss
leads, the rest of the fashion set follows. A guest at the wedding said
that when Galliano walked into the Gloucestershire church everyone stood
up and clapped. “US Vogue ran the pictures, including a shot
of John with Kate. I’m not sure any other editor would have done that at
that point,” says Sykes.
But a few weeks later, came a new low: the circumstances of
Robinson’s death emerged. Robinson, who had said Galliano “made him
feel safe” and even slept on the end of his bed when he was nervous, had
been found dead in his own flat in the Marais, while Galliano was on
holiday in 2007. Shortly before Robinson’s death, a team member recalled
seeing him “high as a kite and screaming hysterically” after a show. It
was revealed that he’d had between 5-7g of cocaine in his blood – a
fifth of that amount would have been enough to kill him.
In 2008, a 40-year old illegal immigrant and drug dealer
from Senegal called Alassane Seck had been convicted of Robinson’s
manslaughter and sent to jail. Seck’s lawyers said that he had often
supplied cocaine to other public figures, including a cultural adviser
to Nicolas Sarkozy and friend of Carla Bruni François Baudot.
As no
journalists attended the case, and no documents showing Robinson’s cause
of death were ever released, the revelations provoked accusations of a
cover-up aimed at protecting the reputation of the House of Dior, as
well as senior figures in the French establishment. Around 1,000 people
went to Robinson’s memorial at the American Cathedral in Paris; Stephen
Jones and set designer Michael Howells did the readings as Galliano was
too upset to speak.
But the revelations a few years later raised the question,
if it was an open secret that Galliano was in so much trouble, why
weren’t more drastic steps taken to save him from himself ? His closest
friends have come to believe a conspiracy theory – that he was set up by
Dior (the rumour goes that his drink at the café had been spiked) in
order to give them an excuse to fire him. While that seems particularly
far-fetched – how could you ever set someone up as an anti-Semite? – it
certainly seems to be the case that there was trouble afoot.
There was tension between the demands of the business (a
public company) and the creative impulses of its designer. After a
Pocahontas-meets-Anne Boleyn show for Dior in 2006, in which he was
accused of hubris and being out of touch, it was believed that Galliano
had finally been reined at the ready-to-wear label, with mediocre
results.
The collections became constrained, the designer’s morale
flagged and relations with the management deteriorated. Only Russians
were said to be buying Dior. Then came the financial crash. More and
more emphasis – in advertising and elsewhere – was given to the
increasingly sacred cash cows of handbags and scent keeping fashion
houses afloat. He was being urged to lift profitability at his own
label, John Galliano, of which LVMH also owned the majority.
“He was like a bird trapped in a cage, although a gilded
one at £4m a year,” said one fashion director. “He told friends he was
having panic attacks, he had to take valium to come to work, but he
didn’t know how to escape.”
Galliano had become convinced that possible replacements
were being interviewed behind his back and found himself in that
particular nightmare of having a commercial responsibility to fulfill,
while doubting that he had the full support of management.
Galliano the penitent
Clean and sober, in June 2013 Galliano gave an interview to
American TV chat-show host Charlie Rose. But talks at Parsons Fashion
School in New York had to be cancelled after a student protest and a
collaboration with the late Oscar de la Renta (brokered by Wintour) fell
flat when he was photographed the day before the show in, what looked
like Orthodox Jewish headgear – his people insisted it was just an
unfortunate coincidence.
But then two things happened: Wintour anointed him and
Maison Margiela appointed him. Renzo Rosso, the Italian founder of
Diesel and a long-time admirer, hired Galliano for Margiela; in his
statement he said that Galliano was one of “greatest, undisputed talents
of all time”. And Wintour – as well as Cate Blanchett at the Oscars,
and Rihanna at the Grammys, and Madonna on Italian television – started
wearing his clothes.
Days after Galliano lost his unfair dismissal case, Wintour
picked him as the person to present her with a lifetime achievement
award at the British Fashion Awards and wore one of his creations, a
black gown with silvery white embroidered tulips. In his speech he said
he wouldn’t be where he was, “healthy and happy” and about to embark on
his next venture, if it wasn’t for her. Wintour didn’t stop there. The
“Artisanal” collection officially launched in London in January –
agonisingly, it was held a day after thousands of people marched in
support of Charlie Hebdo and French Jews in Paris – and was shot for Vogue.
Blanchett wore a black dress from his Margiela collection to the Oscars
– she had worn his very first red-carpet creation in 1999 – as did
Wintour, a pale pink bias-cut dress. Both were lovely: pared-back,
beautifully cut. Apart from a chat with his old friend from St Martin’s,
US Vogue‘s Hamish Bowles, Galliano turned down all requests
for interviews because he, and Maison Margiela, had decided that, as the
house told me, “the clothes should speak for themselves”.
They have definitely started talking. Moss wore the collection in W magazine and Russian Vogue
featured the clothes. The New York stockists who threatened never to
buy Galliano again – the Seventh Avenue fashion crowd who find it hard
to forgive him (not that anyone’s saying it themselves) – in theory are
not a problem, because Margiela has its own stand-alone stores. Indeed, a
new branch has just opened in San Francisco, and last week, a new
womenswear flagship boutique opened in Milan too, another sign of
confidence and ambition.
Picasso’s blue period began after the suicide of a friend,
who shot himself, drunk, in a Parisian café. He focused on the
destitute, before depression lifted and his rose period began.
Galliano’s focused, modern, return is punctuated with red and with
humour (Shirley Bassey’s song Big Spender played in his first show of the year).
By design, celebrity endorsement, and tight-lipped hard work, John Galliano’s stealth period has begun.
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