Donatella: 'I love being surrounded by gorgeous guys'
Donatella Versace: 'I love being surrounded by gorgeous guys'
A survivor of the high-octane, fickle world of fashion, the
designer celebrates her love of the male form.
Donatella Versace loves men. She loves to talk about them. She loves
to dress them. She loves to undress them, too – sometimes more than
dressing them.
But that's a tradition of the house of Versace. Her
brother, Gianni, created a book titled Men Without Ties – but they were
also without shirts and trousers, usually with something like a quilted
bedspread or free-falling serving platter splattered with the Versace
Medusa logo concealing their nether regions like a cross between an
angel in a Renaissance fresco and Austin Powers. "He liked sexy men,"
says Donatella Versace, frankly. "And men like to be sexy. And not only
gay men. I realise that heterosexual men like to be sexy more than gay
men, honestly!"
It's
24 hours before the Versace autumn/winter
presentation, but
Donatella Versace looks immaculate.
Not harassed or stressed, despite it
being one of the busiest points of her year: three weeks ago, she
showcased her pre-autumn Versace collection, and in a week's time will
open the haute couture season in Paris with her made-to-measure Atelier
Versace line. There's also the pending announcement of which of a trio
of reported suitors will pick up a 20 per cent stake in the Versace
company, which value the company at €1.1bn.
Versace menswear is a
big part of that, which is true across the board in fashion. The
emergence of China as a major force in luxury retailing has impacted
global menswear sales – men make up at least 55 per cent of China's
enormous luxury market, set against a global average of 40 per cent.
"Gianni was the first to open a store in Shanghai – in 1983," says
Donatella as an aside. "Back then, it was just Versace!" China, India
and Brazil are the markets she mentions when commenting on the recent
boom in Versace menswear sales, an increase she says of 46 per cent.
The
surprising thing? Set those sales increases alongside the Versace
collections themselves. Last winter, Donatella showed lace lingerie for
men, while for summer 2013 she wrapped her man in studded gladiator
belts for a collection whose inspiration was "part Rocky, part Elvis,
part Mr T". Her tongue is firmly in cheek when she says that, but
nevertheless one would assume it's a pretty tough sell.
Apparently not.
Go into stores and it's the lavish printed silk shirts and heavily
studded jackets with the eye-watering price tags that have made it on to
the rails, but don't stay there for long. "The fashion of Versace men
is powerful, has been powerful with Gianni. It took a moment of … down
with me," says Donatella, looking a bit gloomy.
That's a reference
to collections that tried to catch the mood of the moment, rather than
the mood of Versace. They followed fashion rather than lead. Something,
however, made Donatella say basta to everyone else's ideas – to
minimalism, conceptualism and, to some eyes, to good taste – and march
down her own idiosyncratic, ormoulu-scrolled path in return to Versace's
heritage of ornate, Italianate over-the-topness. There were changes in
the design team, while Donatella also designed a range for H&M that
opened her eyes to young masculine demand for Versace's va-va-voom
style. She stopped listening to other people, and did what she wanted to
do. Ms Versace has never been happier, and the house has never sold
more clothes.
On that quieter period, following menswear's general
gist rather than setting the pace (Versace's Blue Period, we could call
it), Donatella is characteristically candid. "That was a problem I had.
I was confused for a while. I made a mistake. Then I rethought
everything again, and now Versace men is really Versace again. I am
surrounded by impossibly sexy men." She shrugs, grins. "Sorry! That's my
reality! How can you think about not making them sexy?"
Donatella
Versace is frank and honest. Those are the two most likeable things
about her. It's why she's a fantastic interviewee – for the journalist,
at least. You generally see the whites in the eyes of the house's PRs
when Donatella admits to making mistakes. You see those whites again
when she leans in conspiratorially and confesses she's showing cowboy
chaps over underwear for her autumn/winter collection, inspired by
the Village People idea that bikers are the new John Wayne. There's even
a nod to the "hanky code" in vibrant bandanna-prints. That sounds
pretty extreme, but it's again a part of the house's history. "Gianni,
he had a lot of courage," remembers Donatella. "Gianni came out and said
he was gay when it was very difficult to say that. Thirty-five years
ago. Even fashion – you wouldn't say it loud. Gianni had the courage to
say it loud. I'm very proud of that."
Those chaps in chaps are
also a savvy business decision. "Underwear is a huge part of our
business," Donatella states, by way of explanation, with a twinkle in
her eye. The emphasis, in true Carry On tradition, is on "huge".
This
sounds like a very, very funny conversation to be having with any
fashion designer, let alone the creative head of one of the largest
luxury-goods houses in the world. But Donatella Versace is very funny.
She sends herself up. She camps, just a little. She does it in her shows
too. She didn't send out a glitzy ode to Spartacus or that lace
"him-gerie" on a cavalcade of muscled-up, polished male models without
knowing the camp value of the imagery.
She plays up to it herself:
when men are mentioned, Donatella purrs like Eartha Kitt on heat. And
her description of the collection she is about to show is coloured with
the humour that's a hallmark of Versace – both house, and Ms. "I think
of bikers as the new cowboys," says Donatella. "We have no horses, so
they have motorcycles. Renegades. Both are a very strong reference in
Versace fashion, so I took those elements and tried to rework and make
them contemporary. Lots of leather, lots of denim in different washes.
The thing I like the most is the Cuban heel – I like the Cuban heel in
every shoe. I was looking at a guy in a Cuban heel walking – like a real
man! Like a Marlboro man!" Incidentally, as has been much reported,
Donatella Versace, she of the nicotine-gravelled vocals, has given up
smoking. Hence her lust for the Marlboro man, perhaps? She certainly
always wears a heel herself, so why wouldn't her man?
Donatella's
man is a very specific type – at least, the ones she chooses to embody
her fashion line. "Himbo" is a phrase thrown about a lot, which is
unfair. Versace's male models, however, are different from the skinny
waifs favoured by many a fashion house. They're muscled, buff, wide
shouldered, with barrel chests and meaty thighs. A number are soldiers,
current or former, toned rather than fine boned. "We have 20 models with
exclusivity, and 90 per cent have never done a show before. I see those
guys as dynamic, and full of energy. I like energy. A guy who weighs
40kg has no energy!
"I love designing for men," she's purring
again. "I love to be surrounded by men! Do I lie?" She says this, to no
one in particular, bar the multiple Medusa heads studding everything
from coffee cups to faux Louis XIV fauteuils ("I can't sit in a
super-modern chair," Donatella frowns. "I like the rich") in the Versace
apartment on Milan's Via Gesu. The apartment is inside Versace's
creative HQ, a floor above the glassed-in backyard where the show takes
place on Saturday night, the soundtrack already reverberating through
the building as workmen assemble gleaming motorcycle parts into a
proscenium arch where those perfect models do their Marlboro man act.
"I
love being surrounded by gorgeous guys," declares Donatella. "The thing
is, they don't know, not one of them know they're gorgeous. They're so
humble, so totally different from the women's world." From the house
that invented the idea of the supermodel, that's a pretty loaded
statement, and one Donatella delivers with another grin, and a toss of
her own high-maintenance and knowingly gorgeous peroxide hair. She puts
her money where her mouth is, too: Donatella's ex-husband is a former
Versace model, Paul Beck, whom she married in 1983 and had two children
with before their divorce.
For all the fun and campy frolics,
however, Donatella wants to deliver a specific message with this
menswear show. "I was very determined that men today are liberated. With
all this oppression going on in the world, through your clothes you can
be who you are, or who you want to be in the moment." She pauses, the
eyes twinkle. "Well, through my clothes."
Curriculum vitae
1955 Born 2 May, in Reggio Calabria, Italy. Her mother, Francesca, is a dressmaker; her father, Antonio, is a personal financier.
1977
Studies literature and languages at Florence university, following the
footsteps of her elder brother Giovanni "Gianni" Versace, who had
studied architecture in Florence.
1979 A year
after Gianni Versace opens his first fashion boutique in Milan,
Donatella moves to Milan to work with him as a design assistant. She
later assumes a public relations role as well.
1983 Marries the American model Paul Beck who becomes an advertising executive at Versace.
1986 Her daughter, Allegra Beck, is born.
1989 Her son, Daniel, is born.
1997
Gianni Versace is shot dead aged 50. He is murdered on the front steps
of his Miami Beach mansion by US serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who
commits suicide a few days later.
1998 Hosts her first couture fashion show for Versace Atelier at the Hotel Ritz Paris, in memory of Gianni.
2000 Separates from Paul Beck.
2001 Launches the fragrance Versace Woman.
2005 Admits to US Vogue that she has been addicted to cocaine for "the last 18 years".
2008 Made the honorary chairman for London's Fashion Fringe.
2012 Hosted her first fashion show since 2004, Versace's Couture Comeback, in Paris.
2013
Donatella is played by the American actress Gina Gershon in the TV
movie House of Versace, based on the novel by Deborah Mills, broadcast
in October.
2013 Designs a new Versus collection in collaboration with award-winning rapper M.I.A.
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