I Want To Be A Roitfeld

Kellina de Boer
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Dara Block
STYLE EDITOR

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Jessica Eritou
Renee Hernandez
Bernie Rothschild

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Carine Roitfeld

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Mademoiselle C

Mademoiselle C (2013)
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carine roitfeld: irreverent
THE LITTLE BLACK JACKET

I Want To Be An Alt

I Want To Be A Coppola

I Want To Be A Battaglia

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Entries in Cathy Horyn (5)

vendredi
janv.312014

Cathy Horyn On Carine Roitfeld

The fashion world has suffered a loss today with the announcement that Cathy Horyn will no longer be writing for The New York Times. At this time, I am inspired to reflect on Cathy Horyn's contribution to Irreverent, her eloquent account of meeting Carine Roitfeld for drinks at the Ritz. Adieu, Cathy, bonne chance !

Extract from Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent
By Cathy Horyn

Not surprisingly, given the way things linked and dovetailed in the '80s, before digital links made such connections instant and artificial, Carine Roitfeld was also observing Carlyne (Cerf de Dudzeele), and as well Nicole Crassat, the legendary fashion editor of French Elle, for which Carine, a former model, offered short freelance pieces. "I learned a lot from these two women," Carine tells me over a drink at the Ritz bar. "From Nicole, I learned about a sense of femininity, like putting a black bra under a white shirt. With Carlyne, it was a bit more aggressive — military clothes with gold shoes." As she speaks, her black-rimmed eyes sparkle behind a protective blind of tousled, shoulder-length hair that, along with high heels and narrow skirts, is her distinctive style trademark. 

Sitting straight-back, her long arms sheathed in a black sweater that leaves visible the hollow of her neck, she nurses a glass of vodka she ordered with relish an hour before. I notice several men glancing at her and one, clearly working on a fantasy, calls from his nearby table, "What are you two girls talking about?" And Carine, instead of being wary, flicks her head and in a sweet voice murmurs, "We're just having fun." Then, as the man struggles in confusion, his lips forming the obscene words he thought he has heard, she turns away, releasing him.

In person, in the picture she creates, Carine is not afraid to be audaciously sophisticated and sexual, if politely unavailable. She understands that the roots of all fashion are snobbish, expensive, erotic, and that it depends on a landscape of difficult women — instinctively feminine and cultivated, but not overly educated — to convince the rest of us to ignore our better judgment and play along. Viewed critically, Carine's whippet-thin woman in a tight skirt and stilettos, her impeccable bourgeois surface broken by tumbling hair and a cigarette in her hand rather than a purse, seems a throwback to a chauvinistic and decadent time. And this creature arrived on the fashion scene at a moment, in the '90s, when French cultural influence was on the wane. Yet, viewed up close, Carine was creating a character based on her own provocative personality. It took a certain daring to turn away from the romantic conventions of editorial shoots — beautiful though they may be, with disguises and casts of eccentrics — and look inward, though seldom more than skin deep. "I think I'm very good with nothing," Carine says of her styling methods. This was a useful skill to have, especially at the beginning of her career, when she and Mario Testino, with whom she worked most often, didn't have big budgets for shoots and were forced to rely on Carine's wits: "She's biting her nails, she's pulling the T-shirt under her skirt, she's kissing someone, she's holding a little girl by the hand, she's crossing her legs," as she says of her character. 

Of course, this nail-biting, décolletage-plunging, largely submissive view of woman was also disturbing. Whether or not Carine foresaw the hedonistic fashion of the late '90s, she was definitely one of its principal architects. 

Like many people, I first heard of Carine in conjunction with Tom Ford and Gucci. This was in 1999 — already late into Ford's stunning turnaround of the Italian label, but I had spent a number of years away from the collections writing about other matters, and when I went back to Milan, I must admit I was shocked by what I saw. Ford had indeed created a modern primitive, operating on her senses (and, if need be, on all fours). And, I can say now, I didn't sufficiently appreciate what he and Carine were doing at Gucci (and later at Saint Laurent too), perhaps because it was all happening in front of my eyes. But he and Carine created a genuine archetype; not a concoction from a mood board, but a real woman who in every polished corpuscle, mean step, and lipsticked mouth, conveyed a world made neurotic and unstable by vast amounts of money, much of it from Wall Street and Silicon Valley. The fashion world had changed since the early '90s — it felt less civilized, for sure — but what of it? It pulsed with new creativity, new energy. And it delivered us, for better or worse, into the era of global brands. 

Carine remained an enigma to me for several years — it's funny, I retain a vivid memory of her coming into the Vanity Fair Oscar party, around 2002, wearing a leopard-print Alaïa dress that covered the parts of her body that were necessary and thinking she had all the actresses beat. By then the editor-in-chief of French Vogue, she was a woman in her mid-forties. Within a few years, the street photographers and bloggers gathering in force outside the shows in Paris had discovered Carine (along with Anna Wintour and Franca Sozzani) and I used to imagine thousands of snaps of Carine — in some incredible fur coat or mad pair of sandals, hair in her face — gathering in archives in Japan, waiting for the day when a contemporary artist sees what our numbed minds were not yet ready to grasp. 

I began this essay about a contemporary icon by circling back to the '80s. This is perhaps the perverse habit of my generation, to see things as a continuum, events and people dovetailing together; it's how we make sense of things. For me, when I set out to write about fashion, it was important that I learn. The sittings editors — Carlyne, of course, during my first forays into fashion and Grace Coddington at Vogue, and then Carine in more recent years — had a visual intelligence that I admired but knew I would never master. Still, the point is to learn, and I can say that all these women, and many more besides, have been great teachers. And despite the sometimes discouraging realities of the fashion business, young people have a tremendous readiness to learn. I hope this book about the very individual work of Carine Roitfeld answers some of their questions.

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Cathy Horyn and Carine Roitfeld photographs courtesy of Fashion Spot

mardi
août212012

Carine Roitfeld's Ten Favorite Songs

Carine Roitfeld compiled her top ten songs for "Fashion Mix," a feature created by Nick Knight's SHOWstudio to showcase the music preferred by various people in the fashion industry. Be sure to check out the musical selections by other fashion notables such as Cathy Horyn, Rick Owens, and Edward Enninful. I was interested to see that so many of Carine's favorite songs appear on film soundtracks and surprised that her karaoke standard, "You're So Vain" by Carly Simon, did not make her list…

"Forbidden Colours"
Ryuichi Sakamoto
Cinemage (1999)
"Forbidden Colours" is composed by Ryuichi Sakamoto and he plays the keyboard on the track; the lyrics are written by David Sylvian and he provides the vocals. A different version of the song was included on the soundtrack for the film Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence initially while this orchestral interpretation appeared on the album Cinemage which was released in 1999. The title of the song references the book Forbidden Colors by Yukio Mishima. Note that this is the song that currently plays in the background on the web site for CR Fashion Book.

"Rain (I Want a Divorce)"
Ryuichi Sakamoto
The Last Emperor (1987)
The song "Rain (I Want a Divorce)" can be found on the soundtrack album for The Last Emperor which won the Academy Award for Best Original Score in 1987.

"Je suis venu te dire que je m'en vais"
Serge Gainsbourg
Vu de l'extérieur (1973)
"Je suis venu te dire que je m'en vais," or in English, "I came to tell you that I'm going," is one of the biggest hits from the album Vu de l'extérieur by Serge Gainsbourg. Released in 1973, Vu de l'extérieur (or in English, Exterior View) is widely considered to be one of Gainsbourg's best albums although if you listen closely, you may be surprised to learn that he is singing mostly about bodily functions and their associated noises.

"Dieu est un fumeur de gitane"
Serge Gainsbourg avec Catherine Deneuve
Initials SG (1980)
"Dieu est un fumeur de gitane" is a duet by Serge Gainsbourg and Catherine Deneuve that is collected on Initials SG, an album of his greatest hits. If you are not familiar with the work of Gainsbourg, Initials SG is a wonderful introduction.

"Your Song"
Elton John
Elton John (1970)
The ballad "Your Song," composed by Elton John, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin, was released on his eponymous album in 1970. Regarding his first pop hit John has stated, "I don't think I have written a love song as good since," although it took him only ten minutes to compose the music once Taupin had written the lyrics.

"My Way"
Sid Vicious
The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle (1980)
"My Way" is a song written in 1969 by Paul Anka based on the 1967 French song "Comme d'habitude" by Claude François and Jacques Revaux. The tune was made popular by Frank Sinatra but it is the cover of "My Way" by Sid Vicious that Carine prefers. As the bassist for the British punk rock band the Sex Pistols, Vicious naturally sped up the original arrangement and modified the lyrics to lend the song a punk edge. His rendition appeared on the soundtrack of the film The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle. I was interested to learn that Anka actually liked the Vicious version: "It was kind of curious, but I felt he was sincere about it."

"Life on Mars?"
David Bowie
Hunky Dory (1971)
In a fascinating connection to the song above, David Bowie wrote "Even a Fool Learns to Love" in 1968, setting his lyrics to the music of "Comme d'habitude" by Claude François and Jacques Revaux, the same tune that inspired "My Way." Although Bowie never released his original song, the success that Frank Sinatra had with Paul Anka's version inspired the young Bowie to write "Life on Mars?" to parody Sinatra's song. Bowie shares with us the conditions under which he wrote his glam rock anthem: "Workspace was a big empty room with a chaise longue; a bargain-price art nouveau screen ('William Morris,' so I told anyone who asked); a huge overflowing freestanding ashtray and a grand piano. Little else. I started working it out on the piano and had the whole lyric and melody finished by late afternoon."

"Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves"
Jeanne Moreau
Querelle (1982)
In 1982, Jeanne Moreau starred in the film Querelle in the role of Lysiane, the madam of a brothel and the subject of competition for two brothers. Adapted from the novel Querelle de Brest written by Jean Genet in 1947, this German film was the last for director Rainer Werner Fassbinder for sadly he died of a drug overdose before the film was released. Moreau sings two songs in the film and Carine's favorite, "Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves," takes its lyrics from the poem "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" by Oscar Wilde.

View Jeanne Moreau singing "Each Man Kills the Thing He Loves"

"La chanson d'Hélène"
Romy Schneider
Les choses de la vie (1970)
"La chanson d'Hélène" is a song performed by Romy Schneider in the 1970 film Les choses de la vie (or in English, The Things of Life). Directed by Claude Sautet, Les choses de la vie was among the films nominated for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. The lovely actress and singer inspires not only Carine… her daughter Julia named her baby Romy Nicole, in tribute to Schneider and to the baby's great grandmother, Nicola.

View Romy Schneider singing "La chanson d'Hélène"

"The Look of Love"
Willie Bobo
Talkin' Verve (1997)
Burt Bacharach originally composed "The Look of Love" as an instrumental but later decided to add lyrics, releasing it as a pop song in 1967 for the film Casino Royale. Dusty Springfield sang on the soundtrack recording as engineered by Phil Ramone. Carine's favorite version of "The Look of Love" is by Willie Bobo and appears on his album Talkin' Verve. In addition to making his own music, Bobo spent time in various jazz lineups with Cal Tjader, Tito Puente, George Shearing, and Mongo Santamaria and his ideas helped to revolutionize Latin music. I might have pegged Carine as a timbales aficionado…

Carine Roitfeld photograph courtesy of purple.fr. Album cover art courtesy of amazon.com.

mercredi
mars162011

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent (Again)

I am reading about the new book Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent as new news today so I am reposting my mention from a couple weeks ago in case anyone missed it. I would hate to think anyone might miss the opportunity to own the coolest fashion book ever produced! Do I sound excited? [wink]

Woo hoo! Just a quick update on the forthcoming book about the life of Carine Roitfeld that Rizzoli is publishing, it is slated to release 4 October 2011. Now titled Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent, the book is edited by Olivier Zahm with Carine, Cathy Horyn, and Amy Larocca serving as authors. The stylish 300 page hardcover biography, or "scrapbook" as Zahm calls it, is designed by Buero New York and is available for pre-order on Amazon. I can't wait to possess a copy!

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent cover image courtesy of Amazon.

jeudi
mars032011

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent

Woo hoo! Just a quick update on the forthcoming book about the life of Carine Roitfeld that Rizzoli is publishing, it is slated to release 4 October 2011. Now titled Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent, the book is edited by Olivier Zahm with Carine, Cathy Horyn, and Amy Larocca serving as authors. The stylish 300 page hardcover biography, or "scrapbook" as Zahm calls it, is designed by Buero New York and is available for pre-order on Amazon. I can't wait to possess a copy!

Carine Roitfeld: Irreverent cover image courtesy of Amazon.

jeudi
févr.102011

I Want To Be A Roitfeld In The New York Times

The New York Times ran a story titled "New Star in the Front Row" breaking the sad news that Carine Roitfeld and Emmanuelle Alt are no longer on speaking terms following the change in management at Vogue Paris. On a much happier note, also included in the story was a link to I Want To Be A Roitfeld mentioned by none other than Cathy Horyn as an exemplar of the burgeoning "cult of the editor." I thank you so much, Cathy! To think that a writer of your caliber reads my words makes me giddy!

Text and image © 2011 The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved.