Business Standard

SARAH JESSICA PARKER IS BUILDING A STILETTO EMPIRE

- KIM BHASIN BLOOMBERG

Sarah Jessica Parker is holding court inside her new shoe store in lower Manhattan, wearing a pair of her own heels and surrounded by cameras and staff. Outside, past the security guards, dozens of fans are lined up to meet her and perhaps buy some sandals. Passersby scurry up to the windows to snap a quick pic.

“We’re very lucky to have this spot,” Parker says, gliding over to a couch in the middle of her shop, the latest outpost for her slowly expanding stiletto empire. A portrait of herself trying on a pair of red pumps beside piles of shoeboxes hangs behind her. She explains why she likes being amid the cobbleston­es of New York’s Seaport District, dangerous territory for any four-inch heel. “The comings and the goings and the traffic—I just love it.”

Parker, 53, has already built a sizable business on the back of a character she played on television. Her lead role as Carrie Bradshaw in HBO’s “Sex and the City” spanned 94 episodes and two feature films and still airs in syndicatio­n worldwide. Carrie held significan­t fashion influence during her heyday, popularisi­ng various brands of shoes and jewellery. But it was always, always about the shoes. She loved Jimmy Choos, Christian Louboutins and Manolo Blahniks. That’s left Carrie, and the woman who played her, eternally linked to fancy footwear.

”That relationsh­ip was so fevered, and it was so much a part of the storytelli­ng, both as a charming point and also one of her shortcomin­gs,” says Parker, reflecting on Carrie’s love for expensive heels. “It’s a very easy and specific associatio­n.”

Her shoe line is mostly made up of various high-heels and pumps, from chunky booties to four-inch stilettos. There are a few flats, too. They’re made in Italy and sold both at her boutiques and such luxury department stores as Bloomingda­le’s, Neiman Marcus and Saks Fifth Avenue. The designs are largely indiscreet, such as dazzling silver glitter boots and metallic suede Mary Janes. Prices range from $250 sandals to high boots that go for $600.

Parker—and Carrie—each boast an astounding longevity that’s helped her business stay relevant. Though Parker still appears on television in shows such as HBO’s Divorce, which has run for two seasons, she’s far from the pop culture epicentre she occupied in Sex and the City’s prime. After the second feature film came out in 2010, Parker says she was repeatedly approached about starting a shoe line. She turned all the suggestion­s down. She recalls a lunch with a group of women entreprene­urs who asked her why she wouldn’t go through with it. Parker says she told them she didn’t feel “honourable” about it.

”They wanted me to make shoes to sell for $69, and they would be mass and we’d produce them in China by the thousands, and we’d all get rich,” she says. “I couldn’t do it.” By 2014, Parker found a way to make it honourable. She went into business with George Malkemus, president of shoe label Manolo Blahnik USA—a union that brought Carrie Bradshaw home to the brand she made famous.

Celebrity fashion labels, whether in clothing or handbags or shoes, are constantly popping up and fading away, usually in quick succession. A Walmart line from Miley Cyrus was gone in a flash, and it’s fair to say David Hasselhoff’s Malibu Dave doesn’t have a place in most wardrobes. Even Parker had her own clothing line called Bitten in the late 2000s.

But there are success stories. Jessica Simpson has one of the largest celebrity fashion lines around, leveraging an uncanny likability to sell billions of dollars in clothes across America. Her wares regularly fly off the racks of Macy’s, Lord & Taylor and Dillard’s.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? The actor’s shoe line is mostly made up of various high-heels and pumps; Parker put up for auction a lot of the footwear she wore as Carrie Bradshaw on
REUTERS The actor’s shoe line is mostly made up of various high-heels and pumps; Parker put up for auction a lot of the footwear she wore as Carrie Bradshaw on
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Sex and the City

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