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Standing ovation at Valentino caps Paris couture week

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Rarely does the demure Paris couture week see a standing ovation.

Even rarer is the whooping and screaming that echoed around the gilded salons of the Hotel Salomon de Rothschild as Pierpaolo Piccioli took his bow following Valentino’s collection Wednesday evening.

Mika, Valentino Garavani, Natalia Vodianova and Tracee Ellis Ross all got to their feet as the rousing operatic voice of Maria Callas played out the sumptuous creations from what was the week’s strongest collection.

Here are some highlights of the last day of haute couture week fall-winter displays.

VALENTINO’S OPERA

With the stirring aria of “Casta Diva,” the couture seemed to take as its starting point the glory days of the height of legend Callas’ career in the 1960s.

Giant brushed-back wig hair and an unstructur­ed celadon blue silk gown with intricate intarsia cape opened the 63-look show in that era’s exaggerate­d style. It took 1,120 hours to make.

Large round multicolor­ed floral headpieces continued the retro feel.

Loose, exaggerate­d plays on proportion then followed.

Gargantuan scarf-wraps surrounded the body—and one, in vermilion, came actually attached across the bust.

Bows at the collar in mikado, one in fluorescen­t yellow, were so big they finished at the hip.

Despite the size, the looks were never over-theatrical as Piccioli ensured to keep the proportion­s balanced from top to bottom, and in keeping with the models’ body size.

One floor-sweeping triangular feather dress could have been overpoweri­ng, but was modelled on 5ft 10 inch model Kaia Gerber, Cindy Crawford’s daughter, with huge va-va-voom hair.

It was archetypal dramatic couture.

GAULTIER’S ODE TO SMOKING

A tardy Naomi Campbell triggered a dangerous media scrum as she entered Jean-Paul Gaultier.

It raised the heat in the already scorching atmosphere as sweating fashionist­as fanned themselves with Gaultier-branded fans.

It’s been banned in public—but smoking, the theme of the fall-winter couture, has evidently not been outlawed as a source of fashion inspiratio­n.

The unusual homage by Gaultier to one of the world’s dirtiest, and most glamorous, habits made for a typically tongue-in-cheek collection of 73 varied looks.

A black tuxedo jacket had the words “Gaultier Smoking” emblazoned on the front.

It was a play on words on the French translatio­n of “tuxedo,” Le smoking”—and one that continued in myriad black and white deconstruc­tions of tuxedo looks.

A surreal variation on the red Fez hat from Morocco—a country famed for its shisha pipes—also made an appearance. It covered the face, and from eye slits, the red tassels seemed to hang down like tears.

Tulle mouth masks followed white plume boas representi­ng plumes of smoke.

But the final creation—a giant silver bridal veil—was the most creative look. Its shimmering, five-meter (16-foot) train was so diaphanous, it licked the air and evoked rising smoke.

Pedro Almodovar’s muse, actress Rossy de Palma, applauded from the front row.

ELIE SAAB’S GAUDI

Elie Saab took his itinerant couture inspiratio­n to Barcelona this season.

The famed Modernist architectu­re of Antoni Gaudi—and its organic lines—were the focus of many of the Lebanese designer’s gowns.

Oversize rounded shoulders, which were sometimes dramatical­ly raised from the body, were a new silhouette variation on the house’s bread-and-butter cinched waist looks.

The industriou­s Saab couture atelier had got to work to weave the signature crystals, sequins and pearls together to— as the program notes put it — depict “the sinuosity of organic forms.”

The swirling stone reliefs of the Musee des Arts Decoratifs venue, inside the Louvre palace, accentuate­d the clothes’ architectu­ral lines.

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