Cape Times

Ladies in red… gold and silver

- Leanne Italie

AND the red carpet goes to… the women in red, for one, with equal accolades for shiny and shimmery gold worthy of the Oscars, this and all years.

Long sleeves and belts played major roles on Sunday in Los Angeles at the Dolby Theater, along with a beautiful Janelle Monae, transforme­d in Elie Saab Haute Couture into a busy but fabulous fashion city of black tulle, birds, lace, feathers, sequins, crystal stones and a head piece that served as the perfect topper.

There were some midnight blues, including Meryl Streep’s sparkly Elie Saab with trousers, and a smattering of blah black.

Among the night’s trends were velvet, worn Old Hollywood style by Taraji P Henson, Brie Larson and Michelle Williams, and metallics, including a fierce Charlize Theron, Emma Stone and Jessica Biel.

Henson, a co-star with Monae in Hidden Figures, earned praise from many for her deep navy blue Alberta Ferretti. It fell off the shoulder and her Nirov Modi diamond necklace pointed the way to ample decolletag­e.

All in all, the clunkers were few.

Some highlights: The reds

Viola Davis rocked the colour as she picked up a best supporting actress Oscar for her role in Fences. She wore silk Armani Prive in vermilion, with the perfect halter neck falling into a pleated capelet effect off the shoulders. Her short hair with bangs swept to one side let the dress shine and she kept jewellery to a minimum.

“It was a perfect shade of red on her,” said Adam Glassman, creative director for O magazine and a special correspond­ent for Extra TV. “The colour red was a symbol of hope and optimism. We are living in dark times and, perhaps by choosing red, she is symbolisin­g hope. The gown was sensual and elegant at the same time. The draped capelet detail was so flattering on her. Her body looked amazing in it. It was stylish without trying too hard.”

Ruth Negga wore her red Valentino Haute Couture by Pierpaolo Piccioli with a blue ACLU ribbon and Irene Neuwirth jewellery featuring Gemfields’ responsibl­y sourced Mozambican rubies. Her jewels included a head piece not all could pull off, but she did so effortless­ly. The gown included a high lace collar and skimmed the ground, her make-up a perfect match on eyelids and lips.

“It proves you don’t have to be plungy and show lots of excess flesh to look sexy and beautiful,” said Avril Graham, the executive fashion and beauty editor for Harper’s Bazaar US. “The fact that she wore those rubies played into that sustainabl­e trend and were a great modern take.”

Auli’i Cravalho, at 16, was a stunner at her first Oscars’ performanc­e, singing How Far I’ll go from Moana in, yes, another stand-out red gown.

The golds

Stone led the pack in a custom Givenchy Haute Couture by Riccardo Tisci. It was a long dress in all-over embroidere­d nude lace with fishnet detailing and gold and bronze crystals. It had tiers of fringe that lent a tad of flapper without going overboard. Her red lip colour and swingy, matching earrings from Tiffany and Co went a long way.

She was “finished with Old Hollywood worthy waves”, said Kerry Pieri, the digital fashion and features director for Harper’s Bazaar. “This was glamour at its best, finished with a subtle Planned Parenthood pin.”

Dakota Johnson took one of the night’s biggest risks. She wore a long-sleeve, strong-shouldered sweeping silk gown with a waist tie. The dress was Gucci and paired with a vintage Cartier necklace. “And it paid off,” Pieri said.

Gold turned Champagne hewed on Nicole Kidman, in Armani Prive, and Felicity Jones, in princessy Dior Haute Couture. Amy Adams wore plunging metallic silver as a presenter, courtesy of Tom Ford. It was embroidere­d with silver bugle beads, had long sleeves and was cut wide open nearly to her waist.

Theron, Graham said, “knocked it out of the water, as always. The metallic moment was amazing”.

Theron was “Grecian Goddess meets Glamazon” in her pleated Dior Haute Couture that plunged at the neck and was set free to flow below the waist, Glassman said. And that’s not a bad thing.

“Charlize owns the red carpet,” he said.

Fashion and style expert Hal Rubenstein found Theron’s huge Chopard drop earrings in connecting pear and heart shapes distractin­g, and the dress a little much. “There was almost six yards too much fabric in that dress. It’s impossible for her to look bad but that was an awful lot of dress and an awful lot of jewellery.”

Jessica Biel was the definition of gold statuesque in a Kaufman Franco gown that hugged her body and included a metallic fringe-looking collar and liquidy train.

“She really scored well. It was cut really vavoom and close to show off her figure,” Graham said.

“This was not frothy. This was a way of wearing metallics and sequins and embellishm­ent in a contempora­ry way.”

Stone was on top of Rubenstein’s best-dressed list. “For me it’s not about this being a fashion show. It’s about celebratin­g the movies and who looks like a movie star. They should look like Lauren Bacall and Lana Turner and people like that,” he said. “Emma looked the most like that. She looked sexy without being overt or redundant or trashy.”

The confection­s

Hailee Steinfeld pulled one off. It was sheer white with back pleating and huge red and purple and blush floral embellishm­ent. It had a heavy train and a dainty belt. It had a high collar. It was by Ralph & Russo, and it was one of those young-girl coups that might not have worked otherwise, not unlike Dakota Johnson’s look.

Speaking of confection­s, but with a fierce bite, Monae made her usual fashion statement in Elie Saab Haute Couture. Her Forevermar­k jewels were valued by the company at $1.5 million and included multiple diamond rings.

“It wasn’t my favourite. I always like sleek lines,” Graham said of Monae.

Kirsten Dunst looked a bit swallowed-up by her black Dior Haute Couture. She was strapless with a corseted bodice and asymmetric hem that fell at the ankle at the front with a voluminous train behind.

“It was big, black, wide, sort of 18th century,” Graham said. “I just didn’t like the proportion­s.”

Of Henson’s Old Hollywood look, Glassman said. ““From head to toe she was sophistica­ted, elegant and glamorous. The neckline was perfect for the Academy Awards. The navy velvet was so on point for the season and her hair was soft and cool. It was a modern take on the Old Hollywood look. Every detail worked on her.” – AP

 ??  ?? EMMA STONE
EMMA STONE
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VIOLA DAVIS
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CHARLIZE THERON

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