Saturday Star

Williams projects concert cool with Chanel handbag

Rapper shows a man can have it all in the bag too

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PHARRELL Williams has been wearing Chanel necklaces for years – only not the original costume jewellery. “He has them copied in real gemstones,” noted Karl Lagerfeld, Chanel’s couturier since 1983. Does he mind? “Of course not. I’m flattered,” he said with a smile, for he has long called the music impresario part of the Chanel family.

Williams has appeared in a short film for Chanel, walked the runway in its most recent Métiers d’Art show at the Ritz Paris and is now the first man to appear in a handbag campaign for the French house. He is depicted in a concert hall toting a crocodile version of the new Gabrielle bag.

Slated to break worldwide on April 3, the ads also feature Kristen Stewart, Cara Delevingne and Caroline de Maigret, each exuding a different allure – insouciant, streetwise and quintessen­tially Parisian, respective­ly.

Unveiling the campaign exclusive to Women’s Wear Daily, Lagerfeld said he wished to show that the Gabrielle bag can be worn in “many different circumstan­ces” – and why not by a man? “It’s not very feminine in the sense of being chichi,” he teased.

Lagerfeld noted that virtual reality goggles – which inspired the shape of the handbag – are used by both sexes. Indeed, at his autumn 2017 ready-to-wear show in Paris earlier this month, the designer had male models – including his 8-year-old godson Hudson Kroenig – tote versions of the Gabrielle. Its double-chain handle permits multiple carrying options.

Interviewe­d after the Chanel show, Williams said Chanel first came to his attention more than a decade ago, courtesy of rapper The Notorious B.I.G.

“I was like a nerdy little black kid on a skateboard. So looking at high-end fashion was something that I really didn’t understand in the very beginning,” he confessed.

“And then I realised, slowly but surely, man, this is amazing. And although there’s mostly the perception that it’s for women, I just started to see, okay, as a man I can wear some of this. So I would wear sunglasses here, or a jacket there.”

Indeed, when Williams starred in a Lagerfeld-directed film for the Paris-Salzburg collection in 2014, he learnt that the original inspiratio­n for Chanel’s famous contrast-trim, four-pocket jacket was one worn by the lift operator of that Austrian city’s exclusive Schloss Mittersill hotel.

Williams impersonat­ed the operator and crooned that he wanted to “see, see (CC) the world”.

Delevingne co-starred as a reincarnat­ion of Empress Elisabeth of Austria, popularly known as Sisi, and the two shared a waltz.

Williams’s good fortune is hardly lost on him.

“It’s crazy. Who knew if you just follow what it is that you’re curious about, it may make sense for you one day – and in a major, major way. I just never dreamt that I would ever be considered in this way, and given all these opportunit­ies,” he said.

Asked to describe the shoot with Lagerfeld, he replied: “It was fun, I mean Karl knows what he wants, he knows what he’s doing.”

Williams attended the Chanel show without a bag, his hands stuffed in the pockets of his hefty cardigan. But he said he relished the chance to carry the crocodile version of the Gabrielle he sports in the ads.

“When I first started wearing it, I didn’t have anything in it. I was just so excited to have it,” he said. “But now I use it to carry my phone, and, you know, essential personal things.”

While in Paris, the Happy singer and fashion entreprene­ur was decorated as an officer of the Order of Arts and Letters from French Minister of Culture Audrey Azoulay. The insignia recognises significan­t contributi­ons to the arts. “I wore it yesterday. But, you know, I’m shy about it, but I’m grateful,” he demurred.

Lagerfeld characteri­sed the cam- paign cast as friends of the house – each very connected to the times.

Stewart is a face of Chanel make-up and Lagerfeld has photograph­ed her for several Chanel handbag and ready-to-wear campaigns. Also a house ambassador, De Maigret has a music label and is a producer, photograph­er and co-author of the book How to Be Parisian Wherever You Are: Love, Style and Bad Habits.

Stewart, now a regular in front of Lagerfeld’s lens, calls the process “natural and instinctiv­e for both of us”.

“Seeing the satisfacti­on on Karl’s face when everything comes together is always the highlight for me,” she said. “Exploring the evolution of our creative relationsh­ip is one of the greatest privileges I’ve had as an artist. The result always feels as free as the process was.”

The ads are to run exclusivel­y as two double-page spreads – the first with a pack shot and a portrait, and the second with a lifestyle scenario.

De Maigret, for example, is depicted barefoot in a Parisian apartment, while Delevingne totes a skateboard against a graffiti-strewn security gate.

All wear black Chanel jackets and carry different versions of the Gabrielle bag. In tandem with the print ads are four short films that are to debut on Chanel’s website and social channels.

The French fashion house has dubbed 2017 the year of Gabrielle, the name of a forthcomin­g perfume and also jewellery and watch collection­s inspired by the rebellious house founder. – The New York Times

 ??  ?? Chanel’s Karl Lagerfeld with musician Pharrell Williams.
Chanel’s Karl Lagerfeld with musician Pharrell Williams.

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