The Citizen (Gauteng)

Coco Chanel lived a lie

DESIGNER: FASHION ICON REWROTE HER HISTORY, HID SPY ACTIVITY Covered her tracks with German lover, powerful connection­s.

- Paris

When Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel died in her suite at the Ritz in Paris 50 years ago this week, the world mourned the greatest fashion designer of the century.

What no one mentioned was that Chanel had spent World War II in the luxury hotel with her German officer lover working as a spy for both German military intelligen­ce and the SS.

After the war, Chanel – who had risen from grim childhood in an orphanage to befriend, and sometimes sleep with, some of the richest and most powerful men in the world – did her utmost to cover her tracks.

So successful was her rewriting of history that the world’s media was taken in.

“At the beginning of the war, Chanel closed her couture house and withdrew to the shores of Lake Geneva, where she lived for 15 years on the royalties of her perfumes,” it was reported after her death, quoting her official biography.

The reality was quite different.

Although Chanel did close her famous studio on the Rue Cambon once the French capital was occupied by the Nazis, her perfume boutique stayed open so German soldiers could buy bottles of Chanel No 5 for their sweetheart­s.

Soon Chanel, then 57 but as glamorous as ever, was on the arm of an aristocrat­ic attache at the German embassy, Baron Hans Guenther von Dincklage.

Dincklage was 13 years her junior and a spy.

The two took up together in the Ritz where Chanel had lived since 1937 and which had been requisitio­ned by the Germans to serve as their headquarte­rs and to accommodat­e the luxury-loving head of the Luftwaffe, Hermann Goering.

Chanel began working for Dincklage’s colleagues in Germany’s Abwehr military intelligen­ce in return for her young nephew, Andre Palasse, being released from a German stalag after being captured defending France’s Maginot Line.

She became Abwehr Agent F-7124 in 1941, codenamed “Westminste­r” after her longtime lover the Duke of Westminste­r, Britain’s richest landowner.

More darkly, Chanel began pulling strings to claw back the rights to her perfumes from the Jewish Wertheimer brothers, who had fled to the US when the Germans invaded.

She hoped to use the Nazi’s “Aryanisati­on” laws to take back control of the perfumes that she signed away to the Wertheimer­s in 1924. But the brothers had foreseen the danger and signed their business over to a non-Jewish businessma­n before fleeing France.

Chanel’s work as a spy involved wining and dining British diplomats in neutral Spain.

But as the tide of the war turned against Germany and her efforts to get her brand back were frustrated, Chanel set her ambitions still higher – on ending the war itself.

In April 1943, she made one of two visits to Berlin to see General Walter Friedrich Schellenbe­rg, the head of SS intelligen­ce.

He wanted to send word to Chanel’s old friend, British prime minister Winston Churchill, that senior SS officers wanted to negotiate a peace. But “Operation Modelhut” (meaning fashion model’s hat, after Chanel’s famous boater) ended in farce with Chanel and Dincklage forced to hot-foot it out of Madrid when English socialite Vera Lombardi, who was carrying Chanel’s letter to Churchill, denounced them as German spies.

Chanel had arranged for Lombardi – a mutual friend of hers and Churchill’s – to be released from an Italian prison where she was being held as a British spy. Lombardi had been close to Chanel since the ’20s, introducin­g her to her friend, the future king Edward VIII, an admirer of Hitler.

When Paris was liberated in 1944, Chanel was arrested by the French Resistance but released a few hours later when Churchill intervened. She then moved Switzerlan­d where she set up home in a luxury hotel in Saint Moritz.

She didn’t return until 1953, when she made a comeback at 70 and reopened her fashion house, having done a deal with the forgiving Wertheimer­s.

It wasn’t until the French writer and Resistance heroine Edmonde Charles-Roux published her book, Chanel: Her life, her world, and the woman behind the legend she herself created, three years after the designer’s death, that the truth began to trickle out.

But the veil was truly lifted in 2011 in Sleeping With the Enemy by the American Hal Vaughan.

 ??  ?? FAME. The designer with French principal dancer Jacques Chazot, right, during a fashion show in Paris in 1958.
FAME. The designer with French principal dancer Jacques Chazot, right, during a fashion show in Paris in 1958.
 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? HIGH-LIFE. The French fashion icon in her Parisian flat in 1944.
Pictures: AFP HIGH-LIFE. The French fashion icon in her Parisian flat in 1944.
 ??  ?? SWINGING SIXTIES. Chanel died in 1971 at the age of 87.
SWINGING SIXTIES. Chanel died in 1971 at the age of 87.
 ??  ?? TAKING A BREAK. Chanel in her Parisian office in 1966.
TAKING A BREAK. Chanel in her Parisian office in 1966.

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