Gulf News

Melania’s Africa style diary

From flat shoes to contempora­ry price points, the US First Lady was on top of her fashion game on her solo trip. But what’s her message?

- ByVanessa Friedman

In the end the most viral moment of Melania Trump’s five-day, fourcountr­y solo trip, which came to a close on Sunday when she stepped off the plane at Joint Base Andrews, had to do with clothes, as it so often does.

To be specific: her irritation with everyone’s interest in her attire. It happened after she had met other first ladies and heads of state in Kenya, Malawi, Ghana and Egypt, after she had toured hospitals and cuddled babies and pet elephants, after she had done what she could to offer a new, friendlier face of the Trump administra­tion not just to the African world but to everyone else. It happened during an impromptu news conference at the foot of the pyramids.

“I wish people would focus on what I do, not what I wear,” Trump said. Within minutes, her remark was all over social media, along with a picture of her wearing a sand-coloured Ralph Lauren jacket, a white Chanel shirt with a black tie, and a cream fedora. She looked like a character straight from Out of Africa crossed with Belloq, the nefarious Frenchman from Raiders of the Lost Ark.

It’s a familiar plaint, one often issued by Hillary Clinton. It was almost surprising that Trump didn’t follow it up with the usual corollary: If I were a (first) man, you wouldn’t care about my clothes.

But the fact is, chafe against it as she will, what she does is inextricab­ly bound up in what she chooses to wear while doing it, and the same would be true of anyone in that role. After all, that’s what you see in the pictures, and the pictures are what most people see first. The clothes are simply a symbol of the actions, and the actor. Is it superficia­l? No more than paying attention to any kind of symbolism is.

Besides, it’s clear that Trump understand­s this and dressed this time around, at least to a certain extent, to make a point: to offer a different image to that of her pugnacious husband. If her wardrobe also seemed like a costume donned for a specific public performanc­e, perhaps it is to be expected. This is someone who is a reluctant star in the continuing drama that is this White House, and this is increasing­ly her approach to the role. If she sometimes gets the props wrong; well, oops.

So in Africa, instead of a trussed up and guarded trophy wife, resplenden­t in Louboutins and couture labels, as has been Trump’s style in Washington, we got flat shoes and safari jackets; desert tones and contempora­ry price points; Princess Diana crossed with Hollywood.

RELAXED

None of that Marie Antoinette-playing-shepherdes­s donning of the $1,380 (Dh5,068) Balmain flannel shirt to garden. The first lady even shopped her closet, wearing pants (Polo Ralph Lauren) and jackets (specifical­ly a Veronica Beard style), we’d seen before. Her mien, as social media kept pointing out before it got distracted by her hats, was relaxed and cheerful.

The biggest controvers­y had to do with the silly headgear: the pith helmet on safari in Kenya, which had people crying “Colonialis­m” and “Ignorance,” and the fedora. Though truthfully, what they revealed was more a lack of in-depth research into the signifiers than any purposeful intent.

Before that, everyone was too entranced by the $50 Zara fake lizard loafers to focus on the somewhat wince-worthy implicatio­ns of choosing to depart for Africa in a suede Vince coat and leopard heels, to wear a tan Joseph safari dress to arrive in Malawi, and a shirtdress printed with emus and rhinos to leave Kenya.

Indeed, the Twitterati, quick to attack, were instead won over.

“Genuine smiles plus good walking shoes!” one wrote.

The factions of Trump-watchers who see the first lady’s wardrobe as something of a litmus test of her relationsh­ip with her husband. But in truth this seems simply another disguise. All clothes are costumes we assume to play ourselves, but Trump’s often seem like costumes donned to obscure herself.

If the first lady really wants people to focus on what she does instead of what she wears, she can do what Hillary Clinton did in her time as a candidate and adopt a uniform to effectivel­y bore people into silence. Or she can accept that people see what she wears as an extension of who she is — relaxed or rational or cheerful or global — and embrace that. The part people are waiting for her to play is herself.

 ?? Photos by AFP and AP ??
Photos by AFP and AP
 ??  ?? Nairobi, Kenya. In front of the Great Pyramid in Giza, Egypt. Accra, Ghana. Nairobi. Cape Coast, Ghana. Lilongwe, Malawi.
Nairobi, Kenya. In front of the Great Pyramid in Giza, Egypt. Accra, Ghana. Nairobi. Cape Coast, Ghana. Lilongwe, Malawi.

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