Daily Mail

Why (like all of the Swinging Sixties generation) I REFUSE to retire

By the woman who founded Biba – and is launching a new collection, aged 81

- by Liz Hoggard

Barbara Hulanicki, ObE, the woman who invented biba, the fashion store that set London alight in the Swinging Sixties (and became a hangout for Twiggy, the rolling Stones and Marianne Faithfull), is telling me why her generation grew up to change the world.‘London was so grey in the late Fifties. Young people now don’t realise there was no food. If you went to a restaurant you ate spaghetti with tomato sauce out of a Heinz tin. It was awful. No one travelled, so no one knew about food.’

Life was in black and white, not colour. Pubs were only open for a couple of hours a day. There were no concerts or gigs. and don’t get her started on the shops.

‘The clothes were terrible. There were no shoes, no make-up. I was earning money and there was nothing to buy. I used to go up and down the streets trying to find anything that audrey Hepburn wore in the 1953 film Sabrina. I wanted her earrings — even one would have been enough,’ she sighs.

Nothing was designed for teenagers. So clearly the landscape was ripe for an explosion of young people with disposable incomes choosing their own clothes.

and boy did Hulanicki change the landscape with biba, the forerunner of today’s High Street chain stores. It’s ironic that barbara, who wears a ‘school uniform’ of black, is the woman who got the uptight brits wearing prints, leopard skin, feather boas and glitter.

She made shopping a social event and launched the first- ever mail- order fashion catalogue. but most importantl­y she created designs an emerging female working class could afford.

along with Mary Quant she put the mini skirt on the map, though biba’s famous micromini was the result of a mistake. The cotton jersey they used shrank.

‘You needed to let the material rest before sending it into manufactur­ing so that you cut it properly, but once our manufactur­ers didn’t do this. We hung the skirts up in store and when we returned the next morning found they had shrunk dramatical­ly!’

barbara went home feeling sick, saying, ‘We’re bust, this is the end; all these skirts barely cover a girl’s crotch.’

but then husband Stephen Fitz-Simon, whom she married when she was 25 and who helped run the business, rang to say customers were running out of the store with the bandagesty­le skirts still shrinking in their hands!

With her ash blonde bob, black T- shirt, trousers, skinny jacket, and ubiquitous dark glasses, Hulanicki looks decades younger than 81. Married for 36 years with one son, she lost Fitz-Simon, whom she calls Fitz, to cancer in 1997, and now lives alone in a converted Twenties apartment in Miami.

She is smart, funny and self-deprecatin­g, the sort of woman you’d like to sink a martini with. She fizzes with energy, throwing her arms around as she chats.

SHE’Sexcited to be one of the Sixties trailblaze­rs celebrated in Michael Caine’s new film My Generation. Made to mark his 85th birthday, the documentar­y sees Caine travel back in time to Sixties London to talk to icons including barbara, Paul McCartney, Twiggy, David bailey, Mary Quant, The Stones and David Hockney.

The film features unseen archive material — images of Carnaby Street, Piccadilly Circus, gritty South London where Caine grew up, and barbara’s famous ‘ big biba’ shop on Kensington High Street, which drew more than a million visitors a year.

‘It’s amazing footage,’ barbara marvels. In the film, Caine explores why his generation — born in the Thirties and Forties — was so successful. They were hardly born with a silver spoon in their mouth, living through a world war and rationing. Many of the Swinging Generation came from working class families. (Caine grew up on the Heygate council estate in South London; barbara arrived as a Polish-born refugee in England in 1948).

but what united them was a spirit of rebellion. between them they revolution­ised fashion, music, acting and art.

To be young, smart and in your 20s in London in the early Sixties was a gift, barbara recalls. ‘Everybody had a job, they came in and rented bedsits in places like Kensington and Notting Hill.’

She adds: ‘They were in little rooms, sharing bathrooms. I always remember Fitz saying: “Ok our clothes have to be £3, because women earn £9 a week; £3 on food, £3 on rent and £3 for a biba dress.” ’

Unlike their parents, they weren’t afraid of their social betters. They demanded change. ‘ You were considered a rebel over the most stupid things,’ barbara says. ‘Wearing black was a rebellion, you only wore it for funerals. and no one wore purple. So obviously black and purple became biba’s big colours.’ What’s so fascinatin­g is that most of the Swinging Generation still work full time in their 80s. Hockney is producing new work for major exhibition­s worldwide. Caine has four new films this year. The Stones in their mid-70s are touring this summer. and barbara has no intention of retiring. She designs wallpaper for Graham & brown and there’s a new fashion collection coming out with King’s road boutique, baar & bass, (fans include the Duchess of Cambridge and Princess Eugenie). Growing up in a family of strong women (her father died when she was 12), she says she was always a natural feminist. as a consequenc­e biba was a very female-orientated company. ‘They didn’t need fancy offices. They were amazing when they worked together, there was no nonsense. If there was a “drone”, you know one of those girls who look amazing, but do f*** all, they would get rid of her themselves.’

If anything, she says, Caine’s film doesn’t show how strong women were.

‘I’m sorry Mr Caine,’ she jokes. ‘ but the girls who came to London were toughies. Fitz was absolutely terrified of them. His office was next to the changing room and he’d hear them describing what they’d been doing and say: “I can’t take it.” ’

barbara was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1936, the eldest of three girls. The family relocated to Jerusalem in 1936 when her father, Witold, was made the Polish Consular General there. after the fall of Poland in 1939, he remained in Palestine, working with the british Mandate authoritie­s during World War II.

as a diplomat’s family they were wealthy, but Jerusalem had no shops, so her mother had to make their clothes and cosmetics. but then tragedy struck. When barbara was 12, just months before the formation of

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 ??  ?? Star: Twiggy in Biba headscarf Picture: GETTY
Star: Twiggy in Biba headscarf Picture: GETTY

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