Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

STYLIST FOR FORMER FIRST LADY FOLLOWED PATH OF SERENDIPIT­Y

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pronounced as people parse her future intentions through her clothes.

There’s an appetite for the nuanced way Obama used fashion both as a tool and a celebratio­n (as opposed to, say, a defensive measure). All of which makes her every fashion choice even more freighted, and none of which has escaped the woman who, starting during Obama’s second year in the White House, hashelped her put it all together: Meredith Koop. (Koop styled the Elle shoot, so the clothes reflect Obama’s idea of herself, not the magazine’s.)

“I met Meredith when she was a young sales associate about a decade ago, and ever since, I’ve been blessed to have her by my side,” Obama wrote in an email. “Together, we’ve prepared for every sort of event — from afternoons in T-shirts and gloves in a garden with middle schoolers to evenings in formal ballgowns with heads of state. Over the years, I’ve come to depend on Meredith for far more than wardrobe. She’s ridden with us through eight hectic years. She’s been a friend and mentor to our daughters. And she’s given us all a sense of comfort and home, no matter where in the world we might be.”

For years, Koop, a 37-year-old from Missouri with the height, broad cheekbones and bright blue eyes of the Midwest, functioned largely behind the scenes, but since the end of the Obama administra­tion she has slowly emerged from the shadows. But the book tour is about to carry her — or at least her work — to the edges of the spotlight.

It’s a role she is not entirely comfortabl­e with, in part because her biggest calling card is the one she is most apprehensi­ve about appearing to exploit. (She has given only one formal interview, in 2016, when she was leaving the White House.) The mission now: to define what the next stage looks like. Not just for the former first lady, but for herself.

Can the approach that continues to help make Obama such a resonant figure — one that involves choosing clothes not just for how they look (cute!), but also for the values they represent — be applied to the lives of regular women?

Is there a place outside politics for a stylist with an agenda?

These days Koop spends most of her time in a bright second-floor walk-up apartment inNew York, furnished with a cream sofa and some green plants. She moved there in 2017 with her boyfriend, Tomas Pagan Motta, a musician she met during her time in Washington. (He was working in the archival department.)

She has a small office off the bedroom but works mostly on her computer at the dining room table while sitting on a balance ball chair. In her bedroom are rolling clothes racks that slide under the bed when not in use.

Koop spends more time surfing e-tail sites and runway slideshows than sitting in the front row at fashion week or going to store openings. “I’ve always been an outsider,” she said one afternoon this summer when she was starting to plan for the book tour. “I think it makes me more approachab­le for people who are intimidate­d by the idea of fashion coming in their door.”

Koop did not set out to be a stylist. Growing up in St. Louis, she wanted to be a dancer. She went to Vanderbilt University and ended up living with her older sister in Chicago. One day she saw an ad in a paper for a sales associate at a clothing boutique and decided to apply.

The boutique was Ikram, a Chicago store run by the charismati­c Ikram Goldman, a retailer with an uncanny ability to match clothing and clients and deep personal relationsh­ips with the women whom she dresses. (Her fans include Mellody Hobson, the high-profile Chicago asset manager and philanthro­pist, and Desirée Rogers, the former White House social secretary and Johnson Publishing executive.) Koop spent some five years there, “exposed to so many different types of women, women that are out there in the world doing something.”

“It was extraordin­ary training,” she said, “although I did not realize it at the time.”

One of those women was Michelle Obama.

When Barack Obama embarked on his first presidenti­al campaign, Michelle Obama had enlisted Ikram as her wardrobe adviser, and Goldman had become a key figure in defining what became the “Obama style” — that is, one focused on using the attention that came with the job to support independen­t and emerging American designers, bridge all price points and break the first lady pastel skirts-andsuits mold. (The J. Crew outfit Michelle Obama wore on “The Tonight Show” with Jay Leno was Goldman’s idea.)

But Goldman was running a business and couldn’t move to D.C., so she was looking for a person to facilitate communicat­ions. Koop was young and didn’t have anything keeping her in Chicago. And she could recognize an opportunit­y.

She started as a general aide, and in 2010, after Goldman stepped away from her unofficial White House role to focus on her store, Koop became the first lady’s de facto stylist in the Ikram mode: exploring “the patchwork of America.” Which is when she learned what it really involved. Which is pretty much what all dressing involves, only with much higher stakes.

“You have to anticipate every avenue of attack and every possible outcome,” Koop said, rememberin­g. Everyone has an opinion: This dress is too informal; that is too frilly; this is expensive; that is too conceptual.

“You have to celebrate fashion but also be aware of the message people are going to take away,” she said. “Fashion can bolster communicat­ions in the best-case scenario, or be a silent partner, or actually distract.” Every outfit involved gaming out every possible reaction, good or bad, that she could imagine.

She would go along to meetings with policy experts and the foreign relations team. She would research countries where the first lady was traveling, target a look and show the first lady.

“I would try to make a case for things: This is why it makes sense, why this designer, this cut,” Koop said. “Then we’d ask, ‘Do you like it?’ And then we’d think about logistics: What surface are you walking on? How many events? Will you be sitting? Will you be standing?”

To get the clothes, she emailed designers directly. “Her (and Michelle Obama’s) vision for how Mrs. O wants to look for each event is always crystal clear,” Tracy Reese said in an email (Reese made the pink and silver sleeveless dress Obama wore to the Democratic convention in 2012, among other looks). “In spite of all the scheduling and logistics involved, she somehow also manages to keep the process light and collaborat­ive.”

Narciso Rodriguez, whose marigold dress Obama wore to her husband’s final State of the Union in 2016, said much the same: “She is matter-of-fact about what she needs and lets you do your thing.”

Obama had the final OK but didn’t question Koop beforehand. “She just frickin’ believed in me,” Koop said. She didn’t want to say more, she said, because she “would cry.”

But then it was over (or mostly over), and she was left wondering what to do next.

“I talked to a lot of celebrity stylists but didn’t hear many positive things about their business,” she said, sipping water from a Mason jar. “I didn’t want to be in the rat race of seasons, or promote the idea of disposable clothing, or something worn on a red carpet only once, or be in a room with a publicist telling me what to do. I didn’t want to just show up on a set and style for an advertiser.”

But she didn’t want to leave fashion, either. She wanted to do what she was doing but for a wider variety of people. She wanted to focus on emerging designers or names outside the fashion establishm­ent, and introduce them to shoppers who tend to gravitate to what they already know. Instead of always considerin­g the diplomatic message, she thought it would be interestin­g to think about the humanist message. It just wasn’t clear exactly how to style that job.

One afternoon in October in the Chelsea, New York branch of the Wing, the coworking space for women, some members were hovering in the entry to a small backroom. Along one wall were racks filled with basic pieces from Cuyana, a line focused on local production and started in 2011 by two business school graduates with the mission statement “Fewer, better things.”

Koop had been enlisted by the Cuyana founders, Shilpa Shah and Karla Gallardo, to do some “guest styling appearance­s” and help women understand how to define their style.

Koop, wearing high-waist jeans, kitten heels and an “I’m a Voter” tee, was trying to speed-psychoanal­yze each potential customer in 20-minute slots. “Are you a dress person?” she said to one young woman. “Sometimes a blazer or suit can feel like a costume, like you’re trying too hard to be a boss,” she said to another.

A young woman in a striped dress and sneakers appeared. “Are you really Michelle Obama’s stylist?” she asked. “That’s so cool.” Then she said: “I recently realized crop tops are not right anymore. But what’s next?”

Later Koop said: “It’s so complicate­d now to be a woman. You want to be yourself, and you want to look good, but you don’t want to be objectifie­d, and you don’t want to wear a bag.”

Her time now is generally divided between projects like the one with Cuyana and another she is doing with the American Civil Liberties Union that will bring it together with the fashion community to brainstorm ways to use clothes beyond simply making a message T-shirt.

She also designed a raincoat for Everybody World, a label started by the onetime American Apparel designer Iris Alonzo as a sort of hub for like-minded creatives with an eco bent. It has an adjustable waistband to fit as inclusivel­y as possible and will go on sale in February.

She is working on a TV series as well, with the production company Honto88 (it made the #MySentence PSAs on prison reform) that will look at the way fashion reflects the culture of its day. And she still does personal styling.

For now, she is focused on the book tour.

“I really want what she wears to reflect her in a genuine way and resonate with what is in the book,” she said of Obama. “For a certain percentage of the country, these are depressing times, and there’s a fine line between acknowledg­ing that and celebratin­g her for who she is as a woman. Plus, a lot of her message is about connecting to younger individual­s. So what does all of that look like?”

She is thinking a mix of designers, including names Obama has not worn before ( just to make that umbrella even more inclusive), but she’s not thinking dresses because they have too many associatio­ns with Obama’s time as first lady. And because they make her think of the word “relic” more than the words “powerful” and “chic,” which are those she thinks Obama should be going with.

She’s thinking more pants.

 ?? JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2016) ?? Michelle Obama takes the stage in July 2016 on the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. There’s an appetite for the nuanced way Obama used fashion both as a tool and a celebratio­n. The woman who has helped her put it all together is her personal stylist, Meredith Koop.
JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2016) Michelle Obama takes the stage in July 2016 on the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelph­ia. There’s an appetite for the nuanced way Obama used fashion both as a tool and a celebratio­n. The woman who has helped her put it all together is her personal stylist, Meredith Koop.
 ?? VINCENT TULLO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Meredith Koop, pictured Nov. 2 at her apartment and workspace in New York, is now helping with Michelle Obama’s book tour.
VINCENT TULLO/THE NEW YORK TIMES Meredith Koop, pictured Nov. 2 at her apartment and workspace in New York, is now helping with Michelle Obama’s book tour.

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