Los Angeles Times

That presidenti­al look

The president may neglect his wardrobe, but he appreciate­s the importance of a good backdrop.

- By Adam Tschorn

How over-the-top decor fits in with the new president’s overall sense of style.

By all accounts, when incoming First Lady Melania Trump stepped into public view on Inaugurati­on Day, she was also stepping into a new role as trendsette­r in chief. It was a shift reflected in her choice of outfit: a sky-blue Ralph Lauren ensemble with matching suede gloves and skyhigh stilettos that instantly drew comparison­s to Jackie Kennedy.

Number 45? Not so much. The new president’s ill-fitting navyblue suit had not been swapped out under cover of darkness for one that better fits his frame. And his familiar red tie was once again cartoonish­ly long.

Just as a leopard can’t be expected to change its spots, no one really expected Donald Trump, at 70, to emerge from the chrysalis of his candidacy acting, or looking, very different. But the simple act of retying a necktie to the proper length — just grazing the top of the belt — is as straightfo­rward as tying a shoelace. More than that, the tie is so front and center in a suited man’s look that a detail like that goes a long way.

For an example of this, look at any photo of the tuxedo-clad Trump attending Friday’s inaugural balls. His hand forced by the dictates of formal dress, he makes a different impression in a bow tie, the fit of the tux notwithsta­nding.

It feels as if Trump is trapped in the (poorly tailored) amber of his wardrobe neglect, patently unable to muster a more traditiona­lly presidenti­al mien. That might go a long way toward explaining the look and feel of at least one of last night’s high-profile inaugural balls.

The most visually striking element of the Freedom Ball at the Washington Convention Center was the outsized presidenti­al seal — make that seals plural. Two immense seals flanked the main stage, a third slightly smaller was center stage with a fourth hovering above that.

It was as if Trump, unable to become any more presidenti­al from the inside out, decided to take the opposite approach and turn the trappings of the office all the way up to 11 right out of the gate.

A reality-TV profession­al from way back, the importance of a good backdrop has never been lost on Trump. A flurry of flags was routinely unfurled behind candidate Trump on the campaign trail, and he often used the ostentatio­us set pieces of his company properties to create an aura of business acumen. That’s precisely why he announced his run for the presidency from the marble-and-gilt lobby of Trump Tower, and why he so often opted for photo-ops at the sprawling Mar-a-Lago, a Florida property that once belonged to heiress and socialite Marjorie Merriweath­er Post.

The stagecraft of the inaugural balls called to mind a connection that’s been drawn between pastor Norman Vincent Peale, author of the 1952 book “The Power of Positive Thinking,” and Trump’s ascent to the highest office in the land.

“Think big, and you’ll achieve big results,” said Peale (officiant at Trump’s first wedding) in an oftcited example of his approach to overcoming obstacles. “Think success, and you’ll have success.”

That certainly seems to fit in with Trump’s approach, especially in the final days of the presidenti­al campaign. And now, in the earliest hours of his presidency, he seems to have added: “Think presidenti­al, surround yourself with that which looks presidenti­al, and you’ll ultimately be a successful president.”

In this quest, no last detail appears to have been overlooked. Before heading off to the inaugural balls, President Trump decamped to the freshly renovated Oval Office where the seeds of “think and grow rich” Trumpdom had blown in the open window of democracy and taken root: The familiar red drapes from the Obama administra­tion had been replaced with ones in yellow gold. A color more suited to the Trump Tower aesthetic, and the mind-set of a new president moving forward.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States