Los Angeles Times

L.A. fashion icon name-checked in ‘Clueless’

- By Storm Gifford Gifford writes for the New York Daily News.

Fred Segal, the Los Angeles celebrity fashion retailer name-checked in “Clueless and “Legally Blonde,” is dead at 87.

He died Thursday of complicati­ons from a stroke at a Santa Monica hospital, his publicist said Friday.

Segal “was an innovator, a forward thinker, a rulebreake­r, a mentor to so many, such a lover of life and a humanitari­an,” his family said in a statement obtained by the Hollywood Reporter.

“Anyone who knew him felt his powerful energy. He worked his whole life to have self-love and to teach all of us to love one another.”

Segal opened his first shop in 1961 in West Hollywood, where he primarily sold denim jeans and flannel and velvet ensembles.

The Fred Segal name has been synonymous with Los Angeles style since the early 1960s, The Times wrote in 2017.

Among his earliest fans were the Beatles, Diana Ross and Farrah Fawcett, the company website said.

“In the 1960s, there weren’t paparazzi and tabloids and internet like there are today,” Segal previously said. “But the Beatles came in to shop, and it got so much attention that it caused a traffic jam outside.”

At the height of Fawcett mania during the mid-1970s, the “Charlie’s Angels” star was photograph­ed riding a skateboard while sporting Segal’s jeans and a red shirt.

Segal’s designs also appealed to fashionist­as — real and fictional. In the 1995 comedy “Clueless,” Alicia Silverston­e’s Cher Horowitz cries out in distress when she can’t find a favorite top.

“Lucy, where’s my white collarless shirt from Fred Segal?” Cher says.

And “Legally Blonde” heroine Elle Woods, played by Reese Witherspoo­n, recalls an encounter with a Hollywood A-lister at his store. “Last week, I saw Cameron Diaz at Fred Segal, and I talked her out of buying this truly heinous angora sweater,” Elle says.

Segal is survived by his wife, Tina; five children; and two stepchildr­en, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

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