Times Colonist

Young designers wow Runway Junior’s judges

- LEANNE ITALIE

NEW YORK — Tim Gunn said he was apprehensi­ve about participat­ing in a bite-size version of Project Runway featuring teen designers as young as 13.

“I thought,” he recalled in a recent interview, “will I have to soft-pedal my critiques? Is it all going to be watered down? Are they going to be emotional wrecks and very fragile?”

Gunn was pleasantly surprised by the freshman class on Project Runway Junior, which premières tonight at 9 on Lifetime.

And yes, he DOES employ his signature catchphras­e: “Make it work!”

The mentor, former educator at the Parsons design school and adult wrangler on the long-running Project Runway called the new show’s young contestant­s lovable, sweet to each other and respectful of the process swirling around them.

That’s saying a lot, considerin­g the age range — 13 to 17 — among the 12 contestant­s from around the U.S.

Gunn saw bits of his younger self in them all, as did his co-host, model Hannah Davis, and two of the three judges, Christian Siriano and Kelly Osbourne. Aya Kanai, the executive fashion editor at Cosmopolit­an and Seventeen magazines, rounds out the judges’ crew.

“These young people ... are all loners. There’s no one like them who comes home from school and plays with a sewing machine,” Osbourne said.

“They’ve been put in a room of their peers, with kids just like them, for the first time in their life.” Gunn agreed. “For the boys on the show, you know they were the picked-upon, bullied, odd people out in their schools, and yeah, I was that kid,” he said.

The 62-year-old Gunn recalled his own miserable childhood. Growing up in Washington, D.C., he had a debilitati­ng stutter that went untreated until he was 19. It was a time in his life when he was “coming to terms with the importance of being a responsibl­e citizen of the world and not fleeing it, which is what I spent almost the first 20 years of my life doing.”

He saw none of that in the kids on the show.

“Compared to the designers on a regular season of Runway, these teens ... accept responsibi­lity for their actions,” Gunn said.

“There’s never any factor that comes into their interactio­n with the judges or with me about why this isn’t going as well as they had wanted it to go, versus regular Runway when there’s nothing but excuses.”

The entire cast got a high-level treat. The Dec. 10 episode will feature a video appearance by first lady Michelle Obama to announce a challenge supporting education for girls.

Bella Thorne is a guest judge for the final challenge.

 ?? MOLLY RILEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fashion guru Tim Gunn says he was pleasantly surprised by the young designers on Project Runway Junior, which debuts this evening.
MOLLY RILEY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Fashion guru Tim Gunn says he was pleasantly surprised by the young designers on Project Runway Junior, which debuts this evening.

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