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The noughties are making a comeback. Jeffrey Yan explores why celebrity style from the paparazzi era—from midriff-baring tops to chainmail dresses—is fashion’s latest obsession

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Recent events in pop culture at large have cast a new light on the players in the decade we call the noughties. For the past few months, all everyone could talk about was The New York Times’s documentar­y Framing Britney Spears, which chronicled the pop star’s battle for autonomy and the relentless media hounding that has shaped so much of her narrative. Before that, her fellow 2000s party buddy and tabloid target Paris Hilton dropped a YouTube documentar­y of her own, which showed a deeper side (and voice) to the heiress. In the background were what these women wore—clothes, captured via telephoto lens by prying eagle-eyed paps, that defined the style of a decade.

With no Instagram then, celebritie­s were the original influencer­s and Los Angeles was where the world looked to get a measure of the zeitgeist. It didn’t hurt that a new breed of celebrity was cropping up—those who seek the spotlight instead of shying away from it. Gossip rags and tabloids featured Paris, Nicole, Britney and Lindsay—so infamous they were first names only—on a daily basis, pretty much setting the style agenda; their California­n look was emulated the world over.

The reason their styles were so impactful, and memorable even today, was because there was often an offhandedn­ess to them— nothing felt overly calculated or curated to garner likes or fit into a specific Instagram aesthetic. Instead, the overall vibe that came through most was that these girls were just out to have fun. There was sex, there was shock, and most tantalisin­g of all, there was often a dash of bad taste.

Those were the wild days before the recession. Tops were cropped, skirts were small and jeans rode low. Dresses were sparkly, short or both. Red-carpet looks drew attention to the body without ever constricti­ng it—skin-baring, but free-flowing. This season, iterations of those dresses can be found at Dior and Chanel. At the latter, Virginie Viard was inspired by Hollywood and starlets past and present, creating a full wardrobe that covers everything from movie premieres to coffee runs. Her weightless logo gown looks like something Lindsay would have worn at the height of her movie stardom.

In Milan, another female designer also felt the noughties vibe. Donatella Versace is undoubtedl­y the queen of 2000s red-carpet dressing with her more-is-more approach when it comes to print and skin—who could forget J. Lo in that dress? Her current-season propositio­ns of searing colours, cleavage-centric silhouette­s and skirts slung low or hiked high seem right out the wardrobe of a Paris & Nicole press tour.

When it comes to off-duty looks, Hedi Slimane captured the delightful, deliberate haphazardn­ess of 2000s style most perfectly at CELINE. After a few seasons exploring a sense of sophistica­tion rooted in ’70s bourgeoisi­e, the designer presented a spring/summer 2021 collection that mirrored the way young women actually dress in today’s world and echoed the way young Hollywood did then: Expressive, eclectic, but effortless. That nonchalanc­e came through the most in the way logo bras and denim shorts were worn with a boyfriend blazer or an oversize shirt, a baseball cap and flat black boots completing the look.

At Paco Rabanne, there was a similar spirit of things not being too precious, with Julien Dossena mashing up disparate elements. Much like the way Paris would wear designer with Von Dutch, here, too, the glamorous intermingl­ed with the everyday— chainmail and lace, for example, alongside faded denim and shaggy coats. There was also a freewheeli­ng spirit at Balenciaga, where Demna Gvasalia mined certain tropes of 2000s style. There were sweatsuit sets that evoked those of Juicy Couture—the most 2000s of all 2000s brands and a previous Gvasalia collaborat­or—and ugly-cute footwear not dissimilar to Crocs, yet another 2000s mainstay and previous Gvasalia partner. The designer even showed a silvery chainmail slip that is almost an exact replica of Paris’s 21st-birthday look.

It is often said that fashion trends go round in 20-year cycles; the timing is particular­ly right for the noughties to make a comeback—it was the last decade in recent memory to have a hedonistic streak, and as the world emerges from lockdowns and a year spent inert, there will be pent-up cravings for the pursuit of pleasure, for living large and loud. The fashion pendulum has already swung that way—just like it was in the 2000s, the fall/winter 2021 collection­s are filled with unapologet­ically party-ready, entrance-making clothes. That’s hot. ■

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie in 2004. Kim Kardashian and Hilton recreating a 2000s Hilton look. Lindsay Lohan in 2005. Balenciaga spring/summer 2021. Chanel spring/ summer 2021. Dior spring/summer 2021 OPPOSITE: (Clockwise from far left) Versace spring/summer 2021. CELINE spring/summer 2021. Saint Laurent spring/summer 2021. Versace spring/ summer 2021. Paco Rabanne spring/ summer 2021. Britney Spears in 2003. Nicky and Paris Hilton in 2003
Clockwise from top left: Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie in 2004. Kim Kardashian and Hilton recreating a 2000s Hilton look. Lindsay Lohan in 2005. Balenciaga spring/summer 2021. Chanel spring/ summer 2021. Dior spring/summer 2021 OPPOSITE: (Clockwise from far left) Versace spring/summer 2021. CELINE spring/summer 2021. Saint Laurent spring/summer 2021. Versace spring/ summer 2021. Paco Rabanne spring/ summer 2021. Britney Spears in 2003. Nicky and Paris Hilton in 2003
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