Gulf News

Elton’s farewell tour wardrobe explained

The iconic English singer will be kitted in mostly one-off Gucci ensembles for his final outing

- By Elizabeth Paton

On a late summer afternoon, on the sloping driveway of a palatial 1920s villa high in the hills above the city of Nice, sat three large white trucks. Lining a path along its lush lawns were scores of brown cardboard boxes; rolls of bubble wrap were unfurled on the grass.

Inside the mansion’s undergroun­d gym, neatly laid out by a small army of Italians largely dressed in black, lay a glittering cornucopia of stage costumes, twinkling in the Cote d’Azur sunlight that beamed through the windows.

On one groaning rail were half a dozen 17thcentur­y-style ottoman frock coats, finished with bright lapels, pearl or gold sequinned trims and 3-D embroidere­d embellishm­ents, including roaring cats and twisted florals, a bright white “EJ” emblazoned on the back.

Above it all, perched on a balcony painted pale yellow, sat British singer, pianist and composer Elton John, 71, for whom all that sparkle was meant. After selling 300 million records in a career spanning five decades, John was deep in the final stages of preparatio­n for Farewell Yellow Brick Road, a three-year, five-continent outing that will be his retirement from touring.

There will be more than 300 concerts and a travelling wardrobe of at least two dozen one-off Gucci outfits, designed by creative director Alessandro Michele for his longtime muse and idol. It will be a fitting finale for a man who always understood the power of a sequin. Give or take 10,000.

“Look, I’m not Mick Jagger, Rod Stewart or David Bowie, tearing from one end of the stage to the other,” John said, clad in an electric pink T-shirt and glasses, swim shorts and black baseball cap (all by Gucci). “I’m always bloody stuck at the piano, aren’t I? Clothes have always had to be part of the show that I put on. They made me memorable. Though I suppose with hindsight I did go totally and utterly crazy, especially in the first 30 years of my career.”

Raised in a conservati­ve household in the outer London suburbs in the 1950s, John termed himself “a late rebeller”; someone for whom the joy of dressing up only arrived in his late 20s as he emerged from the plain chrysalis of Reginald Dwight (his birth name) and refashione­d himself as his own madcap musical creation, Elton Hercules John.

It was a gradual process: In the early years, the wacky glasses that later became the singer’s trademark allowed him to cover up the extreme shyness he felt as a performer.

And for all the frothy outre humour that fell out of the closet with him, stage outfits also offered a dazzling armour against the gaze of the outside world. “Any good costume makes you feel ready to perform. I arrive at a venue, take a nap, then wake up and pick my outfit. Then I put it on. And that’s the moment when I become Elton John,” John said, looking a little tired behind his rose-tinted glasses. “When I take it all off, that all disappears again. When I’m offstage, I’m not Elton. To my boys, I’m just Daddy.”

Raising those boys — Zachary, seven, and Elijah, five, his sons with his husband, David Furnish — has changed his priorities, he said. Life on the road no longer held much allure.

“As I sink into the latter stage of my life, I want to do things differentl­y.” he said.

Offstage, that may well be the case. But for his last hurrah — sartoriall­y at least — old habits seem to die hard, judging by his tour wardrobe.

According to Jo Hambro, a former creative fashion director of British

GQ, the stage outfits are “an 18-month passion project.”

There will be three costumes per show; the singer’s “maestro look,” which centres on an embroidere­d tailcoat, will open the night. Next will come a change into a bright, printed “rock ‘n’ roll” suit before a final dressing gown over a tracksuit closes the shows. The Gucci team has made John multiple options for each look of the night.

FAST FRIENDS

Michele, the mastermind behind the muchherald­ed turnaround at Gucci, met John three years ago in Los Angeles.

“There has never been another pianist pop star dressed quite like him, as a sort of pop divinity, a great artist who has urged different generation­s of young people to look for freedom,” wrote Michele in an email.

John is halfway through writing songs for a Broadway-aimed musical adaptation of The Devil

Wears Prada. Rocketman, a movie about his life, starring Bryce Dallas Howard and Jamie Bell, of which he is a producer, will be released in 2019, as will a “no-holds-barred autobiogra­phy,” written with Alexis Petridis, a journalist.

There would inevitably be some mishaps on tour, he added, using somewhat saltier language. “But one thing I’ll tell you for absolute certain,” he said. “There won’t be any wardrobe malfunctio­ns.”

 ?? Photos by Rex Features and New York Times ??
Photos by Rex Features and New York Times
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