Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Model became Dior’s muse by knocking on his door

- By Hilary Fox Associated Press

Before there were supermodel­s, there were “mannequins” — living, breathing women who played an active role in designing haute couture by standing very, very still. Designers and artisans would pin, prod or tuck fabric and toiles to the mannequins to bring sketches and ideas to life.

In 1950, one such mannequin, the

British model Jean Dawnay, went to work full time in Paris at the fashion house of Christian Dior. This contract alone was enough to earn her newspaper coverage in Britain at the time, but she also wrote a book about her experience­s. “Model Girl,” published in 1956, went behind the scenes of fashion shows, couture houses and photo shoots, lifting the veil on the hard work that goes into glamour.

Now Dawnay’s daughter, Katya Galitzine, is re-releasing a section of the memoir as “Working for Christian Dior” (Zuleika Books) to coincide with the “Christian Dior: Designer of Dreams” exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

Galitzine says her mother arrived in France after a modeling job in Venice and spent a few days knocking on designers’ doors, asking for work. “She only went to the Houses whose perfumes she knew ... and every single one of them wanted her, so she must have had something. I mean, she did have something. But she was very beautiful, she was very elegant. She adapted very well to whatever people wanted, and she had an 18-inch waist.”

Although she spoke no French, Dawnay’s cold calling paid off, and she accepted a contract at Dior’s atelier. “They had to clock in, like in a factory, at 9 o’clock, and then she would stand, literally stand and be pushed around and shoved around and pricked and pinned,” her daughter says.

Galitzine found one Dior dress at the back of a wardrobe after her mother died in 2016. “There was this beautiful, wool worsted tight-waisted dress that’s called ‘Nonette’ that was original Christian Dior, numbered. If you did a test on it, it would probably have his DNA dust on it because he actually made it on my mother in 1950,” she says. “And it was the dress that she wore at the original Savoy show that brought Christian Dior to London in spring 1950.” The dress is part of the V&A show.

In footage of the Savoy Hotel show, Dawnay wears a white debutante dress called “Innocence,” a white embroidere­d dress “Muguet de Mai,” a silk coat called “Ravel” and a dinner dress made of straw lace.

After Dawnay left Dior, her celebrity status continued to rise. In 1951, Vogue took the unusual step of sending her and several other models to an event in Australia, Galitzine says. “Clothes had been sent to locations, but once the clothes got there, they’d find pretty local girls, local models, to be the model. To actually pay on an aircraft for five girls and put them up in a hotel — that was enormous. So those five girls became ‘supermodel­s.’ ”

Dawnay wrote her memoir in Majorca, where she socialized with Prince Rainier and Grace Kelly, who were on their honeymoon. “She’d spend all day writing her book and then not have to worry about food because she’d go to this fantastic yacht and have dinner,” Galitzine says. In photos of her mother and Kelly from that period, “they looked so similar actually. They’re very much that ’50s style with the scarves and their pointed glasses.” Dawnay also married a prince — a Russian emigre to Britain. She became Princess George Galitzine.

In later years, she wrote another book about modeling, made regular appearance­s on quiz shows, advised stores on fashion, and did charity work. In an interview with The Associated Press in 1997, Dawnay recalled the excitement of those days: “After the war, with the austerity and clothes rationing, coupons, when Dior came on the scene, it was such a sensation — these incredibly feminine, romantic, beautiful clothes with so much material.”

 ?? GETTY ?? Fashion model Jean Dawnay in 1955.
GETTY Fashion model Jean Dawnay in 1955.
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