Newsweek

Q&A: Anne de Courcy

- BY MEREDITH WOLF SCHIZER

Why this book?

I have always been fascinated both by the Riviera and Chanel, but had never really connected them. When I discovered that Chanel had spent every summer there between 1930 to 1944 in the villa she had built, I had my theme— and my time frame.

Chanel was a successful businesswo­man when that wasn’t so common. Is she a role model for young women today?

Many young women lack not only self-confidence but self-esteem. Gaining financial independen­ce through your own efforts, as Chanel did, helps achieve both—and this in turn helps one in life itself. Chanel could serve as a role model in this way.

What do you think made Chanel uniquely successful?

She was a true originator, with the ability to spot a trend before it had risen above the horizon—in her case the need for clothes far simpler and less cluttered than before. She also had the drive, energy and determinat­ion to carry her ideas through.

Chanel was branded a collaborat­or and an anti-semite. Are these accurate characteri­zations?

Certainly she was antisemiti­c, as indeed was most of France then. Chanel’s Riviera (St. Martins, February) tells the story of the years Chanel spent her summers there during what was the Riviera’s heydey. As to collaborat­ion, Chanel was what was called a “collaborat­eur horizontal­e”—that is, she had a German lover. Deplorable, I know—but here it is worth rememberin­g that so did masses of other Frenchwome­n, as up to 100,000 Francogerm­an babies were born in WWII.

Is it a designer’s place to get political?

No more than the rest of us.

Who is your favorite? Chanel or Schiaparel­li?

Chanel, by a country mile. I much prefer simplicity and elegance to the outré.

Where is your favorite spot to write?

My study, where I have everything to hand, from reference books to family photograph­s, my diary, notebooks and countless Post-its around to remind me of things I have to do.

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