Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Actors Goldblum, MacLachlan bookend Prada fashion show

- By Colleen Barry

MILAN — Jeff Goldblum infused Milan Fashion Week with some levity recently as he shimmied down the Prada runway in a dark overcoat that cast a dramatic silhouette.

The latest menswear collection in the two-yearold collaborat­ion between Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons as co-creative directors was at once elemental and celebrator­y, presenting elevated versions of everyday pieces.

“We were thinking about meaningful fashion, pieces that make sense,” Prada said in show notes. “Clothes that make people feel important, and that are therefore, in themselves, important, not something to discard.”

Kyle MacLachlan and Goldblum respective­ly opened and closed the runway show that featured eight other actors, chosen by the designers to represent “real men, recognized figures,” enhancing reality.

Both wore long overcoats. Goldblum’s was set off dramatical­ly with furry trim, while MacLachlan’s was contrasted with shimmering pants and shirt in light blue. Closing the show, Goldblum emerged hilariousl­y from a purplelit tunnel, as if surprised to find himself on a runway, then sashayed merrily along.

Guests at the Fondazione Prada’s exhibition space were seated in wellspaced velvet-covered theater seats.

Outerwear and work clothes formed the backbone of the collection, sturdy, durable pieces. Statement pieces like long overcoats were trimmed in technical mohair, thick along the hem, and ringing the upper arms. At times, shoulders were accentuate­d,

and a belt pulled tight at the waist for maximum form.

The designers continued their exploratio­n of the uniform, as the world makes on-again, off-again moves back into the office amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, proposing elegant, lightweigh­t and nearly formless coveralls in silk tech, leather and cotton.

“They replace the traditiona­l, historical shirt/ tie/ bow tie, and give a new energy and reality, a younger attitude also,” Simons said.

The designers also gave the collection flashes of color, in orange, yellow and icier hues.

Looks were finished with matching colored gloves. Statement earrings were shaped like robots or the new Prada triangular logo. Bags included futuristic triangular shapes or double-cylinder backpacks.

With the pandemic still raging, fashion designers took differing, even opposing, views of the current moment: that we are moving out of the darkness and toward the light — or that it is time to hunker

down.

Indian designer Dhruv Kapoor took the former view, in a collection that unites masculine forms with psychedeli­c designs with the underling message that it is mind over matter.

“Linear time is an illusion” is embroidere­d in a burst of pink on a tailored overcoat, a job that takes 20-25 days to complete. Another slogan promotes “parallel worlds,” the notion that we can be in more than one place at a time. Felt hats with thick fringe represent dreadlocks worn by yogis and considered auspicious.

By contrast, Rome-based American designer Justin Gall’s debut Milan runway collection exuded the need for protection, to hunker down and wait it out.

The looks could outfit squads of survivalis­ts caught in a dystopia, with a mashup of puffer jackets, vests and quilted trousers, layered or alternated with faux fur elements. Hoods were cinched tight over dark sunglasses, and pants alternated between heavyduty leather with utility pockets and lightweigh­t parachute pants.

 ?? MIGUEL MEDINA/GETTY-AFP ?? Jeff Goldblum walks Jan. 16 in the Prada’s Men’s Fall/Winter 2022/2023 fashion show in Milan.
MIGUEL MEDINA/GETTY-AFP Jeff Goldblum walks Jan. 16 in the Prada’s Men’s Fall/Winter 2022/2023 fashion show in Milan.

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