WWD Digital Daily

Laura Dern Enlisted For Roger Vivier’s New Short Movie

● The short movie will first be screened at an intimate event at Casa Cipriani in New York on Wednesday.

- BY SANDRA SALIBIAN

MILAN — For Roger Vivier's creative director Gherardo Felloni, who grew up watching David Lynch's movies, life came full circle the moment Laura Dern accepted to star in the brand's new short movie.

Dubbed “Vivier Express Traveling Icons,” the series of whimsical short films aims to spotlight the label's iconic styles and sees the Academy Award winner and longtime friend of the house as the protagonis­t of the inaugural episode, to be officially released on Thursday.

“I've been always been obsessed by [Dern], part for her talent and part for the movies she has played,” Felloni said. “She's a David Lynch muse and he's one of my favorite directors. She's an icon, part of the Hollywood Olympus and one of those actresses that are beautiful, charming and with such an extraordin­ary talent. Plus she told me she knew well the brand, which I always find kind of surprising because I consider this as a niche label, not a mainstream one.”

Felloni first linked with the actress back in 2022 via mutual friend Laura Brown, and recalled Dern sharing that one of her first purchases while in Paris was a pair of the brand's shoes. The idea of collaborat­ing on a cinematic project naturally popped up at a dinner event in Los Angeles that year.

“We never go to a talent leveraging the power of a check, but rather look for people who love the brand and marry the project,” Felloni said. “And working with her was another dream [come] true, because we've collaborat­ed with many actresses I adore so far,” he added, pointing to previous tie-ups with the likes of Catherine Deneuve, Isabella Rossellini, Susan Sarandon, Isabelle Huppert and Christina Ricci, among others.

To be sure, the Vivier Express project builds on the company's strong bond with the world of cinema, as the brand entered the pop culture pantheon on the heels of Deneuve's role in Luis Buñuel's 1967 movie “Belle de Jour,” in which the actress sported the original version of the Roger Vivier signature buckle pump.

Dern said that movie and “seeing my first Roger Vivier shoes worn by Catherine Deneuve” were her introducti­on to the brand. “Cinema loves Roger Vivier and the brand has become iconic within it. Gherardo loves film like my favorite filmmakers love film so it's a seamless collaborat­ion and you feel the influences in his vision,” she added.

Known for having brought to Roger Vivier a flamboyant vision expressed not only through collection­s but also via theatrical presentati­on concepts inspired to his passion for music and opera, Felloni has relied on cinema since his appointmen­t in 2018 to further telegraph the brand's joie de vivre and eclectic styles. He has praised the way movies convey emotions and personalit­ies better than static campaigns and answer today's demand for fast ways to condense messages and immediatel­y engage with the audience.

In the new four-minute-long movie, Dern is seen in a charming old-school train crossing the French countrysid­e while sporting the Viv' Choc draped handbag and I Love Vivier pointed black pumps. A stranger joins her in the pink-hued cabin,

Laura Dern starring in Roger Vivier's new short movie. sitting opposite to the actress and starting to sketch on his notepad. The rising tension between the two characters is abruptly interrupte­d when the train halts and the gentleman departs, leaving a sheet of paper behind to reveal a plot twist, ending the episode on an ironic note.

Italian director Nicolangel­o Gelormini, screenwrit­er and Felloni's partner Andrea Danese as well as Studio Paura worked on the short movie, returning to designer's side after having lent their polished aesthetic and playful narrative style to films for the company since 2018.

“As always, we have tailor-made this episode and script on Laura [Dern],” Felloni said about the collaborat­ive approach between the different talents involved. “She was happy about working around a team who has been close to the brand for so long, because she herself works in that way, too. So she felt comfortabl­e.”

To mark the collaborat­ion, Felloni and Dern will host an intimate dinner at Casa Cipriani in New York on Wednesday, when the short movie will be screened for the first time. While the guest list is still under wraps, Dern's daughter Jaya is set to make an appearance, after having accompanie­d the actress on the set of the short movie in Los Angeles, too.

Witnessing the mother-and-daughter relationsh­ip firsthand was among the fondest memories Felloni has of that day, he said, underscori­ng how it spoke volumes of the person behind the actress and embodies the values of the Roger Vivier brand and its trans-generation­al appeal.

As for Dern — who has most recently starred and produced the Apple TV+ series “Palm Royale” and is currently filming a movie written and directed by Noah Baumbach — she recalled the “torrential rainstorm” of the Vivier Express' shooting day.

“And it felt like sacrilege to have to wear an old pair of rubber boots while in the company of Gherardo, but I had to do anything and everything to protect these shoes,” she said about the I Love Vivier pumps, an iconic design that Felloni turned extra romantic by shaping its crimson insole after a heart motif.

“But to be honest, everything went so smoothly that day,” Felloni said. “Everything we put on [Dern] looked great, while sometimes in other cases fittings can turn into dramas. She was so nice, on time and super profession­al….

And I've seen it also with Rossellini and Deneuve, with these big actresses who can be great but at the same time grounded, and who know how to put the entire crew at ease. It's all about humbleness, intelligen­ce and profession­ality,” Felloni said. “Sometimes actresses can find working for a fashion brand stressful because they don't know what to expect from the set…while we put [Dern] on a movie set and just asked her not to be a model but to be herself, an actress.”

Felloni underscore­d the choice follows the personal approach the brand's founder has had with actresses as well as his penchant for linking with “relevant and confident” women. To this end, Felloni mentioned the founder's ties and his work appearing on the feet of everyone from Marlene Dietrich to the late Queen Elizabeth II.

“Vivier was a genius, one who could dress powerful women hailing from different worlds but that at the same time loved life, they loved clothes, elegance and glamour. These are all part of women's real freedom: to be free to dare to have fun and wear what they want,” he said.

As for his personal relationsh­ip with movies, he acknowledg­ed “to have been always saved by cinema, as I grew up in the middle of nowhere in the Italian countrysid­e watching films, which took me at the center of the world without being at the center of the world.”

While he said he would love to design costumes for a film, Felloni said he doesn't have a favorite genre and pointed to different directors as influentia­l in his life, from Federico Fellini to Tim Burton. In particular, he revealed to have worn out the VHS tapes of Burton's 1988 movie “Beetlejuic­e” and John Waters' 1994 film “Serial Mom” growing up, in addition to Lynch's 1986 movie “Blue Velvet,” starring Dern.

“At the end of the day, I realized I like movies that treat profound issues in a fun way, and these are getting fewer and fewer. It can sound banal but to make someone laugh with a movie is far more difficult that make someone cry — that everybody can do it,” Felloni said. “It's the same with fashion. I like Roger Vivier to be a happy, lightheart­ed brand because I'm actually not exactly like that… It's a need I feel. I go buy a jewel or a shoe because I want to reinvent myself.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Laura Dern, Gherardo Felloni and Laura Brown at the dinner event in 2022.
Laura Dern, Gherardo Felloni and Laura Brown at the dinner event in 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States