The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute's annual gala: Oh, it happened all right. And though you now know who made it into the the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly category of "fashion's Oscars," we know you're just dying to know what the media themselves had to say about the yearly orgy of fashion and fame. (At the very last you're dying to know what hoity-toity critic-types had to say about Anna Wintour's Princess Amadala outfit, right? Right.) The best of the press' bon mots, after the jump.
The trouble with last night's party at the Met, if I may speak frankly, is that it was a little like being sucked into a sequined wind tunnel. It started with a little breeziness before the superhero displays—Oh, hey, Narciso and Claire! Hi Liya! Alessandra! Isaac! Diane! Tom!—and then, suddenly, people seemed to be flying around the room....But I thought Anna Wintour looked great in her Chanel dress—fantastical fashion....And though I didn't see Victoria Beckham until later, in pictures, her lace Armani coat dress was definitely a look—Hollywood grandeur with a wink. Zac Posen and his date Kate Mara, in outfits painfully inspired by Superman, get the try-harder award. I'll be interested to know who you all thought looked super—and not.— Cathy Horyn, "On the Runway"
One could probably read as many metaphors about the transformative power of fashion in the silver-sequined, elaborately padded Chanel gown that Anna Wintour wore to the Costume Institute gala on Monday night as one could in Superman's cape, which happened to be hanging in a gallery down the hall. The floor-length dress had curiously curling crescents attached at the hips and the shoulders, giving Ms. Wintour, the Vogue editor and overseer of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's annual Party of the Year, the fuller-bodied appearance of Botticelli's Venus on her clamshell. She seemed to be broadcasting a message of total earthly control. (Or it could have been that all the Vogue assistants standing along the way to Ms. Wintour's receiving line had been strictly instructed not to speak to anyone, not even to people they recognized, or that so many guests were unusually prompt.) With this year's gala titled "Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy," Ms. Wintour pointed out that she was Storm, the "X-Men" character. "I control the weather," she said.— Eric Wilson, New York Times
Blake Lively wore black gloves and a snug black Ralph Lauren gown involving feathers. She said that her favorite superhero was "Spider-Man. Cause he's awesome! He gets to swing around, and, I don't know....I've always seen pictures growing up, being a teenager, and thought, 'I'd love to go to that, a night just to dress up in ball gowns.' And here I am!"...Vogue editor and hostess Anna Wintour was the first to arrive, at 6:33 p.m., wearing a Chanel gown adorned with what appeared to be seahorse tails and accompanied by daughter Bee Shaffer, who required two men, including the formidable Vogue editor at large André Leon Talley, to carry the train of her voluminous blue Nina Ricci dress up the stairs....Designer Phillip Lim came with teenage model-of-the-moment Chanel Iman,..."I've been here last year, and this is her first time here, so she's the newbie...it's a lot of pressure."— Meredith Bryan, New York Observer
It was a silver moment for Julia Roberts, wearing a swoop-neck dress by Giorgio Armani, who underwrote the event. Her co-chairs were Clooney and Anna Wintour, the editor-in-chief of Vogue, who wore a Superwoman creation by Chanel with snakes of padding at shoulders and thighs. Fashion's superheroes included Donatella Versace, who dressed Janet Jackson in a cut-away back dress, Karl Lagerfeld, wearing a sparkling silver jacket while he dressed Kate Bosworth in a multicolored patchwork of vintage Chanel; and Valentino, who was with the model Claudia Schiffer wearing a frilled blue dress from the retired designer's last collection....The cast of the newly revived "Hair" sang "The Age of Aquarius" and "Let the Sun Shine In." David Bowie, sitting with his wife, Iman, looked pained at this new rendition of the counterculture musical.— Suzy Menkes, International Herald Tribune
[George] Clooney joked that he had wanted to dress as Batman, but the costume was already in the exhibition, so he settled for a midnight blue Giorgio Armani tuxedo. Anna Wintour, shimmering in silver cyber-couture, by Karl Lagerfeld at Chanel, declared: "I stopped the rain"....The tennis star Venus Williams and American Vogue's editor-at-large, André Leon Talley, shared a red satin, super-cape for two that was custom-made by Chanel. The actress Scarlett Johansson wore a Dolce & Gabbana gown with a large diamond solitaire which announced her engagement to the actor, Ryan Reynolds. The designer Marc Jacobs confessed to wearing Superman underwear beneath his tuxedo....The "Superheroes" exhibition opens with a mirrored illusion of Clark Kent morphing into Superman and features radical catwalk creations by some of the world's top designers and comic book costumes from Hollywood blockbusters such as Spiderman and Batman.— Hilary Alexander, Telegraph
It's the Oscars of the fashion industry, but if the looks on parade at Monday's Costume Institute gala in New York were anything to go by, that industry is in a sorry state of disarray. Hosted by Vogue editor Anna Wintour (in a Starlight Express moment, perhaps taking the superhero theme somewhat literally) and Giorgio Armani (looking as buff, relaxed and fashionably weathered as ever) the normally ultra-glamorous event fell flat as the proverbial pancake, where the frocks were concerned at least....how about Katie Holmes, who's clearly sharing a sunbed with her new best friend, Victoria Beckham? Someone really ought to have warned her that tomato red and orange is a challenging colour combination and that her razor-sharp bob is more Playmobil nurse than intergalactic heroine. And what of the aforementioned Mrs Beckham? Even by this particular fashion car crash's standards, her dress was disastrous. Nancy Reagan circa 1985, anyone? That cool-as-a-cucumber chignon, meanwhile, isn't kidding anyone. A Hitchcock heroine the artist formerly known as Posh most certainly is not.— Susannah Frankel, Independent
Armani dressed Clooney and Roberts. "He asked me very sweetly if I'd be his date," Roberts, wearing a platinum Giorgio Armani Privé gown, said about the designer, who also outfitted other A-list celebrities, including Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, Beyoncé Knowles and John Mayer....Clooney was taking it all in stride. "I get to have a drink. It's easy for me," he said. As for the superhero theme, he said he had a favorite when he was a kid: "Well, you know, I loved one that no one ever talks about, the Green Hornet. He was really cool." [Thandie] Newton, in a short dress in black lace with a long cape, said, "I like this because it's one look — and two looks. She made up her own superhero inspiration. "I'm Love Woman," she said. "I wanted to do a bit of skin."— Donna Freydkin, USA Today
"I think the secret of a good exhibition is when it happens very easily, which is what happened here," Anna Wintour told us of the Metropolitan Museum's Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy installation. We had many more looks in the exhibition than we could use, so [the idea] is obviously, once you start to look, really out there. It was largely Andrew [Bolton, the exhibition curator]'s vision that brought it all together but we've been very fortunate that at the same time," she added. "All these movies are coming out and the Olympics are coming up, so it all sort of came together."— Lauren David Peden, Vogue UK
Holy Stars, Batman! It was a celeb-studded affair at the Metropolitan Museum on Monday night as the world's fashion elite and Hollywood heavyweights met on Fifth Ave. to kick off the Costume Institute's latest exhibit, "Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy." And while the night's theme celebrated cat suits and unitards, the red carpet featured far more glam getups: Co-hosts Julia Roberts and George Clooney giggled together as they strolled in wearing Giorgio Armani. "I wore the dress because he made it for me," said Roberts, who gave the designer, who sponsored the evening with Vogue magazine, a hug....Fashion darling Zac Posen took the theme seriously, rocking out Clark Kent-worthy spectacles and revealing his own secret identity. "I worked here as an intern for three years," he said. "I got paid $60 to do the event."— Jo Piazza, New York Daily News













Comments
It looks like a dress Pricess Leia would wear. Just sayin'.
Personally I thought her dress was a shoutout to those anorectic ads for whatever it was, you know, YOU ATE THOSE CINNAMON ROLLS AND NOW EVERYONE KNOWS CUZ THEY'RE ON YOUR ASS!
It kinda reminds me of a silver coffee filter...all wave crimped and wierd. And it looks itchy and uncomfortable.
Anna Wintour can wear anything she wants cause she's Anna Wintour. And if people say it's bad, she'll just respond with "Ooooobviously you are too uncouth to understand Haute Couture, peasant."
That dress is so Fifth Element.
@Kittenish: Not so much Leia but Queen Amedala...she was the ones with all the CRAZY outfits
PS - I've just exposed my inner nerdness :)
Other than the weird hip horns, I think she looks nice.
Somebody must've told Anna here how very Geiger-esque she tends to look. It appears she took the ball & ran with it.
Horyn. What an unfortunate name for someone in the fashion publicity world.
Just sayin'.
Thank god for ridiculous rich people. They make me so happy that I get to wear jammies and sweats all day.
"Anna, I knew Storm, and you are no Storm."
Susannah Frankel is right on the fuckin' money. Last year's gowns were sooooooo much better.
i'm sorry, i do not think anna wintour dresses well. she may have her occasional good day, but i swear sometimes it seems like she blindfolds herself and pulls random items out of her closet.
my little sis has better fashion sense than ms. wintour, and homegirl is a toddler (yeah...there's 17 years between us).
Anna Wintour exists to make us hate ourselves and in turn, make her richer.
But. Her dress is (sigh) AMAZING.
I will go burn in hell now.
@misssgolightly:
exactly, and that's what's so fricken annoying about it.
if i wore that...garb, the fashion snobs would be disgusted. not that i ever would wear something that hideous, but you know.
Anna looked a bit Judy Jetson goes Chanel!
A cyber-snake clamshell.
Lex Luther's evil sister?
Katie Holmes looked like she fell into a vat of tanning lotion.
Wintour's dress would be alright without those ridiculous sea shells on her hips that serve no purpose. I actually don't mind the little shrug, especially because women of a certain age are so eager to cover their arms.
@vivresavie17: They were better because the theme was doable. Super heroes? It's hard to strike a balance between fashionable and way too literal.
"starlight Express moment" = perfect description! Heidi would not like the treatment of those hips, no?
Frankel's review was the best, bitchy to the nth degree - just how I like it.
Hey Susannah Frankel, people are supposed to take the theme of the ball into consideration when they dress, asshole. You think Christina Ricci wouldve worn that dress if the theme of the ball had been Amish Paradise?
Wintour looked fucking phenomenal.
@kimsama: Yeah, I was about to call bogus on that. I suspect she had one of her minions find a suitable comic character, and that has no earthly idea who Storm actually is. And with her personality, she's closer to Iceman.
Looove the crack about Katie Holmes's hair looking like a Playmobil doll. Kind of true, too.
@Skinny Bone Jones: Nah. A little to plain for The Fifth Element. I was thinking TV -- Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.
Should "elaborately padded" really be entering the sartorial lexicon? Really? Are they just letting in any old adverb-verbal adjective combination now? Standards, people.
@NefariousNewt: (nerdy giggling coming from kimsama's office)
Maybe Anna Wintour wore that dress so no one could get too close to her. With those shoulder and hip 'extensions,'it'd be tricky to put your arm around her waist or hip. But hey, at least she's smiling.
The comparison of Katie Holmes' hair to a Playmobil toy practically made me spit my water out. Now that I look at it that way...
Just me or does Ann W look like she's channeling Tilda's spin as the Jadis the White Witch. Hmmm, rhymes with witch...
I usually hate what Anna Wintour wears, but I love this dress. From the hips down it screams "Aries!" at me, and for some reason I love this. It just seems uncharacteristically whimsical of her, yet not too young.
@AthertonMerriweather: For sure, it is the return of Nautilus! The most powerful of superheroes!
Watch her make her hands disappear into her curved shells! Watch her hand down judgment from on high. Tremble at her power.
Susannah Frankel is my hero. What a bitch! That was magnificent.
Also, Bee's dress wins. Hands down. Gorgeous, glamorous, diva-licious. If she didn't have to deal with Anna Wintour being her mother, I'd gladly be her.
Oh, and. Anna- did you talk to Halle Berry before stealing her superhero? And does anyone have pics of what Rachel Zoe was doing instead?
@rocknrollunicorn: Yeah. I kinda dig the dress, but every time I see it my brain says, "Gee, I wonder what astrological sign she is. I bet she's an Aries. I wonder why I think that."
Ms Wintour looks like a force to contend with and kinda cute actually, but I've never liked the look of a woman in evening dress all slouchy with her hands jammed in pockets.
A la Tom Hanks in A League of Their Own, I insist, "There's no pockets in couture!"
@savagechica: But it would have matched Leia's hair better!
No matter what, she's having the last laugh in that hideous dress because people are still talking about it two days later.
@angryblackgurl: You're thinking of Jane Jetson.
[www.scarlet.nl]
Is it wrong that this dress is starting to grow in me?
I think Anna Wintor looks great. I think the dress is a bit weird, but she's working it. It actually looks really good with her bob.
Speaking of, I also loved the crack about Katie Homes's hair.
I think if Bjork did it, i would love it....
Looks like one of the costume pieces from Dune.
the emperor has no clothes.
(her dress is FUGLY and looks really stupid, regardless of who "designed" it or how much it costs.)
Again, WHY do we let this woman tell us what to wear?
You don't tug on Superman's cape
You don't spit into the wind
You don't pull the mask off the ol' Lone Ranger
and
You don't mess with The Win
Ah no no you don't mess with Anna ...
She looks like a villain from a Disney movie. But not a weak-ass Disney villain. She looks like one of the really, really evil witches that summons the powers of hell before transforming into a dragon or snake or something.
@WantToTouchtheWahine a>: then maybe one of the most honest names in show business.
but cathy horyn had a brave + daring thing last year about anna W in her nyt blog, allowing people to comment at length in heretical and excommunicatable fashion. critical of the pope of vogue.
but now maybe cathy drank the koolaid, since she likes this princess amigdala dress...
i never saw a comment come out red before ! do we need more bandwidth or something??
@krismry: You didn't close the link.
If she's trying to be Storm, are tornadoes supposed to come out of those weird horn things?
Honestly, I liked Anna's dress.
At least she was fashion, hmm? Many other people...just....weren't.