Wednesday, February 26, 2014

The Oscar red carpet

WHEN Jennifer Lawrence tripped on her way to accept her best actress Oscar last year, her blush pink princess-like Dior Haute Couture gown was captured in all its glory as the unscripted moment made ripples around the world.
That bonus air-time for a single dress at one of the world’s premier global events is priceless for the likes of Dior, one of the strongest fashion houses in the cutthroat marketplace that the Oscars red carpet is today.
Success on the red carpet can buy cachet that no advertising can – both for designers and stars – and profits for luxury brands for years to come. With stakes that high, the more established houses are raising their game and leaving little room for newcomers to make a splash, like they might have a decade ago.
The red carpet, which will be televised live before the March 2 Academy Awards ceremony, presents “a great and free opportunity” for a designer to reach an audience that expands beyond the fashion set, said Ariel Foxman, editor of fashion magazine InStyle.
“It’s free marketing,” Foxman said. “Advertising dollars are so expensive, and marketing budgets are so fractured these days with social media, digital media, print media and television media, so it’s more valuable than ever.”
Sandra Bullock in the Marchesa dress she wore at the Academy Awards in 2010, when she won the best actress Oscar for her role in The Blind Side.
One way of estimating the monetary benefits of having a standout dress on the red carpet is to compare how much a brand would otherwise spend on commercial advertising during the same time, said Milton Pedraza, chief executive officer of the Luxury Group Institute, a consulting firm.
According to a report by Kantar Media released this week, the average cost of a 30-second advertising spot during the 2013 Oscars was US$1.65mil (RM5.28mil). The show was watched by 40.3 million viewers in the United States and several hundred million more across the world.
For Lawrence’s 2013 Oscar acceptance speech and her accidental trip on the stairs to the stage, she had more than 75 seconds of solo camera time. For a commercial spot of the same duration at the same time, Dior would have had to pay more than US$4mil (RM12.8mil). And this doesn’t include the time dedicated to Lawrence and her gown on the pre-show televised red carpet.
For this year, Kantar Media estimates that a 30-second advertising spot will cost brands an average of US$1.8mil (RM5.76mil) during the primetime show.
Lawrence, 23, who is nominated again this year in the best supporting actress category for American Hustle, is a Dior brand ambassador, wearing the Paris fashion house’s designs to all her public events.
While Christian Dior group has not disclosed how much it paid for its deal with Lawrence and doesn’t discuss her impact on its sales, the high-end couture label is on the rise. In 2013, couture’s profits totaled US$226mil (RM723.2mil), up 26% from 2012.
While the Oscars has launched newcomer designers such as Olivier Theyskens, worn by Madonna in 1998, and Elie Saab, donned by Halle Berry when she won best actress in 2002, the big names in fashion don’t leave much room for new talent anymore, said Hollywood fashion publicist Marilyn Heston.
Heston, the founder of publicity firm MHA Media whose success stories include introducing Jimmy Choo shoes and Lebanese designer Saab to Hollywood, said the Oscars red carpet is today dominated by established luxury brands.
“For young designers, finding their way into this world, it’s really difficult,” Heston said. “It’s much more difficult to get successful placements for the big events when the eyes of the world are watching, the stakes are higher and there are more people in the game.”
With the red carpet in mind, many of the top fashion houses have created capsule couture lines, such as Chanel Haute Couture, Atelier Versace, Armani Prive and Gucci Premiere, which are the highest of the high end.
For British designer Georgina Chapman, co-founder of Marchesa, the red carpet launched her then-unknown brand in 2004 when actress Renee Zellweger wore a red and gold Marchesa dress to the premiere of Bridget Jones: The Edge Of Reason.
“The next day, the dress was on the cover of every single newspaper and there was Marchesa written as well. And it really hit home that this is what a red carpet can do for a brand,” said Chapman, who is married to one of Hollywood’s most powerful men, film producer Harvey Weinstein.
The pinnacle for Marchesa came in 2010 when Sandra Bullock won the best actress Oscar wearing a gold sequined gown by the brand. Chapman said the dress received 40 million mentions in media.
The ultimate coup for a designer is to dress a young rising star on the Oscar red carpet, as fashion houses are trying to appeal to millennials who are likely to become customers as they earn more money, Pedraza said.
From Carey Mulligan’s quirky Prada gown covered with miniature kitchen utensils in 2010, Lawrence’s bold red form-fitting Calvin Klein in 2011, to Rooney Mara’s white structured Givenchy gown offset by jet black hair in 2012, each year one emerging actress is sure to make a fashion statement.
Lupita Nyong'o at the Bafta Awards in London recently.
Nyong'o at the 86th Oscar nominees' luncheon in Beverly Hills, California, earlier this month.
This year, all eyes are on 12 Years A Slave best supporting actress nominee Lupita Nyong’o, who has so far captivated fashion critics with her vibrant colour choices.
From a vermillion Ralph Lauren column gown with a cape at the Golden Globes, a turquoise figure-hugging Gucci dress with a floral detailed neckline at the Screen Actor’s Guild Awards, to a jade Dior Haute Couture gown at the BAFTAs in London, the 30-year-old actress has topped the best-dressed lists.
Nyong’o’s fashion hits have cast a spotlight on her stylist, newcomer Micaela Erlanger, whose savvy picks have showcased the actress’ versatility, made her a fashion muse almost overnight, and helped her land a campaign with luxury brand Miu Miu.
“Having that standout moment or having that public image is really an integral part of building someone’s persona,” said Erlanger.
As for what the Kenyan actress will wear on the Oscars red carpet, Erlanger isn’t giving any clues. She has been scouring runways at this month’s fashion presentations in New York and London in search of a standout dress.

“There should be an element of surprise, and that’s what keeps everyone interested. I might go for the whimsy and unexpected but keep it modern and classic at the same time,” the stylist teased.

Monday, February 24, 2014

15 Of The Most Revealing Dresses In Oscars History

The 86th Academy Awards are upon us this coming weekend and we’ll be bringing you all the fashion, beauty and WTF coverage you could possibly want. As far as awards shows go, the Oscars are one of the more tame ones style-wise, but there are still gowns with high slits, low backs and deep cuts that are real risque for this red carpet.
Let’s take a look back in history to see all the most wonderfully naked dresses stars like Angelina Jolie, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jennifer Lopez have dared to rock on the red carpet. Will the 2014 Oscars have any Twitter-frenzy-inducing dresses? We can only hope.
Brandi Glanville 2013 - Most revealing Oscars dress 2
1. Brandi Glanville didn’t deserve to get an invite to the 2013 Oscars, but because the world makes no sense, she did. And she wore this.
It looks like a potentially problematic dress from faraway, but a closeup makes you wonder just how much fashion tape is under there.
Liberty Ross 2013 - Most revealing Oscars dress
2. At last year’s Vanity Fair Oscars Party, Liberty Ross inexplicably mistook a sparkly scarf for a dress, yet somehow made it look really hot (which makes sense because she is ridiculously hot).
Gwyneth Paltrow 2007 Academy Awards dress
3. Gwyneth Paltrow’s 2007 dress. Upon first glance, you think “pretty.” Second glance: “Oh! Nipples.”
Anne Hathaway 2013 - Most revealing Oscars dress 2
4 (kinda). Speaking of nipples, Anne Hathaway’s 2013 dress will live in infamy for its faux-nips. But this doesn’t really deserve a spot on this list, because it was simply a dress structure thing, not an actual nipple thing.
Jennifer Lopez 2013 Cameron Diaz - Most revealing Oscars dress
5. Remember that time in 2012 when we all thought we might have seen J Lo’s nipple onstage? Regardless, girl wears sheer, form-fitting dresses so well.
Sharon Stone 2009 - Most revealing Oscars dress
6. For the 2009 Elton John AIDS Foundation Academy Awards viewing party, Sharon Stone went full-on sheer.
Photo: WENN
7. I love Selma Blair, but this, uh, dress…thing she wore to the 2002 Vanity Fair Oscars Party. It’s just awful. Also, hi Christina Applegate and Cameron Diaz!
Angelina Jolie's right leg 2012 - Most revealing Oscars dress
8. Angelina Jolie’s 2012 dress, featuring the leg that launched a thousand Twitter accounts.
9. Chloe Sevigny did something “interesting” with sheer paneling at the 2001 Vanity Fair Oscar Party.
Pamela Anderson Liz Hurley 2001 - Most revealing Oscars dress
10. The same Vanity Fair Oscar Party as Chloe’s dress in #9 brought us this lovely look by Pamela Anderson. To be fair, Liz Hurley‘s dress is pretty redonk, too.
Heidi Klum 2013 - Most revealing Oscars dress
11. Last year, Heidi Klum‘s dress was about two millimeters away from being a wardrobe malfunction.
Nicky Hilton - Most revealing Oscars dress
12. Nicky Hilton wore sixth-grade me’s idea of “prom sexy” in 2003.
Hilary Swank - Most revealing Oscars dress
13. Hilary Swank‘s dress dipped lower than college juniors doing sexy limbo at the 1999 MTV spring break party.
Halle Berry 2002 - Most revealing Oscars dress
14. Halle Berry won an Oscar in 2002 for Monster’s Ball, so the fact that she wore my parents’ wallpaper as a dress is more than balanced out.
Cher 1986 - Most revealing Oscars dress

15. And finally, Cher. She did the wildly complicated crop top in 1986 like nobody did before and nobody has since.