HAVE YOU HEARD?
Fashion world is making changes!
"Fashion houses usually release ad
campaigns featuring ambiguously young pin-thin models or shining
starlets set to open a big upcoming movie.
But not Lanvin.
The luxury brand’s fall 2012 campaign, released in part on Wednesday, features several “real” men and women, stylish people plucked from the streets. Among them is Jacquie Tajah Murdock, an 82-year-old African-American woman who was born in Harlem and has a long career as a dancer. She currently is retired and living on a fixed income in New York University faculty housing in Greenwich Village.
The luxury brand’s fall 2012 campaign, released in part on Wednesday, features several “real” men and women, stylish people plucked from the streets. Among them is Jacquie Tajah Murdock, an 82-year-old African-American woman who was born in Harlem and has a long career as a dancer. She currently is retired and living on a fixed income in New York University faculty housing in Greenwich Village.
For
as long as she can remember, Murdock says, it has been her dream to go
to Paris—but she still has never been. “I wanted to become another
Josephine Baker or a high-fashion model on the runway—but the
opportunity was not there for women of color,” she told The Daily Beast
when reached by phone Wednesday.
At 17, Murdock appeared onstage at
the legendary Apollo Theatre for the first time, in a troupe called
Norma Miller’s Jazz Dancers, and has been dancing ever since. She is an
expert in Russian ballet, was a belly dancer at Manhattan’s Istanbul
Club in the 1960s, which brought her to Egypt, and was one of the first
black typists at Universal Films in 1948. She has earned three degrees,
including a master’s in “Media Ecology” at NYU, where she was an
administrative assistant to a research professor for 30 years. She
currently is a lecturer and performer at the Jazz Museum in Harlem, has
been honored at the Apollo Theatre, and has performed at Frederick
Douglass Academy and the Harlem School of the Arts. She is now working
on a book about her life.
Murdock was walking through her neighborhood last year when she was spotted by Ari Seth Cohen, who runs the popular blog Advanced Style, for older men and women with distinguished personal style. He photographed her and put her on the blog and in his book, Advanced Style, which was published last May. She appeared on the Today show following publication to speak about it, and has received a lot of attention for her style ever since.
Cohen,
who helped Lanvin cast its campaign, called to ask Murdock if she would
be interested in interviewing. She immediately met with Lanvin designer
Alber Elbaz
and famed photographer Steven Meisel, and told them about her dancing.
She explained that she once had portrayed Dora Dean—“the toast of
Paris”—onstage at the Apollo."
{continue reading}
Now HOW COOL IS THAT?!
I'm extremely excited from all angles possible : DANCE AND FASHION UNITED!
WHAT ARE YOUR THOUGHTS?
I love that they are finally getting in touch with reality! Have a nice one!
ReplyDelete