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LA Times 10-23-97
Airy Godmother
With Her Flowing Chiffon and Platform Boots, Stevie Nicks Has Wrought
Many a Gypsy Woman
By BOOTH MOORE
The look is pure Stevie. Long, fluid chiffon skirts, airy capes
with cut velvet details that seem to move to the music, rich
jewel-toned maxi-coats and buttery suede platform boots. And
black--lots of it.
Many things have changed since 1975 when a doe-eyed
26-year-old named Stevie Nicks joined a struggling British blues
band called Fleetwood Mac. But Nicks' look has remained a
crystal vision. She is still the gypsy queen of diva-dom.
Today, she is high on the success of the group's reunion tour,
which on Friday night will add a Hollywood Bowl engagement to its
roster of sold-out shows across the country. At 49, Nicks has
reached a point in her life where she is confident with herself and
her look, a look she didn't come upon by accident.
Living in L.A. with Lindsey Buckingham in the early '70s, before
either had joined Fleetwood Mac, Nicks had her eye on another
diva.
"I was very influenced by Janis Joplin," she said during a recent
interview, "the one time I saw Janis in person, and all the times I
saw her on television with her feathers and her bell-bottomed pants
and her beautiful silky blouse tops."
She liked the look so much that she traveled to San Francisco to
try to duplicate it at the Velvet Underground, a store where Joplin
and Jefferson Airplane's Grace Slick bought their clothes.
"It was a tiny little store, but it had the most beautiful things,"
Nicks recalls. "Tunic tops that came down to your mid-thigh, and
evening gown, old-lady nightgown material bell-bottoms that
weren't really wide, but instead fell straight over a really high
boot. It was in that room where I thought 'Wow! These are the kind of
clothes I'm going to wear forever.' "
The "Rumours" tour in 1977 was a definitive point for the band
and for Nicks' ethereal stage look.
"Onstage I wanted to wear skirts that just flowed around me as I
walked, and if there was air-conditioning, or real air, they would
move," Nicks said.
Margi Kent, a designer in L.A., helped Nicks crystallize the look
and has acted as the primary designer of Nicks' stage clothes ever
since. This past summer, Nicks had two- and three-hour fittings at
the Kent studio, located near the Beverly Center, to make sure
each wardrobe piece for the current tour would fit perfectly. Nicks
and Kent's partnership will be the subject of an eight-page photo
spread in the November Harper's Bazaar.
During the "Rumours" tour, the bulk of Nicks' onstage wardrobe
consisted of quasi-religious-looking black skirts and fringe shawls
that helped feed her wise woman/high priestess image. But black
became her color of choice for practical reasons, not just a desire
to dress like the Celtic witch she sang about in "Rhiannon."
"I really started wearing black because it was easy and it was
slimming," Nicks explained. "I kind of elongated the little black
dress into a mid-calf length because it was dramatic and because
my hair is kind of streaky blond and black is always good on
blonds."
Another part of the look are 7-inch-heel platform boots. "They
make me feel like a bigger person," said the singer, who is 5-foot,
1-inch. The boots have been custom made for 20 years by a local
Italian boot maker, di Fabrizio.
Although her relationships with Kent and di Fabrizio have been
long and fruitful, others in the fashion world had not shown much
interest in designing for her, Nicks said. "Fashion people have
always talked about me like 'that's a very Stevie Nicks maxi-coat'
or 'that's a very Stevie Nicks chiffon skirt,' but nobody really came
to me."
But last season, both Isaac Mizrahi and Anna Sui dedicated
collections to Nicks. Richard Tyler, who approached her last year,
also has contributed a few pieces to the tour wardrobe.
Undoubtedly, some of the increased attention springs from an
apparent re-fascination with anything from the 1970s.
Fashion-forward pop singer Courtney Love--another in a long line
of divas (and also a Harper's cover girl)--says she has long been
fascinated both by Nicks' music and her clothes.
In the early days of her own band, Hole, Love took her pop
idol's dreamy gypsy look and hardened it into grunge for the '90s.
Instead of the love-struck mystic personified by Nicks, Love came
across as an angry broad with smudged black eyeliner in a ripped
lace baby doll dress.
Unlike that of many female rock singers, Nicks' image was never
about how much skin she could get away with showing the
audience. "I never wanted to create a sexual object kind of image,"
she said. "I wanted to be beautiful first, and somewhere on down
the line sexy came with it."
Indeed, for Nicks, feeling sexy has nothing to do with hem or
necklines. It's about how clothes feel against her body.
"I am a fabric sensualist," she said. "I love fabrics. Cashmere,
velvet, silk chiffon. . . . If it feels good, it doesn't have to be
particularly beautiful. I buy clothes sometimes just because I like
the way they feel."
Now, 20 years and some 50 million album sales after she joined
the band, Nicks has her own stylist, Kim Brakeley, who swatches
all over the world for her silk chiffons and textured velvets--some of
which cost more than $100 a yard. Nicks also has the attention of
the fashion elite focused on her, really for the first time in her
career.
Still, many of the pieces you will see among her seven costume
changes in the band's show are not the latest creations from Kent,
Mizrahi, Sui or Tyler. They're old--as old as Nicks' membership in
the band.
"I knew when I created this image in 1976 that I was going to
stick with it," Nicks said. "I knew the skirt lengths could be
changed, they could handkerchief their way to the floor or come
right back up to under the knee. It was a moving style. If shoulder
pads go 'out,' we pare them down and if they are back 'in,' we use
them again."
Many of the costume pieces are almost as essential to the
concert experience as the music itself--and have proven just as
enduring. "Some songs have a special item or piece of clothing that
goes along with the song. Either it was in the video or it has stood
for that song," said Brakeley, who is touring with the band.
"There are capes that literally have names that go with songs,
like the Gold Dust Woman cape, the Bella Donna Blue cape.
Everything has a meaning."
The Gold Dust Woman cape is one of Nicks' personal favorites.
"It's gold chiffon with sequins, glitter and drapery fringe, and it's
strong as anything," Nicks said. "It looks like it's brand new. But I
had it made in 1976."
That cape no doubt will make an appearance Friday
night--along with another Fleetwood Mac hallmark: the
Stevie-heads, fans who mimic the gypsy look, twirling in their own
chiffon.
"I think if people like to dress like a gypsy and they get a little
inspiration from me to do it, then it's great," Nicks said. "It's
definitely something everyone should try at least once in their lives.
Dress like a gypsy!"
Thanks to CLMoon for submitting this to the newsgroup.
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