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In VOGUE: The Archives
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In season 2 of In Vogue: The 2000s, we explore how fashion fused with every aspect of pop culture to become a global entertainment engine ubiquitous in culture--impinging on the global consciousness like never before. From Nicholas Ghesquière awakening the sleeping fashion house of Balenciaga, to Vogue putting the couture into Juicy Couture, and discussing Carrie Bradshaw’s influence on trendy 2000s fashion with Sarah Jessica Parker, we cover the iconic looks that defined the decade. Hear how 9/11 led to the creation of the CFDA Vogue Fashion Fund and ushered in the next generation of designers. We examine the colliding worlds of Vogue and Hollywood, and learn how the Met Gala became the Superbowl of fashion. We go behind the scenes of the most iconic fashion shoot of all time, where Annie Leibovitz and Grace Coddington transformed the designers of the decade into the characters of Alice in Wonderland, and sit down with the Brazilian Bombshell herself, Gisele Bündchen, who revolutionized modeling and the fashion industry, while on a meteoric rise to international celebrity status. Presented by Anna Wintour and hosted by Hamish Bowles, season two of In Vogue examines how the 2000s ushered in a new millennium and redefined boundaries in fashion and society. Alongside fashion leaders, cultural icons, and Vogue’s editorial team, we dissect the decade’s most impactful style moments and how they’ve shaped our world today. **Credit: Photographer Steven Meisel for Gisele and Chanel
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The 90s, a pivotal decade when fashion and mainstream culture collided, can best be understood through the invention of the supermodel. The fashion models who rose to prominence at the turn of the decade, transforming into supermodels, married the fashion industry with mainstream pop culture. Episode 1: The Rise of The Supermodel features guest interviews with Victoria Beckham, Garren, Tonne Goodman, and Camilla Nickerson. From Vogue’s editorial team: Mark Holgate, Laird Borelli Persson, and Nicole Phelps. See the iconic 1991 Versace Fall 1991 Ready-to-Wear Collection here and learn more about the making of George Michael’s “Freedom! ’90” video. For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
The 90s brought a backlash to the lingering decadence of the 80s. This was the birth of grunge. As supermodels rose to prominence, so did this counterculture, which emphasized anti-fashion and rejection of superficiality. But can anyone be exempt from fashion?Episode 2: Grunge Strikes Back features guest interviews with Marc Jacobs, Kim Gordon, Anna Sui, Cathy Horyn, Grace Coddington, Camilla Nickerson, Tonne Goodman, Kimberly Jenkins, and Megan Jasper. From Vogue's editorial team: Mark Holgate, Laird Borrelli-Persson, and Nicole Phelps.See Marc Jacobs 1993 Spring/Summer collection for Perry Ellis here. For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
The 90’s marked the moment when now iconic American designers turned their distinctive fashion labels into household names. Calvin Klein, Donna Karan, and Ralph Lauren cemented the notion of the designer as brand behemoth, defining an aspirational American lifestyle beyond fashion—into homewear, fragrance, and beauty. We follow the stories of the designers who best exemplified this flourishing moment. Episode 3: Brand Americana features guest interviews with Calvin Klein, Donna Karan, David Lauren, Tyson Beckford, Robin Givhan, Virginia Smith, Thirstin Howl III, and Rack-Lo. For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
Karl Lagerfeld reinvented the role of designer as a creative director, rather than just an in-house couturier. That model, which is standard today, came to wider prominence in the 90’s — a shift which will be perhaps his most lasting legacy. Lagerfeld channeled the zeitgeist and made fundamental changes to the production and marketing of every house he worked at, but most famously, Karl reinvigorated the legendary house of Chanel. His success at Chanel became the blueprint for creative directors of legacy fashion houses. Episode 4: Karl Lagerfled & The Role of Creative Director features guest interviews with Amanda Harlech, Anna Wintour, Kim Jenkins, Eric Wright, Tom Ford, and Claudia Schiffer. From Vogue’s Editorial team: Laird Borelli-Persson and Mark Holgate. For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
After first resisting her role in a storied Italian luxury family brand, Miuccia Prada spent the '90s transforming the company into a major fashion house. She accomplished that metamorphosis by infusing her designs with her own interests and internal contradictions, challenging traditional ideas of beauty and luxury. By embracing her own identity as a modern woman, Prada brought the world into her designs-–and captured imaginations around the globe.Joining Vogue’s editorial team on this episode are, in order of appearance: Photographer Glen Luchford, designers Miuccia Prada and Lawrence Steele, fashion critic and journalist Suzy Menkes, and stylist Lucinda Chambers.For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
Tom Ford was a wildcard choice to unify the house of Gucci – but the Italian luxury brand’s bet on a relatively unknown designer paid off handsomely. Ford brought 70s-inspired sex and glamour to the runways, and the potent formula shocked the fashion world and made Gucci a 90s sensation. And Ford’s new combination of high fashion and cinematic drama paved the way for celebrity and aspirational luxury to grow even more closely intertwined.For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
From major fashion fundraisers to Madonna’s Vogue video, the 90s was a decade of queer visibility unlike ever before. But the road to acceptance was a rocky one. When the glamour of the 70s and the first gay pride parades glorified sexual liberation, fashion reflected the sensuality on the runways and magazines. But when the AIDS crisis of the 80s started killing thousands of gay and trans people, queer expression. was shadowed by the threat of the disease and the discrimination that came with it. By the 90s, the fashion community rallied around the queer community and began to acknowledge queer influence and inspiration within the industry.If you enjoyed this episode and want to listen to more in the series, make sure to subscribe to show here: http://apple.co/invogueSubscribe for new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
At the beginning of the 1990s, London’s fashion scene was sleepy and small. But not for long: Following the groundbreaking success of young British designer John Galliano at Givenchy in the 1980s, other young graduates of the London art school Central Saint Martins began to push the fashion world’s boundaries. Hussein Chalayan, Alexander McQueen, and Stella McCartney garnered attention with their provocative presentations, complex image-making, and challenges to established fashion rules, all on very limited budgets—at least at the beginning. Soon the Paris fashion establishment woke up to – and adopted – this new generation of fashion thinkers whose creativity had been forged in the post-punk cultural stew of 90s London. Interviews in order of appearance: Mark Holgate, Anya Hindmarch, John Galliano, Hussein Chalayan, Camilla Nickerson, Laird Borelli-Persson, Karen Elson, Andrew Bolton, Shaun Leane, Jenny Capitain, Tonne Goodman, Stella McCartney. For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
By the mid 90’s, New York City had married the European couturier model with the commercial power of Seventh Avenue, and had begun to overshadow Paris and Milan as the most important fashion capital in the world. Around the same time, a downtown school of designers and cultural figures began to react against the corporatized, uptown school, establishing a second, and equally as powerful vein of American fashion that exists even today. Voices featured, in order of appearance: Sandra Bernhard, Claire Danes, Julia Stiles, Donna Karan, Marc Jacobs, Isaac Mizrahi, Thirstin Howl III, Kristin Davis, Calvin Klein, Meg Ryan, Ryan McGinley, Kim Gordon, Yukie Ohta, Anna Sui, Laird Borelli-Persson, Vera Wang, Michael Kors, Francisco Costa, Fern Mallis, and Mark Holgate.For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
This weekend, we're delighted to be bringing you an exclusive spoken audio version of Vogue's December cover story. In Vogue: The 1990s host Hamish Bowles interviewed Harry Styles in a wide-ranging conversation spanning Styles' Tokyo travel plans, making music, and his refusal to be defined by boundaries and labels in fashion. You won't want to miss hearing this intimate interview with Harry Styles, the first-ever solo male cover star to front Vogue.This article was read by Hamish Bowles.Find the full December cover article here, and for more of Hamish and Vogue, make sure to subscribe to In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
By the mid 90’s, fashion had ceased to be an insular, self-sustaining industry. The fashion ecosystem expanded rapidly to include celebrities as aspirational symbols of fashion and status in popular culture. We chronicle the era when pop culture became the vehicle for a mass education in high fashion.Voices featured, in order of appearance: Kristin Davis, Fran Drescher and Brenda Cooper for the Nanny, Donatella Versace, Vera Wang, Andie MacDowell, Melissa Joan Hart, Jennie Garth, Debra Messing, Melissa Rivers, Victoria Beckham, Angela Bassett, Claire Danes, Sharon Stone and stylist, Sofia Coppola, Elizabeth Hurley, Kristen Johnston, Karyn Parsons, Tatyana Ali, Tamera Mowry-Housley, Nia Long, Tonne Goodman, Plum Sykes, Mark Holgate, Laird, Darnell-Jamal LisbyFor more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
After years working alongside Karl Lagerfeld, Virginie Viard is quietly and confidently reimagining Chanel for the house’s next chapter. Listen to the exclusive spoken audio article from Vogue here.This article was read by Hamish Bowles.Read along to the full story here, and for more of Hamish and Vogue, make sure to subscribe to In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
This week, in honor of John Galliano's birthday, we're releasing a special episode featuring an extended interview with John Galliano on his career in fashion.For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
Music and fashion have always had a symbiotic relationship, but not until the emergence of hip hop did we see the direct influence of music and music-makers on the fashion industry—and vice versa. This episode is a culmination of the cultural prominence of hip hop, from Dapper Dan’s Harlem Boutique to Tupac walking in a Versace show in Milan. We examine how Hip Hop shook up the fashion world in the 90's and eventually went on to take back its representation.Featuring interviews with Missy Elliot, LL Cool J, Kelly Rowland, Salt N Pepa, Dapper Dan, Daymond John, June Ambrose, and more....For more on this week’s episode and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
As we close the series, Vogue editors and source interviews throughout the season reflect on what they consider to be the ending of the 90’s. Some purists argue that the decade ends on Dec 31, 1999, others have pivotal moments that flag the end of the zeitgeist before transitioning to the 00’s.To catch up on the season and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 1990s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
In season 2 of In Vogue: The 2000s, we explore how fashion fused with every aspect of pop culture to become a global entertainment engine ubiquitous in culture--impinging on the global consciousness like never before. From Nicholas Ghesquière awakening the sleeping fashion house of Balenciaga, to Vogue putting the couture into Juicy Couture, and discussing Carrie Bradshaw’s influence on trendy 2000s fashion with Sarah Jessica Parker, we cover the iconic looks that defined the decade. Hear how 9/11 led to the creation of the CFDA Vogue Fashion Fund and ushered in the next generation of designers. We examine the colliding worlds of Vogue and Hollywood, and learn how the Met Gala became the Superbowl of fashion. We go behind the scenes of the most iconic fashion shoot of all time, where Annie Leibovitz and Grace Coddington transformed the designers of the decade into the characters of Alice in Wonderland, and sit down with the Brazilian Bombshell herself, Gisele Bündchen, who revolutionized modeling and the fashion industry, while on a meteoric rise to international celebrity status.Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts: https://link.chtbl.com/iv-cn-trailer
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No model defined the 2000s like Brazilian bombshell Gisele Bündchen, whose multifaceted charm and charisma catapulted the fashion industry beyond the waif supermodels of the 1990s and into the curvaceous runway of the new millennium. The decade was a smash hit for Gisele. Her infectious personality and era defining look led to her dominance throughout the entire modeling landscape and global runway, while contributing to countless humanitarian efforts. She became a celebrity amongst celebrities. Gisele Bündchen's rise to stardom forever changed the fashion world creating a legacy that continues to echo throughout the entertainment industry today.Featuring interviews with: Gisele Bündchen, Inez Van Lamsweerde, and Vogue’s editorial team Anna Wintour, Tonne Goodman, Ivan Shaw, Nicole Phelps and Laird Borrelli-Perrson. Hosted by Hamish Bowles.To catch up on the season and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcastDon’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 2000s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/or wherever you listen to podcasts.For a transcript of this episode, please follow this link.
Throughout the 2000s, the Metropolitan Museum Costume Institute Benefit—better known as the Met Gala— rose in exuberance and notoriety, becoming the Superbowl of fashion. No longer an exclusive evening for those “in the business,” the gala began welcoming prominent artists, entertainers, and politicians alike. The broad spectrum of prominent cultural figures reflected within the pages of Vogue, toed the gala’s red carpet, resulting in record breaking donations for the Costume Institute.In our oral history we hear about the unforgettable themes that truly make it the party of the year. The Met Gala continues to transform itself into a platform where celebrities and designers push boundaries, stir conversation, while crafting fashion statements that amplify the proposal that fashion is art. Episode featuring: Andrew Bolton, Harold Koda, Jennifer Connelly, Sarah Jessica Parker , Law Roach, Gisele Bündchen, Nicolas Ghesquière, and Vogue’s editorial team Anna Wintour, Nicole Phelps and Laird Borrelli-Perrson. Hosted by Hamish Bowles.To catch up on the season and to access additional Vogue content, make sure to visit vogue.com/podcast.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 2000s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/For a transcript of this episode, please follow this link.
Few designers in the 2000s pushed boundaries, stirred conversation, and made statements like Nicolas Ghesquière. At twenty-five years old, Nicolas took over the dormant fashion house of Balenciaga. As a young, unproven designer, no one foresaw the explosion of ingenuity that would follow. Ghesquière incorporated the influential creations of Balenciaga’s storied past, while drawing inspiration from science fiction, to produce revolutionary looks for the runway and the decade. Season after season, Ghesquière’s unique vision fused the past with the future, allowing Balenciaga to become a rising global brand in the decade. Episode featuring: Nicolas Ghesquière, Marie-Amelie Sauvé, Inez Van Lamsweerde, Jennifer Connelly, and Vogue’s editorial team Nicole Phelps, Mark Holgate, Laird Borrelli-Persson, and Virginia Smith. Hosted by Hamish Bowles.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 2000s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/
In the early 2000s, mass fashion and high fashion collided at Paris couture Fashion Week. Instigated by former Vogue editor Sally Singer for a Vogue April 2003 feature, Gela Nash-Taylor and Pamela Skaist-Levy, founders of Juicy Couture, won the hearts of high fashion’s most revered names. Their signature zip-ups and tracksuits dominated the marketplace and popular culture. Learn how Juicy became the unofficial uniform for Los Angeles types and twenty-something women in the know and the eventual guilty pleasure of couture designers. Hear the story of how the brand’s founders made Juicy Couture into an athleisure wear empire that remains an undeniable force in fashion today.Episode featuring: Pamela Skaist-Levy, Gela Nash-Taylor, Sally Singer, Kate Young, and Rachel Zoe. Hosted by Hamish Bowles.Don’t miss out on new episodes of In Vogue: The 2000s on:Apple Podcasts: listen.vogue.com/iv-apple-podcastsSpotify: listen.vogue.com/iv-spotifyGoogle: listen.vogue.com/iv-google-podcastsor wherever you listen to podcasts.Shop the Vogue Collection: https://shop.vogue.com/For a transcript of this episode, please follow this link.
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