Models, muses and a rich cat: new film spotlights
unusual life of Karl Lagerfeld
A BBC Two documentary looks at the late designer’s
life and finances through the eyes of his friends
Vanessa
Thorpe Arts and media correspondent
Sat 15 Apr
2023 16.24 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2023/apr/15/karl-lagerfeld-documentary-film-bbc-two
The legal
fallout from the death of Karl Lagerfeld four years ago is still heavily draped
in secrecy. But, ahead of a major exhibition of the great German clothes
designer’s work in New York, a new BBC documentary is about to offer a glimpse
of his unusual private life and shed light on his enormous financial legacy.
While
Lagerfeld’s vast Parisian apartment remains sealed and his £150m estate is tied
up in protracted negotiations between lawyers in Monaco and Paris, it has
emerged that the leading beneficiary of his will is set to be the 33-year-old
French model Baptiste Giabiconi.
Immediately
after Lagerfeld’s death in February 2019 at 85, speculation centred on rumours
that his beloved fluffy white cat, Choupette, would be in line for a
substantial feline fortune. But now Giabiconi has confirmed to the makers of
the documentary that he believes he is “at the top” of the list of inheritors.
In a rare interview, the model also discusses Lagerfeld’s abortive plan to
adopt him as a son.
“He wanted
to adopt me, but the paperwork, there were too many steps,” Giabiconi explains
in The Mysterious Mr Lagerfeld, to be broadcast on BBC Two on 26 April. The
model, who featured in many of Lagerfeld’s promotional campaigns, was close to
the designer in his later years, but he tells the filmmakers they were “not
intimate”.
“We asked
Baptiste a lot of quite straightforward questions,” said Michael Waldman, who
made the film for the Arena documentary strand. “It is the first time many of
Lagerfeld’s inner circle have spoken publicly, and when a much older man has a
close friendship like that, people make assumptions. But it seems that, if not
exactly ‘innocent’, the right word for part of that complicated feeling he had
is ‘fatherly’. The adoption plan, which both seemed to have wanted, was odd,
not least because Baptiste already has a father. But he did tell us that he
loved Lagerfeld. In the end, a picture of Lagerfeld’s almost monkish existence
emerges.”
The
Hamburg-born designer became a dominant figure in the world of haute couture
after he moved to France in the 1950s. He was creative director of Chanel in Paris
for more than four decades and held the same role at Fendi in Milan.
Recognisable for his trademark sunglasses and high white collars, he owned
several homes, including a grand estate in Biarritz and a large villa outside
Paris, in which it is believed he never stayed a night.
Giabiconi
was one of two models who became part of Lagerfeld’s extended family of friends
and colleagues. The other, American Brad Kroenig, is also featured in the
documentary and talks for the first time about the big impact Lagerfeld had on
his life and on his family, including his two sons, who are the fashion
designer’s godsons.
Kroenig,
who lives in Florida, met Lagerfeld when he was 23 and then became the
top-earning international male model for three years running. The generous
Lagerfeld entertained the Kroenig family every summer in the south of France.
“I think I bought a coffee once,” says Kroenig in the film.
Lagerfeld
gave valuable gifts to his friends, including cars, flights and homes. His
American niece, who hardly knew him, recounts how he insisted on designing her
wedding dress for free. It arrived after a flight on Concorde just before her
big day. “He was generous throughout his whole life,” she tells the documentary
makers, adding that as his closest living relative she expects nothing further:
“There is no need.”
Princess
Caroline of Monaco, another friend, is also believed to be a beneficiary of the
will, said Waldman: “She is expected to receive a number of knick-knacks and
personal items.”
Lagerfeld’s
lawyer reveals in the film that property in Monaco has complicated his tax
affairs. Other contributors who have never spoken before include Lagerfeld’s
bodyguard, Sébastien Jondeau, his neighbour in Paris, his doctor and his
long-time creative muse Lady Amanda Harlech, ex-wife of the late Francis
Ormsby-Gore. She received hundreds of books about history and culture, all sent
to her farmhouse in Shropshire, because Lagerfeld wanted her to build a library
there.
He spent
more than half a million euros a year on books at the Paris bookshop Librairie
Galignani. “Books were food for Karl,” comments Jondeau.
The saddest
notes are sounded when the feature-length documentary turns to the lost love
between Lagerfeld and Jacques de Bascher, who died at 38 of complications from
Aids in 1989. The couple had a tempestuous relationship, not least because de
Bascher was also involved with Lagerfeld’s great fashion rival, Yves Saint
Laurent. Lagerfeld fell out with other friends for much less than this sort of
romantic betrayal. “There was great loyalty towards him from friends,” said Waldman.
“But he was an absolutist in everything, which made it hard. He dropped one
friend for years because she wore an outfit by Saint Laurent.
In the same
way, he could also change as an act of will when it came to his own domestic
aesthetic, which went from 18th century to futurist by way of art deco. Even
his weight changed drastically – he lost 60lbs in seven months.”
Lagerfeld’s
last great love was for Choupette, acquired from Jondeau. The blue-eyed white
Birman is now worth an estimated €3m from the modelling work and personal
appearances that continue after her owner’s death.
Those who
worked alongside the famous designer all emphasise his extraordinary work
ethic. He never admitted illness and worked up to the end on several
collections a year for Chanel, for Fendi and for his own label, Karl Lagerfeld.
Each of these brands will be celebrated at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s
Costume Institute this spring in the show Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty.
Harlech has
written this month in Vogue of the speed at which Lagerfeld worked
simultaneously on several collections: “Watching him pounce on fabric swatches
or an embroidery technique, I was wide-eyed and a bit stunned: there was no
hesitation. As Karl often said, there was ‘no second option’.”
The BBC
documentary, in which Harlech also features, reveals the designer’s terror of
ageing and death. “Lagerfeld’s doctor tells us that he had never had another
patient like him,” said Waldman. “He just would not accept his own
mortality.”
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