UNBUTTONED
Is This the End of the Red Carpet?
The actor’s strike could have far-reaching
implications for how we watch and consume fashion.
Vanessa
Friedman
By Vanessa
Friedman
July 20,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/07/20/style/actors-strike-red-carpet-fashion.html
At first it
seemed impossible to imagine: No more red carpets! No more photos of movie
stars and names to watch in fabulous gowns blanketing the internet. Could
“Oppenheimer” and “Barbie” be the last gasp of that marketing Valhalla of
fashion and film that was the modern premiere — at least for the foreseeable
future?
At least,
that is, until the SAG-AFTRA actor’s strike, announced July 14, is resolved.
For the moment, actors, from the unknown to the most celebrated, are banned by
their union from engaging in any promotional activities. That means big
openings. That means magazine covers touting new movies. That means film
festivals with all their associated dressing and posing opportunities. That
means social media pics of them getting dressed for premieres.
And what
that means for fashion, an industry that has become increasingly intertwined
with the denizens of Lalaland in a mutually beneficial ecosystem of influence
and outfits — and as important, what it means for the public’s understanding of
fashion, much of which is received through the lens of celebrity — is
potentially enormous.
Actors sign
contracts that can be worth millions, negotiated by agents and managers, to be
brand ambassadors, appearing in some combination of advertisements, front rows,
store openings and red carpets, dressed by stylists, generating coverage,
desire and, most of all, publicity for everyone involved.
Their work
may form their substance, but fashion is the grease that sends them viral (and
that has bolstered their bank accounts at a time when the economics of movies
are shifting — part of the reason for the strike). Timothée Chalamet on the red
carpet in Venice in a crimson Haider Ackermann halter top and Florence Pugh in
a sheer pink Valentino “revenge dress” are images that put those actors and
those brands at the center of social media for days.
Alison
Bringé, the chief marketing officer at Launchmetrics, a data analytics and software
company, wrote in an email that Margot Robbie’s appearance in Schiaparelli at
the film’s Los Angeles premiere “generated over $2.1 million in media impact
value in just 24 hours, which is more than half of what Schiaparelli’s fall
2023 show amassed overall.”
With all of
that grinding to a halt, along with studio productions themselves, what
happens? And who are most at risk? Actors and studios are not the only ones
with a stake in this game.
At the
moment, agents and talent seem to be holding their breath and swiveling their
heads to see what everyone else is doing. The brands themselves are staying
mum. Louis Vuitton, whose ambassadors include Jennifer Connelly, Michelle
Williams and Ana de Armas, declined to comment. Versace, which works with Anne
Hathaway, ditto. Prada, ditto. Gucci, ditto. Dior did not respond to requests
for comment.
In theory,
all fashion promotional work (as opposed to movie promotional work) can
continue. Commercial appearances are not prohibited, according to the strike guidelines.
And there are myriad such opportunities that have nothing to do with premieres.
Recently Wimbledon turned into a catwalk of sorts for celebrities including
Emma Corrin and Brad Pitt.
Much has
been made of the fact that the first big red carpet victim will be the Venice
Film Festival, scheduled for Aug. 30 to Sept. 9, and the de facto start of
awards season, with all the fashion fanfare that implies.
This year
the films rumored to be showing star Zendaya, a Louis Vuitton ambassador (Luca
Guadagnino’s “Challengers”); Jessica Chastain, who works with Gucci (Michael
Franco’s “Memory”); Emma Stone, also a Louis Vuitton ambassador (Yorgos
Lanthimos’s “Poor Things”); and Penélope Cruz, who works with Chanel (Michael
Mann’s “Ferrari”). All of them will most likely be absent.
Yet, as it
happens, early September is also New York Fashion Week, and the start of the
whole fashion season. That’s four weeks of potential for appearances and
events.
Even more
pointedly, brands themselves have increasingly tiptoed into the content arena,
making short films, especially during the pandemic. What sorts of non-studio
videos could they cook up? Entirely independent films are allowed under strike
guidelines. YSL even has its own film production division. The studios would
look selfless — supporting talent — and the talent would look, well, good. When
given lemons. …
Indeed, the
strike may make brand relationships even more important, both as a source of
income and as a creative outlet. “The first writers strike, our teams were
busier than ever, because a lot of the actors had to do more promotional
appearances to subsidize for any slowing in their main vocation,” said Brooke
Wall, the founder of the Wall Group, a talent agency for stylists that is part
of the Endeavor group.
That’s one
way of looking at it. The issue is thornier, however, because of the morality
and optics involved. Even if SAG-AFTRA members are allowed by the rules to
continue their outside work, will it not seem gauche to do so? Given the glitz
and champagne associated with fashion, it could seem a bit like partying while
Rome burns.
Fran
Drescher, the SAG-AFTRA president and face of the strike, received vociferous
blowback when she attended the Dolce & Gabbana Alta Moda couture
extravaganza/junket in Puglia, Italy, just before the strike was announced,
even though a spokeswoman for the union told The Hollywood Reporter that it
knew about the trip, and it was fine. Add in the fact that it is often the most
boldface names in the industry who have snagged the biggest outside contracts —
exactly that layer of Hollywood that does not necessarily need work during a
stoppage — and the situation gets even more complicated.
On the
other hand, there is a whole substratum of talent who are not at the
negotiating table and yet are seriously affected by the red carpet suspension:
the stylists and hair and makeup artists who help create the image-making
magic, and whose salaries are generally paid for by the studios, not the
talent.
“There is
no work!” said Kate Young, a stylist whose work focuses on Hollywood.
The end of
movie promotion is a “massive issue,” according to the stylist Karla Welch, who
said she had had four premiere tours cut short or canceled already. “Basically
any stylist who works with celebs just saw all their jobs go away,” she said.
“The only thing celebs’ people can do are fashion jobs, and that’s the few
people who have celebs with brand deals.”
This may be
partly why there has been little noise thus far about suspending brand
appearances. There is a trickle-down effect at work that is not insignificant
when it comes to people’s livelihoods. Still, Ms. Wall said, “this is a whole
new world, so we shall see.”
Indeed,
there is a scenario in which the suspension of the red carpet has the
unintended but far-reaching consequence of decoupling fashion and Hollywood, or
at least significantly changing the balance of power. It could prove to brands
that they need celluloid celebrities less than they may think, ushering in a
new era of ambassadors focused on the rest of the world and talent that has
nothing to do with back lots or Oscar statuettes. Really, it has already begun.
Two names:
BTS and Beyoncé.
Vanessa
Friedman has been the fashion director and chief fashion critic for The Times
since 2014. In this role she covers global fashion for both The New York Times
and International New York Times. More about Vanessa Friedman
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