Anna Wintour broke her ‘cardinal rule’ for 2024 Met Gala; apologises for ‘confusing’ theme
Anna Wintour apologises for causing “confusion” with the 2024 Met Gala Theme.
Also read | Deepfake hits Met Gala: After Rihanna, Gaga, Katy Perry says, 'my mom fell for it'
Here's why Anna Wintour apologised about the 2024 Met Gala theme
Speaking to Today's Jenna Bush Hager on Monday, May 6, Wintour said, “This exhibition broke my cardinal rule.”
“When we came up with the title ‘Sleeping Beauties,’ it's wonderful and poetic and romantic, but actually, it could be many, many things,” Wintour explained further.
She also added that upon consulting Andrew Bolton, the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute curator, for the gala's dress code, Wintour asked him, “What are we gonna say to people to wear to this night?” Bolton then came up with the ‘Garden of Time’ theme.
“I feared that we've unleashed a lot of confusion out there, and for which I deeply apologise,” continued Wintour.
Undoubtedly it led her to the consideration of what celebs would actually wear on the D-Day. Wintour had already perceived that they'd see “a lot of flowers.” The Today interviewer then probed further to confirm if Wintour would herself take on the idea of sporting florals. The Vogue chief teased, “Possibly,” which, as we know, she ultimately delivered as she was snapped flaunting florals on the red carpet on Monday.
Speaking more on what ‘Sleeping Beauties’ represented, Wintour explained, “The idea of ‘Sleeping Beauties’ is taking these masterpieces from different periods, and because so many of them are very fragile, they are laid flat behind glass walls.”
Also read | Met Gala 2024 major MIA: Why Priyanka Chopra, Justin Bieber, Ben Affleck, Taylor Swift, and other regulars skipped
Lines blur between Fiction and Reality
Beyond the pages of reality, looking at the rather-floral-inspired theme of the fashion night, netizens instantly jumped back in time, remembering Meryl Streep's iconic line from the 2006 comedy-drama film The Devil Wears Prada based on Lauren Weisberger's novel.
Although The Devil Wears Prada author hasn't officially proclaimed fashioning her grey antagonist (of sorts), Miranda Priestly, after Wintour, the world's audience has somehow collectively stood firm on the character being heavily inspired by the real-life Vogue boss.
Some fans even quoted Priestly's sardonic immortal words, “Floral? For Spring? Groundbreaking," and tied them to Wintour's real-life Met Gala theme going off Priestly's script. Though Vogue's chief apology for the theme was more centric around the “confusion” it had generated, one can't help but now correlate the breaking of her “cardinal rule” with this as well.
0 Comments