Christian Lacroix: 'I am too angry to cry'
 				 Famously over-the-top French designer Christian Lacroix says that fighting to    save his couture business will spark his creative renaissance.  
 				
  			 				 
 				 					 	 		By Celia Walden  
			 		Published: 7:00AM BST 21 Jun 2009
 	 	
   	 			
 				 					Christian Lacroix was founded in 1987 by the eponymous designer 					Photo: DAVID ROSE 					
 		
 	
 
"What really hurts," says Christian Lacroix slowly, "is that my    name, which I have now lost, is the name of my family. Whoever does take    over the business can use it and abuse it as they like, but it's my father's    name, and my grandfather's name – men who brought me up to have a very rigid    moral backbone; men who taught me never to have any debts." 
  Were his father alive today, the 58-year-old designer admits, he would be    agonised to learn that his son's celebrated couture house – currently owned    by the US-based Falic Group – went into voluntary receivership last week as    a consequence of 10 million euro losses. And with 125 jobs at stake    (including Lacroix's) unless a new investor is found in the next fortnight,    the future looks bleak for the many workers who have stayed loyal to Lacroix    since the company started trading 22 years ago.  
 		 
   "I'm fighting," he smiles, setting off those Machiavellian eyebrows. 
"Don't    tell anyone, because I'm not allowed to do this, but we absolutely are going    to have a show in mid-July, during Fashion Week – and it won't be a funeral:    it'll be a fightback." That there is not enough money to pay the    seamstresses, fabric suppliers, models or even the stationers printing the    invitations is something Lacroix is striving to overcome. "It can't    cost us a single euro to put this show on, because I'm not having my workers    lose a penny from their pockets, but so far, it looks like thanks to other    people's kindness – friends and suppliers working for free – it might    happen.  
  "I can't stand the idea that people think I am to blame," he adds,    despondent for a moment. "But to a certain extent I am paying for not    having done what everyone else did, with their logos and It-bags. I never    went down that route."  
  Sitting in his fuchsia-painted couture studio above a quiet courtyard off the    rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré, in jeans and one of his own tricolour jackets    worn over a pig-motif Comme des Garçons jumper, Lacroix looks anything but    defeated. There is, however, an element of tempered hysteria to his    defiance, a yearning for levity in his frequent, gurgling fits of laughter.  
  "The recession was a gift to the management, really, because they could    blame everything on that, but it was only partly responsible. Do you know    that I haven't been paid for a year and a half?"  
  This sets him off again. "I'm owed one million two hundred thousand euros."    Has he shed a tear, I ask? He rattles off a quick succession of Gallic tuts. "No,    no, no: I am too angry to cry."  
  These statements – as theatrical as the taffeta, lace and embroidered    creations hanging behind him – are part of the reason why Lacroix quickly    became a part of modern fashion folklore. Who else would, in laughable    fashionese during one Nineties catwalk show, describe a garment as "a    'cold-dawn' shot razimir spiral sheath dress with 'apricot' and 'melon' kick    pleat"?  
  To many, I tell him, haute couture is so baffling that they consider it    natural it should lose its place in today's world. "But fashion isn't    something dead," he says. "Fashion needs to be worn. People are    wrong when they see it as being disconnected from reality: every morning,    before I sit down to draw, I read all the papers, listen to the radio and    find out what is going on in Iran – all that influences me. Besides, in    periods of crisis, people need to see beautiful things around them."  
  As a child growing up in Arles to an engineer father and a fashion-loving    mother ("Even as the sirens went off during the blitz, she would put on    her best shoes"), Lacroix remembers being intoxicated by the coquetries    of women. "My mother and her friends would wear these wonderful big    1950s puffball skirts and I would crawl around underneath them, breathing in    their strong perfumes."  
  After a history of art degree taken largely "to reassure his parents",    Lacroix moved to Paris where he dreamt of working as a curator in the    Louvre. It wasn't until a few years later, after a spell at Hermès, that –    influenced by the gipsy and Provencal traditions he grew up with – Lacroix    started designing the opulent corseted and crinolined dresses that were to    make him famous.  
  "My extended family were very embarrassed," he giggles. " 'Why    don't you make things like Yves Saint Laurent?' they'd ask. 'Because my name    is Christian Lacroix,' I told them." 
  These baroque tendencies meant that Lacroix was soon designing costumes for    the theatre, ballet and opera, and accruing a celebrity clientele. Madonna,    Nicole Kidman and the Princess of Wales, with whom he became close, were    dedicated admirers of his.  
  "I still have all Diana's letters," he smiles. "And they tell    me what I could see for myself during all the years that I knew her: that    she was morphing from a blushing, shy girl into a woman."  
  At that time, a running joke in the TV series, 
Absolutely Fabulous, was    helping to make him a household name in Britain. "It was the best    introduction I could have had in England," he says, "where you    guys all think French designers are brainless frogs."  
  It's a stereotype that Lacroix is far from realising. Throughout the interview    his opinionated outbursts are peppered with cultural references and    lightened by a rare, very un-French ability to send himself up. He is    surprisingly optimistic about the effects the recession will have on his    industry ("If you look back at the history of creativity in clothes –    the French Revolution, the First World War and the Second World War – they    have all been creative reinventions, the moment new forms of luxury come    into play") and loves the British for being "stylistically free;    not bound up like we are", but is saddened by the new puritanism he    sees in young people "which makes me feel like an old pervert".  
 
Today's size zero culture, which recently provoked Alexandra Shulman, the    editor of British 
Vogue, to send a letter to all major designers    asking them to make larger sizes, is another cause for concern. "She    was right to do that. Very skinny women don't look beautiful in clothes.    What I cannot stomach, because it evokes the war to me, is when you can see    a woman's kneecap protruding in its entirety, skinny elbows, or a woman's    chest bones. I won't tell you who they are because it would be hurtful, but    there are certain models I cancelled jobs with because they were too thin.    It's a terribly sad cloning of young women today which actually means that    there is no room for anything to stand out – except bones."  
 
As a "Mediterranean lover of women", Lacroix feels that the primary    female attraction is their capacity to seduce. "That said, I've always    been bisexual," he volunteers. "But I could never live with a man    – too similar." Off goes that great runaway laugh again, the kind    of laugh that would have been cut short by a parent as a child. "And my    wife, whom I married in 1974, still fascinates me, still touches me, still    makes me want to weep with joy in the mornings. She makes me laugh, I think    she's beautiful, she's like my child and my lover – all at once."  
  As he walks me out, confiding 
a propos of nothing that he has given up    chocolate and Bordeaux, he has an epiphany. "Actually losing a few    pounds and having this battle to fight makes me feel that I am undergoing a    renaissance," he declares.  
  I quote a line from a – perhaps premature – fashion obituary in a British    paper last week, intrigued to know what he makes of it. The worry is that "there    just aren't enough Beluga-eating, stunningly beautiful, moneyed women in    this world to keep Christian Lacroix's fantasy alive." 
  "Probably true," he deadpans. Then bursts out laughing