it's confirmed...
from wwd:
Olivier's Next Act: Nina Ricci to Name Theyskens Today
By Miles Socha
PARIS — Olivier Theyskens won’t show his first collection for Nina Ricci until next March, but he’s eager to take on a French house that already sends his poetic imagination soaring.
Ricci will officially announce today that Theyskens is its new artistic director, effective Nov. 1. This confirms an exclusive WWD report on Aug. 30 that he was zeroing in on a Ricci deal. Theyskens succeeds Lars Nilsson, who resigned last month for personal reasons, with plans to return to the United States.
Terms of the contract were not disclosed, but Mario Grauso, president of Puig Fashion Group, said the firm sees large growth potential given Theyskens’ design prowess. Grauso plans to expand Ricci’s market profile with select flagships, a new shop-in-shop concept and eventual expansion into new product categories and possibly price tiers.
For his part, Theyskens declined to give any hints of what might come down the Ricci runway come Paris Fashion Week next spring, but he promised designs consistent with a brand that is “synonymous with beautiful refinement.”
“For quite a while, I had a feeling there were quite a few values in this brand which are common to me, too,” he said. “We are speaking about a symbol of refinement, grace and femininity and also an idea of freedom. These are a few very inspiring things.”
In his first interview since Proctor & Gamble shuttered the Rochas fashion business last July, Theyskens told WWD he understood the corporate logic of that decision, while staunchly defending his three-year stint at the house, which earned wide acclaim, if not commercial traction.
Looking rested, happy and full of energy, the 29-year-old fashion wunderkind said he has already moved on from the setback at Rochas and is eager to enter a new chapter — or perhaps something bigger — in his career.
“I sometimes have the feeling of opening a new opus in life,” he said with a laugh.
Dressed in a thin gray T-shirt, white pants and suede sneakers, his long black hair in a ponytail, Theyskens talked in an animated fashion about Ricci.
“I’m totally excited about it. I’m very happy. It’s an honor,” he said. “I would like to see it become a symbol of beauty, of femininity and grace. I want to make it a brand with true values, an iconic brand. And I want to have a lot of girls fall in love with it!”