In Vogue: The 90s: Disney+ Docuseries With Anna Wintour Is a Journey Worth Taking

Watch In Vogue: The 90s, the wonderful docuseries of Disney+ produced by Liesel Evans and Jonathan Smith, means going back to a time when publishing was a thriving industry and fashion was the best place to experiment and play. To understand how much Voguethe fashion bible, has influenced the strengthening of the global fashion system, it would be enough to look at the frame in which Anna Wintour She recalls a flight to London and the conversation with her seatmate who, when he learned that she worked at Vogue, he was quick to tell her that for him Vogue they are the divas of the past, “certainly not Madonna”, that is, the most transgressive singer who was around and who was slowly making her way in the world. “At that moment, I knew we had to be Madonna.”Wintour says on camera explaining that the goal of Vogue and fashion at that time was that of to displaceto guess what would become to the page showing the public standards they never expected to follow.

In Vogue: The 90s but it also shows us a world in constant transformation who needed muses who would bring revolution everywhere. And so, after the covers of Vogue with close-ups of the models, long eyelashes, thick hair and full lips, here is Wintour’s intuition: to allow models to occupy the space through their disruptive personality. These are the years of the supermodelthe ones that George Michael wants as the protagonists of the video clip of Freedom and who are starting to become a model for women all over the world to aspire to – at a certain point in In Vogue: The 90s Victoria Beckham explains how she was so obsessed with Linda Evangelista that she decided to cut and style her hair exactly like her. Along with the consecration of the myth, however, an alternative model also begins to emerge. Along with the models who are unrivaled in terms of beauty and charm – not to mention certain controversial statements such as that of Linda who, at a certain point, says that she wouldn’t get out of bed for less than 10 thousand dollars -, icons considered more real than the Campbells, the Schiffers and the Turlingtons begin to emerge. Like Kate Mosswhich also thanks to the Calvin Klein advertising campaign becomes in no time at all one of the most sought-after models in the world, with all due respect to the supermodels who fear that their moment is over.

In Vogue The 90s Disney Docuseries With Anna Wintour Is a Journey Worth Taking

Along with Moss’s “anti-fashion” which, however, goes all the way round and becomes the new “fashion”, he reflects on the fact that, at a certain point, clothes and models were no longer enough. It was necessary that everything be accompanied by a story. – the famous storytelling expressed so well by John Galliano’s fashion shows – and, above all, by a goal that could make the difference. The commitment that Vogue and fashion have taken, for example, to address the emergency of theAIDS which was beginning to claim many victims – including Jean-Paul Gaultier’s partner – still represents for Wintour “the thing I’m most proud of in my career”. In Vogue: The 90swhich sees the participation not only of the directors of Vogue Wintour, Hamish Bowles, Edward Enninful and Tony Goodman, but also of stars like Amber VallettaBaz Luhrmann, Claudia Schiffer, Donna Karan, Elizabeth HurleyGrace Coddington, Gwyneth Paltrow, Hillary ClintonJune Ambrose, Kate Moss, Kim KardashianLinda Evangelista, Marc Jacobs, Mary J. Blige, Michael KorsMissy Elliott, Miuccia Prada, Nicole Kidman, Sarah Jessica Parker, Stella McCartney, Tom Ford, Tommy Hilfiger and Vera Wang, aims to to tell what changed fashion forever for ten years. Hollywood, grunge, the Met Gala, the globalization of American fashion, hip hop: each episode of this series focuses on a key moment of the 90s, and lovers of the genre, the same ones who appreciated The Super Models on Apple TV+, The September Issue but also Franca: Chaos and Creationthey can’t help but adore him.

In Vogue: The 90s has Liesel Evans and Jonathan Smith as executive producers for Raw, and Sarah Amos, Agnes Chu, Helen Estabrook and Mark Guiducci for Vogue Studios. Other executive producers include Hamish Bowles, Edward Enninful, Tonne Goodman and Anna Wintour.

Source: Vanity Fair

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