Naomi Campbell walks the runway during her Fashion For
Relief - Haiti fashion benefit, shown during Fashion Week
in New York, Friday, February 12, 2010. Photo by AP.
Naomi Campbell called together her model, designer and
celebrity friends to put on a fundraiser for the relief effort
in Haiti, but the most poignant moments of this event, held as
part of New York Fashion Week, was the finale tribute to
Alexander McQueen.
McQueen was discovered dead on Thursday in London. While he
wasn't known to have many close friends in the fashion
industry, Campbell, a fellow Brit, was in his inner circle.
At the end of the Friday runway show, Campbell walked
backstage with tears in her eyes and clutching the hand of
fellow model Angela Lindvall.
The last seven outfits in Fashion for Relief were McQueen's,
modeled by Campbell, Helena Christensen and Karen Elson,
among others - all wearing impossibly high heels by the
designer, including one pair of platforms that didn't
actually have any heels.
Everything seen on the catwalk at the Bryant Park tents will
be sold on the Net-a-Porter website, beginning March 15.
There is something for all tastes, ranging from the snakelike
McQueen cocktail dresses to mens' tuxedos. Gold lame gown?
Check. Magenta trench coat? Check.
Black catsuit with thigh-high boots? Double check.
The clothes, though, were secondary here. The audience -
mostly paying ticketholders instead of the editors, stylists
and retailers that normally fill the seats at fashion shows -
applauded loudest for celebrities like Chris Brown and Kelly
Osbourne, and designers Donna Karan, Diane von Furstenberg
and Georgina Chapman of Marchesa. Actor Alan Cumming wore a
kilt, and Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson took a spin in a
black gown with gold beading after doing an opening speech
about charities such as CARE and the White Ribbon Alliance
that fight maternal mortality.
She praised Campbell as a loyal and generous friend. "When
Naomi Campbell calls you and says, 'Hi Fergie, can you turn
up on the 12th?' You turn up on the 12th," she said.
Models who rarely strut anymore, including Maggie Rizer and
Agyness Deyn, strapped on their stilettos, too, with the
audience cheering on Deyn when she fell twice wearing
towering Burberry sandals.
But the crowd clearly came to see Campbell, who did not
disappoint. The 39-year-old showed why she was once queen of
the catwalk, making a short, black sequined flapper dress
practically do its own dance.
Campbell said before the show that she's always nervous
before walking the runway, "but just doubly nervous" for the
relief show because she had depended on friends to
collaborate and wanted everyone to enjoy it.
American Express, which sponsored the show, said 950 tickets
- at $100-$150 each - were sold out within three days.
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