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Wednesday, 12th March 2008

Daphne Guinness on awards shows and the US elections 

California is not the worst place in which to be stuck. In fact I love it! To view your world from a distance is interesting, hearing news slightly delayed, the anchors of life breaking until it is inevitable that your inner compass makes a paradigm shift. At least, that is what has happened to me. I missed all the fashion collections. All of the dates that are normally fixed in my year were suspended. Of course I followed my friends’ shows online, and it was actually some sort of experience to see it from far away.

LA in January and February is punctuated by endless award ceremonies. The Globes, the Grammies, the Independent Spirit Awards etc, which culminate with the Oscars. This year, the writers’ strike overshadowed the whole period and Hollywood was nervous. I actually liked the bare bones of the simple reading of the Golden Globes. It was refreshing, it felt modern and there were none of the forced elements which seem unfortunately to characterise these events. The Grammy show was surreal in its vulgarity. The Oscars were terribly flat. Has the nature of stardom changed or has the audience become more selective? The fact is that now we all know that it is teleprompted and timed to the last degree, it has ruined the experience. Even the jokes, the mistakes and the moments of overwhelming emotion are scheduled. I watched the Grammies and the Oscars quietly with Sue Mengers, as Hollywood’s first and much emulated super-agent is one of the smartest, funniest and best qualified people to comment. Everyone agreed, the ceremony was practically a bore. The best bit, apart from being with Sue, was Diane von Furstenberg’s great ad for American Express: yes, the advertisement was better than the show! Far better.

Diane is brilliant at everything she does. She just gave an interesting and moving evening at her studio where she put on a play based on the stories of seven courageous woman from all over the world, from Pakistan to Nigeria to Ireland, who have each helped fight oppression and changed people’s lives. Their tales are utterly harrowing. I felt so lucky to be living in the West, with a vote and the rule of law. It is so easy to forget and to take these important rights for granted. Coincidentally, I am selling off a part of my collections in April on eBay and at a sale in London, and the entire proceeds are going to Womankind, a charity that deals with political and domestic abuse. If it helps even one person, that will be a start. My hope is that it will do more but you have to begin somewhere, don’t you?

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John Rouse

March 17th, 2008 8:57pm

Hillary Clinton as Rasputin. What a hoot! Well done, Daphne. It's beyond my ken what people see in her. She's fake, disingenuous to a fault and her forced joviality on the campaign trail makes my teeth hurt. Oh, yes, and she and her spouse seem to have no qualms about dabbling in racism, or telling their minions to do so. I look forward to Obama's victory.

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