Gabrielle Bonheur "Coco" Chanel (19 August 1883 – 10 January 1971) was a pioneering French fashion
designer whose modernist thought, menswear-inspired fashions, and
pursuit of expensive simplicity made her an important figure in
20th-century fashion. She was the founder of one of the most famous
fashion brands, Chanel. Her extraordinary influence on fashion was such that she was the only person in the couturier field to be named on Time 100: The Most Important People of the Century.
Early life
Chanel was born in Saumur, France. She was the second daughter of
Albert Chanel and Jeanne Devolle, a market stallholder and laundrywoman
respectively at the time of her birth. Her birth was declared by
employees of the hospital in which she was born. They, being illiterate,
could not provide or confirm the correct spelling of the surname and it
was recorded by the mayor Francois Poitou as "Chanel". This misspelling made the tracing of her roots almost impossible for biographers when Chanel later rose to prominence.
Her parents married in 1883. She had five siblings: two sisters,
Julie (1882–1913) and Antoinette (born 1887) and three brothers,
Alphonse (born 1885), Lucien (born 1889) and Augustin (born and died
1891). In 1895, when she was 12 years old, Chanel's mother died of
tuberculosis and her father left the family. Because of this, the young
Chanel spent six years in the orphanage of the Roman Catholic monastery
of Aubazine, where she learned the trade of a seamstress.
School vacations were spent with relatives in the provincial capital,
where female relatives taught her to sew with more flourish than the
nuns at the monastery were able to demonstrate.
When Coco turned eighteen, she was obliged to leave the orphanage, and affiliated with the circus of Moulins as a cabaret singer. During this time, Chanel performed in bars in Vichy
and Moulins where she was called "Coco." Some say that the name comes
from one of the songs she used to sing, and Chanel herself said that it
was a "shortened version of coquette, the French word for 'kept woman',"
according to an article in The Atlantic.
Personal life and entry into fashion
While she failed to get steady work as a singer, it was at Moulins that she met rich, young French textile heir Étienne Balsan,
to whom she soon became an acknowledged mistress, keeping her day job
in a tailoring shop. Balsan lavished on her the beauties of "the rich
life": diamonds, dresses, and pearls. While living with Balsan, Chanel
began designing hats as a hobby, which soon became a deeper interest of
hers. "After opening her eyes," as she would say, Coco left Balsan and
took over his apartment in Paris. Biographer Justine Picardie, in her
2010 study Coco Chanel: The Legend and the Life (Harper Collins),
suggests that the fashion designer's nephew André Palasse—supposedly
the only child of her sister Julie—may actually have been Chanel's child
by Balsan.
In 1909 Chanel met and began an affair with one of Balsan's friends, Captain Arthur Edward 'Boy' Capel. Capel financed Chanel's first shops and his own clothing style, notably his jersey blazers, inspired her creation of the Chanel look. The couple spent time together at fashionable resorts such as Deauville, but he was never faithful to Chanel.
The affair lasted nine years, but even after Capel married an
aristocratic English beauty in 1918, he did not completely break off
with Chanel. His death in a car accident, in late 1919, was the single
most devastating event in Chanel's life
A roadside memorial at the site of the accident was placed there by
Chanel, who visited it in later years to place flowers there.
Chanel became a licensed modiste (hat maker) in 1910 and opened a boutique at 21 rue Cambon, Paris named Chanel Modes Chanel's modiste career bloomed once theatre actress Gabrielle Dorziat modelled her hats in the F Noziere's play Bel Ami in 1912 (Subsequently, Dorizat modelled her hats again in Les Modes).
In 1913, she established a boutique in Deauville, where she introduced
luxe casual clothes that were suitable for leisure and sport. Chanel launched her career as fashion designer when she opened her next boutique, titled Chanel-Biarritz, in 1915, catering to the wealthy Spanish clientele who holidayed in Biarritz and were less affected by the war.
Fashionable like Deauville, Chanel created loose casual clothes made
out of jersey, a material typically used for men's underwear. By 1919, Chanel was registered as a couturiere and established her maison de couture at 31 rue Cambon.
Later in life, she concocted an elaborate false history for her
humble beginnings. Chanel would steadfastly claim that when her mother
died, her father sailed for America to get rich and she was sent to live
with two cold-hearted spinster aunts. She even claimed to have been
born in 1893 as opposed to 1883, and that her mother had died when Coco
was two instead of twelve.
In 1920, she was introduced by ballet impresario Sergei Diaghilev to Igor Stravinsky, composer of The Rite of Spring, to whom she extended an offer for him and his family to reside with her.
In 1924, Chanel made an agreement with the Wertheimer brothers,
Pierre and Paul, directors of the eminent perfume house Bourgeois since
1917, creating a corporate entity, "Parfums Chanel." The Wertheimers
agreed to provide full financing for production, marketing and
distribution of Chanel No. 5.
For ten percent of the stock, Chanel licensed her name to "Parfums
Chanel" and removed herself from involvement in all business operations. Displeased with the arrangement, Chanel worked for more than twenty years to gain full control of "Parfums Chanel." She proclaimed that Pierre Wertheimer was “the bandit who screwed me.”
Coco dated some of the most influential men of her time, but she
never married. The reason may be found in her answer, when asked why she
did not marry the Duke of Westminster: "There have been several Duchesses of Westminster. There is only one Chanel."
In 1925, Vera Bate Lombardi, née Sarah Gertrude Arkwright, reputedly the illegitimate daughter of the Marquess of Cambridge, became Chanel's muse, and also her liaison to a number of European royal families. Chanel established the English look
based upon Lombardi's personal style. Lombardi also had the highest
possible social connections. She introduced Chanel to her uncle, the Duke of Westminster, her cousin, the Duke of Windsor, and many other aristocratic families. In 1927 she built Villa La Pausa in Roquebrune on the French Riviera
hiring the architect Robert Streitz. The villa has a staircase and a
patio inspired by her orphanage, Aubazine. La Pausa has been partially
replicated at the Dallas Museum of Art to welcome the Reves collection and part of Chanel's original furniture for the house.
It was in 1931 while in Monte Carlo that Chanel made the acquaintance of Samuel Goldwyn. The introduction was made through a mutual friend, the Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich,
cousin to the last czar of Russia, Nicolas II. Goldwyn offered Chanel a
tantalizing proposition. For the sum of a million dollars
(approximately seventy-five million today), he would bring her to
Hollywood twice a year to design costumes for MGM stars. Chanel accepted
the offer. En route to California from New York traveling in a white
train car, which had been luxuriously outfitted specifically for her
use, she was interviewed by Colliers magazine in 1932. Chanel said she
had agreed to the arrangement to "see what the pictures have to offer me
and what I have to offer the pictures."
World War II
In 1939, at the beginning of World War II, Chanel closed her shops. She believed that it was not a time for fashion.
During the German occupation Chanel resided at the Hotel Ritz, which
was also noteworthy for being the preferred place of residence for upper
echelon German military staff. She also maintained an apartment above
her couture house at 31 rue Cambon. During that time she was criticized
for having an affair with Hans Günther von Dincklage, a German military intelligence officer who arranged for her to remain in the hotel.
World War II, specifically the Nazi seizure of all Jewish owned
property and business enterprises, provided Chanel with the opportunity
to gain the full monetary fortune generated by "Parfums Chanel" and its
most profitable product, Chanel No. 5. The directors of "Parfums
Chanel," the Wertheimers, were Jewish, and Chanel used her position as
an “Aryan” to petition German officials to legalize her right to sole
ownership. On 5 May 1941, she wrote to the government administrator
charged with ruling on the disposition of Jewish financial assets. Her
grounds for proprietary ownership were based on the claim that “Parfums
Chanel “is still the property of Jews”…and had been legally “abandoned”
by the owners.
“I have,” she wrote, “an indisputable right of priority…the profits
that I have received from my creations since the foundation of this
business…are disproportionate…[and] you can help to repair in part the
prejudices I have suffered in the course of these seventeen years.”
Chanel was not aware that the Wertheimers, anticipating the forthcoming
Nazi mandates against Jews had, in May 1940, legally turned control of
“Parfums Chanel” over to a Christian, French businessman and
industrialist, Felix Amiot.
Ultimately, the Wertheimers and Chanel came to a mutual
accommodation, re-negotiating the original 1924 contract. On 17 May
1947, Chanel received wartime profits of Chanel No. 5 in the amount of
some nine million dollars in today’s money, and in the future her share
would be two percent of all Chanel No. 5 sales worldwide. The financial
benefit to her would be enormous. Her earnings would be in the vicinity
of twenty-five million dollars a year, making her at the time one of the
richest women in the world.
Chanel’s friend and biographer Marcel Haedrich provided a telling
estimation of her wartime interaction with the Nazi regime: “If one took
seriously the few disclosures that Mademoiselle Chanel allowed herself
to make about those black years of the occupation, one’s teeth would be
set on edge.”
In 1943, after four years of professional separation, Chanel
contacted Lombardi, who was living in Rome. She invited Lombardi to come
to Paris and renew their work together. This was actually a cover for
"Operation Modellhut," an attempt by Nazi spymaster Walter Schellenberg to make secret contact with Lombardi's relative Winston Churchill. When Lombardi refused, she was arrested as a British spy by the Gestapo. Chanel was later charged as a collaborator, but avoided trial due to intervention by the British Royal family.
Chanel was a very close friend of Walter Schellenberg to the extent
that when he died of cancer penniless in Turin, Chanel paid for his
funeral.
Some references
suggest that Coco Chanel had close contact with another Nazi, Walter
Kutschmann, who was responsible for the murder of thousands of Poland's
Jews early in World War II. He was transferred to France in 1943 where
he became Chanel's Paris SS contact. Kutschmann made frequent trips to
Spain with Chanel with large sums of money passing between them.
Later years and death
In 1945, she moved to Switzerland, eventually returning to Paris in 1954, the same year she returned to the fashion world.
The re-establishment of her couture house in 1954 was fully financed by
Chanel’s old nemesis in the perfume battle, Pierre Wertheimer. This new
contractual agreement would also allow Wertheimer to maintain ownership
of “Parfums Chanel.” In return, Wertheimer agreed to an unusual
arrangement proposed by Chanel herself, attempting to revive her
youthful years as the kept woman of wealthy men. Wertheimer would pay
for all of Chanel’s expenses from the large to the trivial for as long
as she lived.
Her new collection did not have much success with the Parisians
because of her relationship with the Nazis; However, it was applauded by
the British and Americans, who became her faithful customers.
In early 1971 Chanel, then eighty-seven years old, was tired and
ailing but continued to adhere to her usual schedule, overseeing the
preparation of the spring collection. She died on Sunday 10 January, at
the Hotel Ritz where she had resided for more than thirty years. She had gone for a long drive that afternoon and, not feeling well, had retired early to bed.
Film depictions
The first film about Chanel was Chanel Solitaire (1981), directed by George Kaczender and starring Marie-France Pisier, Timothy Dalton, and Rutger Hauer.
The American television movie Coco Chanel debuted on 13 September 2008 on Lifetime Television, starring Shirley MacLaine as a 70-year-old Chanel. Directed by Christian Duguay, the film also starred Barbora Bobulova as the young Chanel, Olivier Sitruk as Boy Capel, and Malcolm McDowell.
The movie substantially rewrote Chanel's personal history, such as its
portrayal of her status as a professional mistress as instead a series
of "love stories," and glossing over both her Nazi collaboration and her
use of British Royal connections to avoid post-war trial as a
collaborator.
A film starring Audrey Tautou as the young Coco, titled Coco avant Chanel (Coco Before Chanel), was released on 22 April 2009. Audrey Tautou is the new spokeswoman of Chanel S.A.
The film Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky, directed by Jan Kounen and starring Anna Mouglalis and Mads Mikkelsen, concerns the purported affair between Chanel and Igor Stravinsky. The film is based on the 2002 novel Coco & Igor by Chris Greenhalgh, and was chosen to close the Cannes Film Festival of 2009. Two more projects are said to be in the works, including one directed by Daniele Thompson.
Coco & Igor is a novel, written by Chris Greenhalgh, which depicts the affair between Chanel and Igor Stravinsky and the creative achievements that this affair inspired. The novel was first published in 2003.
In 2008 a children's book entitled Different like Coco was
published. It depicted the humble childhood of Coco Chanel and
chronicled how she made drastic changes to the fashion industry.
The Gospel According to Coco Chanel: Life Lessons from the World's Most Elegant Woman is a novel written by Karen Karbo.
Published in 2009, it chronicles the humble beginnings and legendary
achievements of Coco Chanel while providing insight and advice on
everything from embracing the moment to living life on your own terms.
Stage depictions
The Broadway musical Coco, music by Andre Previn, book and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner,
opened 18 December 1969 and closed 3 October 1970. It is set in
1953–1954 at the time that Chanel was reestablishing her couture house.
Chanel was played by Katharine Hepburn for the first eight months, and by Danielle Darrieux for the rest of its run.
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