The Globe and Mail - 19.10.2019

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SATURDAY,OCTOBER19,2019 | THEGLOBEANDMAILO P9

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PURSUITS|

I


n any given concert, Celine Dion provides an Oscar ceremony’s
worth of red-carpet looks all on her own. With the intense fashion
following the superstar has amassed as a style icon, expectations are
at an all-time high for her new Courage world tour, which takes her
stage fashion to another level.
“People that come to Celine’s show, they expect drama and beauti-
ful costumes, and we need to give them at least five looks,” says Pepe
Munoz, who with Sydney Lopez makes up the fashion styling duo on
Team Celine. “And there’s many, many styles of songs. There’s uptem-
po, there’s ballads, and sometimes we find that in the show they’re
next to each other, so we have to find something versatile enough to
match those different styles.”
In addition to suiting the mood of the music and making a fashion
statement, there are also the practical considerations around Dion’s
energetic performance style. They include, but are not limited to,
standing legs akimbo, perching on the edge of the stage, prancing,
lunging, fist pumping, chest thumping and air guitar. Little wonder
the superstar and her team began planning the Courage stage cos-
tumes in earnest last January, at Paris couture. Lopez and Munoz take
us behind the scenes of the process.

THECOIF
Dion created a stir in her recent
Harper’s Bazaar shoot by don-
ning a short black wig of Vidal
Sassoon’s iconic 1960s haircut.
Her own glamorous ’dos range
from topknots and chignons to
long, loosewaves.Shortly before
the Courage tour’s opening night
in Quebec City, however, Dion
and hairstylist Dee Amore Marti
decided to chopher goldenwaves
into a sleek bob for real – surpris-
ing even her fashion stylists.

MAKEANENTRANCE
The striking red gowns by Kuwait-
born Yousef Aljasmi, such as the
one on theCoî×agealbum cover,
open the show and are emble-
matic. “When the light and the
cameras hit the screens, it makes
a statement,” Lopez says of the
power colour. “We were looking
for something that really repre-
sented what this whole album is
for and this whole season of what
Celine is doing right now,” she ex-
plains, “and that’s taking charge
of everything. She’s the boss.”

DOUBLETHEFUN
High-waisted cigarette pants pair
with a soft blouse by Alexandre
Vauthier. Dion has the original
mini-dress version, too. “When
that look walked out [on the run-

way], Celine was obsessed,” Mu-
noz recalls. “’Oh my God, the
sleeves, the sleeves!’ ” Understan-
dably: The blouse has huge, ro-
mantic, billowing sleeves that,
onstage, emphasize even the
most delicate of the singer’s ges-
tures. And when the tempo shifts,
there’s a twist. “We came up with
the idea that if we remove the
sleeves, you have two looks in
one that suddenly become more
of the rock ’n’ roll,” Munoz says.

HOMETOWNFASHION
“On this tour we have a little bit
more time,” Lopez says of the ap-
proximately 90 seconds Dion gets
offstage between song sections to
do a complete costume change.
While she puts on the next outfit,
giant screens offer another fash-
ion show – new conceptual video
content of the superstar. Mon-
treal designer Yso, for example,
whipped up the diaphanous
white dress that Dion wears in a
haunting underwater video that
bridges the last segment of the
show.

GLAMROCK
“Obviously, David Bowie and
Freddie Mercury,” Lopez says
with a laugh of the inspiration for
the bell-bottomed silver jump-
suit by5×oect 7înöayalum Mi-

chael Costello that Dion wears,
accompanied by strobing neon
lightning bolts, to sing raucous
and funky covers.
“They’re so iconic, fashion-
wise, these amazing men who did
so much for fashion, and we just
wanted to give that little nod.”
Munoz adds that the choice suits
the zeitgeist, “with gender fluid-
ity and them being so androgy-
nous.”
The silhouette is arguably also
a nod to Elvis Presley in his Las
Vegas years – if Elvis had exer-
cised and worn liquid sequins like
a sinewy second skin.

DRAMAQUEEN
“The bigger the better, for Titanic
especially,” Munoz says of the
outfit for the performance of this
legendary song. “She told us, ‘I
want something big, kids. I want
something dramatic.’ ” They sur-
prised her with a gown by Zac Po-
sen fresh from his spring 2020
presentation. Lopez pulled some
strings to get it in time for open-
ing night. “We had it delivered on
a truck that came just with that
dress for us from New York.” On
stage, as drones flit and twinkle
like fireflies above her in a simu-
lated night sky, the corseted

gown’s tiers of pale lavender tulle
hold their own against her signa-
ture blockbuster ballad. Worth it.

ANENCORE
Despite all the planning, the
Courage fashion parade is only
getting started. “We’re already on
the hunt for new things,” Munoz
teases. “She’s so connected with
fashion. She always has been, but
now it’s so public that we cannot
keep her in the same outfits for an
entire year!”
–NATHALIEATKINSON

SpecialtoTheGlobeandMail

Clockwisefromleft:CelineDionoutfitsforherCouragetourincludepiecesby
designersYousefAljasmi,AlexandreVauthier,MichaelCostelloandZacPosen.
BRIANPURNELL/SONYMUSICCANADA,INSTAGRAM(VAUTHIER).

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