Leah Garchik

Leah Garchik, San Francisco Chronicle, May 27, 2005

Fashion frenzy this week, with San Francisco's figurative guest book filled with fanciful signatures of fashionistas and designers.

 

Ralph Rucci, here to open a boutique in Neiman Marcus, was feted by the store, by his muse Tatiana Sorokko (the job description includes inspiring the clothes and wearing them), his art dealer, Serge Sorokko, who sold seven of his collages of paper and cloth on opening night, and his admiring customer, Denise Hale. Among the guests -- congratulating Rucci and/or attending Academy of Art festivities that honored Azzedine Alaia and Carla Sozzani -- were James Galanos, who was Nancy Reagan's designer of choice, Suzy Menkes of the International Herald Tribune, Glenda Bailey, editor of Harper's Bazaar, and Boaz Mazor, whose main task here was selling Oscar de la Renta gowns fit for the big de Young opening in October. There were lunches and dinners and receptions, and I didn't hear of a single food fight.

 

One of my favorite moments came Wednesday night, before a dinner in Farallon's upstairs salon, hosted by Christine Suppes of Fashionlines.com. While Alaia had been much feted, he doesn't speak English, and the social responsibility of constantly smiling to accept congratulations was heavy. He looked happy, but not exactly at ease. But when Tatiana Sorokko arrived wearing one of his dresses (dramatic black and red faille), he noticed that the double bows on the sashes were awry. It was as though he'd been a dancer and the music had begun; his body relaxed and he reached up to her waist, his hands working gently and softly, the set smile giving way to a look of intent purpose. Here was a man doing what he knew how to do.

 

Earlier that day, after lunch for Rucci at Neiman's, potential customers crowded around placing orders with him. The designer creates clothing and art utilizing "the same little layers and snippets from my unconscious," he said, but art is simpler because he doesn't have to find a customer who thinks it's flattering to wear. Rucci's clothes are hand-finished, gracefully tucked, embroidered in France, so elegantly tailored they could be worn inside out, but they are, well, expensive as art. An alligator coat was $80,000.

 

At lunch, the designer was almost purring with pleasure over clothing orders and art sales. As to which made him happier, he ducked that question, saying he wished both to satisfy an art-lover's cerebral quest and to help a clothing customer build her confidence. "It's not a choice, it's a moment." I could picture him had he lived in olden days, removing his hat while making this observation and bowing low (in tall suede boots). At one's service, Madame.

 
The designer thanked Madame Hale, a Rucci-ite come-early, for kindly accompanying him down five flights of steps (he's elevator-phobic) after a Fifth Floor dinner hosted by the Sorokkos on Tuesday. Hale, who also hosted a Thursday lunch at Farallon for the designer, was just back from the Connecticut wedding of Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter to Anna Scott. In a sentimental frame of mind, she said the highlight of the wedding was the sight of the "big tough boy" groom with tears running down his cheeks as he said his vows, which made her "re-live my own wedding" to Prentis Cobb Hale.
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