Jean Paul Gaultier Fashion Freak review: Fabulous fun that tells us 'Le freak c'est chic'
JEAN PAUL GAULTIER Fashion Freak show review; The iconic designer has brought his celebrated theatrical extravaganza to Camden's Roundhouse in London with close friends Boy George and Grace Jones cheering him on opening night.
The one-time enfant terrible of the fashion world has lost none of his irrepressibly infectious joie de vivre. At 70, as he stood before a cheering crowd, he still radiates a wide-eyed, child-like delight in everything he does. He may, perhaps, always be best known as the man who brought us Madonna in pointy underwear, but he also represents a profound celebration of difference, of diversity, of revelling in who you are and not letting the world or even designers dictate it to you. "We can use fashion and not be used by fashion," he tells us, followed by his rallying cry of: "We are freaks and freak is chic." All that and more is clear from the moment the show opens with performers in giant teddy bear costumes sporting, naturellement, conical bras...
The entire spectacle is a hybrid of fashion, theatre and the designer's own unique sense of fun. It is a peek inside his head, which we are told contains "a tiny mind filled with muscle bears and sexy nurses." Hence the bonkers opening number.
From there it is a riotous romp through his life via huge screen projections showing magazine covers, artwork or humorous video inserts, alongside the main on-stage set-pieces. It all whirls us from a young boy in trouble for doodling at school (but always encouraged by his doting grandma, later seen can-canning), through struggling early designers days filled with rejection, on to heady success and then the heartbreak of the AIDS era.
The main stage includes, of course, a huge catwalk which bisects the cabaret tables on the main floor. Gorgeous corsetted men and women writhe to a sensual version of Light My Fire before a Josephine Baker segment segues into lucha libre fighters with feather boa headdresses and wings cavort to a pounding club beat.
The live singers including chanteuse Haylen (with a spectacular presence to match her powerhouse, richly full-bodied vocals) are absolutely sensational throughout.