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Heidi Klum returns with Project Runway
Frazier Moore
NEW YORK—Soup or salad for lunch? Heidi Klum ponders the issue as a
waiter stands by. “I’m a Gemini,” she notes. “I can never make up my
mind.” Then she does. Salad.
This would seem to be a rare lapse — as a judge on “Project Runway” (as
well as a co-creator, executive producer and its host), she certainly
has no problem rendering a verdict on each design offered by contestants
on the show, which returns for its fourth season Wednesday at 10 p.m EST
on Bravo.
“I judge clothes from my perspective, and I’ve been in the business for
a long time,” says the 34-year-old German-born
supermodel/designer/personality/entrepreneur.
“I started in ‘93 and I’ve worn a lot of things, from really cheap
things to really expensive things. Things that I didn’t know which way
to get into them — I had instructions, and two people helped me. Or
things so big and overwhelming I can hardly stand in them: `Take the
picture, ‘cause I’m gonna fall over.’ And when I’m not on a runway or in
front of a camera, I need conventional clothes too.”
As she settles in for lunch with a reporter, she has just come from
presiding at a “Project Runway” fashion preview across the street at
Lincoln Centre. There, the season’s 15 contestants were introduced, each
presenting several creations while music throbbed and cameras flashed.
Then Klum threw a black satin trenchcoat over her little blue number and
made her way through raw weather to the restaurant. She stays bundled
up, but in the coat with playful ruffled trim and four-leaf-clover
earrings from her own design collection, Klum still radiates style.
“Fashion makes us all individuals,” she says, her chattiness flavoured
by her faint accent and occasionally bumpy syntax. “At the end of the
day, maybe it’s not all that free of a country. You can’t do this, you
can’t do that” — her smoker friends can’t light up anywhere, it seems —
“but you can wear what you want to wear.”
“Well, you can’t go naked,” she acknowledges.
This “Project Runway” season was shot in Manhattan last May during a
marathon of design challenges, runway judgings and systematic banishment
of 12 contestants. Ever since, all 15 contestants have been living with
the secret of who’s already out.
The season will conclude with the three finalists showing their designs
during New York Fashion Week in February. Klum and her fellow judges,
designer Michael Kors and Elle magazine fashion director Nina Garcia,
will choose the winner, who gets $100,000 to start a fashion line.
“Project Runway” turns fashion’s creative process into a high-stakes
competition, waged under pressure-cooker conditions and unfolding in
plain sight under the guidance of fashion guru Tim Gunn, whose
by-now-famous catch phrase exhorts the contestants to “make it work.”
Obviously, the concept for the show is inspired. But Klum says some
serious tweaking was required to make THAT work. One early idea called
for the contestants to find ordinary people to model their creations for
the judges.
“We thought of having them run around and ask people on the street,
`Hey, do you want to participate in this fashion show we’re doing?’”
And, Klum adds, initially she didn’t mean to be host. Not until Bravo
asked.
What did it matter, she figured — one more thing for her to do? “I NEED
to be doing different things,” she declares. “I’m ALWAYS on the next
thing already.”
But everything isn’t devoted to career. Klum makes it clear that her
favourite roles reside in her private life: as wife (to the pop star
Seal) and mother (to their two young sons and a daughter by former
boyfriend Flavio Briatore). |