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In July 1964 an alleged incident involving Paco Rabanne rocked the
model community to its foundations. The innovative Spanish-born designer
had used black beauties in his Paris show to model his futuristic
plastic dresses, a move that enraged the American fashion press. According
to Rabanne in Barbara Summers’s book Skin Deep, things got
out of hand backstage after the show. ‘I watched them coming,’ he said,
‘the girls from American Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar. “Why did you do
that?” they said. “You don’t have the right to do that, to take those kind
of girls. Fashion is for us, white people.” They spat in my face. I had to
wipe it off.’ Rabanne was subsequently blacklisted by the fashion cartels
until black runway models finally became chic in the 1970s.
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