Karl Lagerfeld

Lagerfeld's short film 'The Return', about Coco Chanel's return to the fashion scene, will make its debut on December 10th.

(PARIS-AFP) - Chanel's head designer Karl Lagerfeld has revealed he thinks the founder of the iconic French fashion house would have "hated" him if they had ever met. Lagerfeld said he had been a "rude awakening" for the prestigious fashion house, which had "grown dusty" before his arrival in 1982.

"I never bumped into Coco Chanel. It was better that way, she would have hated me," he told an audience of hundreds of French college students at a masterclass in Paris on Tuesday.

"You have to respect things, but if you want to survive, you have to change them," he said, recalling how he had "pushed" and "exaggerated" classic Chanel themes. The couture house this year marked the 100th anniversary of the opening of Gabrielle 'Coco' Chanel's first shop in Deauville in the summer of 1913. Today the label, whose founder died in 1971, has 300 outlets including 185 boutiques in cities such as Sao Paulo, Calgary, New Delhi, Istanbul and Brisbane.

Its creative director Lagerfeld also heads design for Fendi as well as running his own label fashion house, and is famous for his prodigious output. On Tuesday, he joked that was "pushing for a 48-hour day" because he was constantly pressed for time.

"Some people say elegance is dead. They're wrong. It has a new face," he told the students.

"It's up to us to adapt to the changing times and not the other way around," said Lagerfeld. "What counts is today."

Lagerfeld's real date of birth has long been a mystery, however in an interview earlier this year he revealed he was born in 1935. He also advised the students, from the prestigious Sciences Po school in Paris, not to focus solely on their studies.

"Education is good, but it's not enough," said Lagerfeld, who left his home in Germany at just 16 to work in the Paris fashion industry. "I never studied, I didn't have time."

Lagerfeld's short film for the couture brand, entitled "The Return" is also in the limelight, set to make its debut on December 10 ahead of the designer's Métiers d'Art 2013/14 fashion show, taking place this year in Dallas, Texas.

Written and directed by Lagerfeld, the half-hour film depicts episodes from the life and career of Gabrielle Chanel, aka Coco, portrayed by British-American actress Geraldine Chaplin. The film will also be released on the Chanel website on December 10.

"The Return" focuses primarily on Coco Chanel's return to the fashion scene, and on the reopening of her couture house in Paris in 1954. Karl Lagerfeld also hopes to underscore the designer's relationship with American culture. Charlie Chaplin's daughter, who makes a very convincing Coco Chanel, is joined on screen by Rupert Everett, Anna Mouglalis, and Arielle Dombasle.

 

(Photos: AFP Relaxnews / Chanel)