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OBITUARY

French fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy dies aged 91

Hubert de Givenchy, the aristocratic French fashion designer famous for the "Little black dress" and styling Audrey Hepburn and Jackie Kennedy, has died aged 91, his partner said Monday.

French fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy dies aged 91
Hubert de Givenchy in Paris in 1978. Photo: AFP
Givenchy set the template for ladylike chic in the 1950s and 1960s, and his restrained style still informs the way Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and older American and Chinese socialites dress.
   
His partner, the former haute couture designer Philippe Venet, announced his death through the Givenchy fashion house, saying he had died in his sleep on Saturday.
   
The pair lived in a Renaissance chateau near Paris.
   
“It is with huge sadness that we inform you that Hubert Taffin de Givenchy has died,” it said in a statement to AFP.
   
It was Givenchy's 40-year friendship with Hepburn, who he met on the set of the Billy Wilder's Oscar-winning comedy “Sabrina” in 1953, that helped make him a fashion legend.
 
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The narrow-collared suits and slim woollen dresses Givenchy designed for the gamine actress for “Funny Face” and “How to Steal a Million” made both of them style icons.
 
The black sheath dress he made for the opening scenes of the “Breakfast at Tiffany's” was perhaps the most famous “little black dress” of all time — although fellow Paris fashion legend Coco Chanel is credited with inventing the garment.
 
It was also the Givenchy look that former US first lady Jacqueline Kennedy adopted for her White House years, sticking to a uniform of shifts dresses, pillbox hats and low-heeled pumps.
   
The red coat she wore on the campaign trail for the 1960 presidential election was a Givenchy copy.
   
On a state visit to France the following year, Kennedy made a famously grand entrance in a Givenchy white silk faille dress at a state dinner at the Palace of Versailles, looking as regal as any European monarch's consort.
 
   
 
“Hubert de Givenchy was a symbol of Parisian elegance for more than half a century,” his label said Monday.
   
“He was the first creator to launch a luxury ready-to-wear range. He revolutionised international fashion in creating the timeless looks for Audrey Hepburn, his friend and muse for more than 40 years.”
   
Fashion mogul Bernard Arnault, head of the giant LVMH group which now owns Givenchy, led the tributes, saying that “he was one of the creators who put Paris at the summit of world fashion in the 1950s.”
 
Born in 1927 in Beauvais, France, Givenchy studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris.
 
His first job in the fashion industry was when he worked for Jacques Fath in Paris in 1945. He then worked for Robert Piguet and Lucien Lelong in 1946, and finally for Elsa Schiaparelli (1947-1951).
 
He opened his own house in 1952. In 1988, Givenchy sold his business to LVMH but remained head of design until his retirement in 1995.
 
He was loved by the fashion world from his very first collection. 
 
In 1952, the New York Times magazine published an article entitled “A Star Is Born” and l’Album du Figaro also wrote a feature stating that “In one night, Hubert de Givenchy became one of fashion’s most famous children with his first collection.”

OPERA

Renowned German opera director Harry Kupfer dead at 84

One of the world's most celebrated opera directors, Germany's Harry Kupfer, has died at the age of 84 in Berlin, his agency confirmed on Tuesday.

Renowned German opera director Harry Kupfer dead at 84
Harry Kupfer died at home on December 30 after a long illness. Photo: picture alliance/Sören Stache/dpa
In a career spanning 44 years, Kupfer worked at opera houses across Germany and was chief director of Berlin's iconic Komische Oper for more than two decades.
   
Born in 1935, Kupfer studied in Leipzig and first worked in then-communist East Germany. But he rose to fame in 1978 with a production of Richard Wagner's “The Flying Dutchman” at the world-renowned Bayreuth festival.
   
He took the reins at the Komische Oper three years later in 1981.
   
A student of Komische Oper founder Walter Felsenstein, Kupfer staged works by Mozart and Wagner and oversaw two world premieres at the opera house before bowing out in 2002.
   
He returned to Bayreuth in 1988, staging Wagner's “Ring of the Nibelung” alongside Argentine-Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim.
   
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Kupfer cooperated with Barenboim again on an ambitious project to stage one Wagner opera a year over the course of a decade at the Berlin State Opera.
   
He continued to work until right up to his death, directing around the world and staging Georg Friederich Handel's Poro in a triumphant return to the Komische Oper earlier this year.
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