Lady Gaga Showed Off on the Catwalk for Mugler
Singer Lady Gaga always has the talent to divert her career from singing to modeling. She was able to prove that she got what it takes to be in the fashion world with her catwalk debut at the 2011-12 ready-to-wear show at Mugler in Paris, France on Wednesday.
The pop-sensation wore a pencil skirt and sheer black top and took advantage of her experience with ultimate footwear. She was able to maneuver with her high-heeled platform shoes better than a few of the models.
The venue of the show was crowded with fans who all wished for a glance of the singer. It was obvious that a lot of the industry insiders were also exclusively there for Lady Gaga, who made an announcement in her Twitter account that she would be participating in the show a day before.
And the singer did not disappoint her followers. As she blew-up the halfway on her way to the show with a powerful set of bodyguards, Lady Gaga jumped onto the catwalk and posed in front of the more forceful groups of photographers. She drew on a cigarette and blew smoke toward the groups. She then started to grind, bump and flaunt her way backstage, only to come again in a white ensemble matched with a lampshade hat.
The performance of Lady Gaga was considered a blockbuster. Compared to a lot of the models, she looked more comfortable. The other girls in the show had trouble adapting the awful girl role they were told to portray. As they posed for some tiger growls to the cameras, the results were disappointing, as their revolution didn’t look natural. Lady Gaga, on the other hand, showed off her prominence.
The apparel itself did not look much better than the show’s models. It seemed like Sebastien Peigne, the designer of the collection under the stylist of Gaga and Nicola Formichetti, the new creative director of Mugler, took the hint from a label’s manual titled “How To,” as he hoped to set off a buzz.
The apparel in the show included bodystockings that are leopard-printed, latex skirt matched with a sheer blouse and painted-on vinyl pants. Nothing of them was really revolutionary. A few of them carried the essence of founder Thierry Mugler such as the tubedress worn on top of the seemingly plastic dinosaur vertebrae.
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