Sunday Tribune

Is the traditional tuxedo dead?

BUHLE MBONAMBI buhle.mbonambi@inl.co.za

I WAS recently invited to a black tie dinner. The invitation said black tie, but then as I read further, it demanded a splash of bright colour. I started stressing. How was I going to honour the invite in a way that still made sure my outfit was classic and I was not committing a fashion faux pas?

I thought about wearing a pair of bright Ankara print trousers with a cummerbund, French cuff shirt, bow tie and traditional tuxedo jacket, you know, so I could stick to the required dress code. It didn’t work.

I eventually decided to wear black, but edged it up with a leather jacket. So the outfit ended up being black trousers, shirt, jacket and a bow tie with a white accent. I asked my date to wear the colour and she chose emerald. It worked out very well.

Which brings me to the point of this article. Is traditional black tie dead?

There’s a scene in Downton Abbey where Lord Grantham decides to not wear white tie and tails for dinner, preferring to wear a dinner jacket and black bow tie. The Dowager Countess was not impressed.

“Why are you in your rompers?” she asked him.

A stickler for rules, the Dowager Countess would be clutching her pearls at seeing how men are now interpreting as evening wear.

Take the London premiere for the latest James Bond film, No Time to Die. Daniel Craig decided to break all rules, wearing a velvet double-breasted fuchsia dinner jacket, forgoing the black tie he has worn at previous premieres of Bond movies. The jacket was from Savile Row tailors Anderson & Sheppard.

People had a lot to say about it. From those who loved how fashion-forward it was, to those who thought it garish, it was clear he had made an impact. Which is what is required from men these days, fashion-wise.

It really shouldn’t be surprising that looking like a penguin has become a faux pas. Even Italian designer Roberto Cavalli was bored with the tuxedo.

“In the evening every man looks the same. Like penguins. Women have a special dress for that event; men, the same tuxedo.”

For the past few years, men have been defying the rules and what “black tie” means, and celebrities like the late Chadwick Boseman, Michael B Jordan, Timothee Chalamet, Jared Leto, Rami Malek and Billie Porter have really pushed what constitutes traditional menswear on the red carpet.

All have paid dust to the tuxedo, choosing to wear dinner jackets and outfits that have texture, sparkle, embroidery, prints and brocade. Boseman and Jordan solidified their status as style icons during the Black Panther promotional tour in 2018, where their outfits were not the expected tuxedos, but designs that allowed them to express themselves, their personalities and their love for fashion.

Malek, Leto and Chalamet have made sure their outfit choices show just how menswear and suiting can be interesting. Porter has taken it up a notch, infusing both masculine and feminine silhouettes to stand out when he is on a red carpet.

Back home, we have seen how stars like Maps Maponyane, Anton David Jeftha and Thapelo Mokoena have also decided to bring an edge to the tuxedo and menswear.

Designers have also responded to the call and are making sure that when they dress the stars, they stand out and don’t look like they have taken an old tuxedo and put it on and gone to a red carpet event.

The rules of black tie have been rewritten. Now it’s up to us to decide just what the new rules are. The days of a black tie dress code for men being a uniform and everyone looking the same are over. Sure, there are those who will still wear traditional black tie, an easy elegance that is beyond fashion and trends, but as we become more individualistic and expressive of our personal taste, it’s time to go beyond the usual.

So, is the traditional tux dead? Not really, but please, gents, bring on the colour and peacockery.

LIFESTYLE

en-za

2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

2021-12-05T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://sundaytribune.pressreader.com/article/282209424141882

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