There’s something deliciously nostalgic about latest red carpet moment — that delicate balance of decadence and danger that only John Galliano could dream up. Fresh from the “Chanel” music video (a visual love letter to -era glamour), the South African star stepped out in New York wearing a Dior masterpiece from Galliano’s Spring 1998 collection — the one he aptly titled “In a Boudoir Mood.”
The dress, a metallic green slip drenched in sensual nostalgia, could easily have been torn from the pages of a Belle Époque fantasy. One strap, delicate and pearled; the other, an intricate sleeve of silver and jewels that shimmered like moonlight on satin. Tyla leaned into the fantasy, pairing it with a stacked pearl choker and long draped necklaces by Pandora — a modern whisper to Galliano’s historical roar.
Photo: Getty Images
But what makes this choice particularly poetic is the context. Galliano didn’t show this collection on a runway — he staged an experience. Models like Kate Moss and Linda Evangelista lounged across velvet daybeds and marble floors inside a mansion built beneath the Carrousel du Louvre, while guests wandered among them, caught between admiration and awe. It was more salon than show, more performance than presentation — and, fittingly, Tyla’s revival of this moment feels equally performative, like a quiet wink to fashion history’s most indulgent era.
Even Nicole Kidman once slipped into this very dress for a Vanity Fair shoot by Annie Leibovitz, cementing its status as a piece of archival mythology. Now, decades later, Tyla has brought it back — and it feels less like a throwback than a reclamation.
A scene from the Dior spring 1998 collection presentation, from which Tyla’s dress, not pictured, originated. Photo: Getty Images
Maybe that’s the allure of vintage Galliano: it’s never just nostalgia; it’s narrative. It reminds us that elegance and rebellion have always shared a bed.
So if Tyla ever decides to remix “Chanel,” perhaps she should add one more lyric — “Put me in Dior.” Galliano-era, of course.