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What a view | From Vivienne Westwood to Yohji Yamamoto: fashion documentaries explore how designers changed the world around them

  • Fashion-focused entertainment never goes out of style – or far from our screens – as this selection shows
  • Among the highlights is Ryan Murphy’s look at America’s original celebrity fashion designer, Roy Halston Frowick

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A model presents a creation by Japanese designer Yohji Yamamoto during Paris Fashion Week, in March 2015. Photo: Reuters

Fashion can be a cat-eat-cat world, so if you like bitchiness, affluence, subversiveness, intrigue, scandal and sometimes even compassion and community spirit woven into your threads, try this selection for size.

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First off the peg is documentary Yohji Yamamoto: Rebel in Black, showing on Now True (Now TV on demand, also available via the Now Player app). If his native Japan wasn’t quite ready for Yamamoto’s exclusively black creations when they first appeared, in the 1980s, nor was the rest of the world, whose fashionistas have been in thrall to his Japanese design aesthetic ever since.

His collections, methods and inspiration are central to Rebel in Black – as are his fears for the future of craftsmanship in tailoring, given the prevalence of cheap, fast fashion, in Japan as elsewhere.

Cut from different cloth is five-episode series Halston, available on Now True and coming soon to Netflix. Ewan McGregor stars as America’s original celebrity fashion designer, Roy Halston Frowick, who, as a 70s superstar, had the ear and vital statistics of Hollywood royalty. So debauched did his lifestyle become – drugs, orgies with male prostitutes, excess all areas – that Caligula would have blushed.

Halston died from an Aids-related illness in 1990, yet his legend and notoriety persist: Sarah Jessica Parker was the public face of a doomed attempt to help resuscitate the Halston brand a decade or so ago. But while that failed, she will be back as fashion plate Carrie Bradshaw in a rebooted Sex and the City for the pandemic era, courtesy of HBO Max. Shooting is due to begin imminently.

If Halston is a 10 on the self-publicity scale, then just about scraping a zero is Belgian man of mystery Martin Margiela. Fanatical about his anonymity, the reclusive couturier appears – sort of – in Reiner Holzemer’s documentary Martin Margiela: In His Own Words (Now True), which is to say that his hands are shown and his voice, which is disguised, is heard. That voice does at least reveal the reasons for Margiela’s ambivalent attitude to the fashion industry and why he walked away from it to become a painter.

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Taking a somewhat different approach to engaging with the world is the un­compromising Vivienne Westwood in Amazon Prime biography-documentary Westwood: Punk, Icon, Activist. Westwood will be forever synonymous with the anti-uniform uniforms of punk rock and her unbending attitude remains robust.

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