
Becoming Karl Lagerfeld
2024 • Drama
In 1972, Karl Lagerfeld is an unknown 38-year-old designer of ready-to-wear fashion, largely unknown to the public. His encounter with the young Jacques de Bascher, an ambitious and seductive dandy, changes everything.
Why you should read the novel
Reading 'Kaiser Karl: The Life of Karl Lagerfeld' offers a unique opportunity to delve far deeper into the mind and motivations of one of fashion's most intriguing legends. While the TV series delivers glamour and entertainment, the biography provides meticulously researched context and reveals the true complexity behind Lagerfeld's public persona. With intimate interviews and firsthand accounts, Raphaëlle Bacqué paints a multidimensional portrait of Karl Lagerfeld that goes beyond what televised drama can depict.
Choosing the book over the adaptation also rewards readers with a nuanced understanding of European fashion history, not just Lagerfeld's personal life. Bacqué explores the intricate dynamics of the fashion industry, Lagerfeld’s relationships with major figures, and the often-unseen machinations behind the couture scenes of Paris. Readers gain insight not only into Lagerfeld himself, but into the cultural and artistic revolutions he both shaped and was shaped by.
Finally, Bacqué’s writing invites readers directly into the anxieties, ambitions, and philosophy that drove Lagerfeld, in his own words and those of his contemporaries. The book enriches appreciation for Lagerfeld’s genius with candid anecdotes, reflections, and background not possible in a visual dramatization. The biography is an essential companion for anyone who wants to truly understand Lagerfeld—and the epoch he helped define.
Adaptation differences
One of the most significant differences between the TV adaptation and the book lies in narrative focus. While Raphaëlle Bacqué’s biography takes a comprehensive look at Karl Lagerfeld’s entire career and personal evolution, the series zeroes in on the pivotal period of the early 1970s. This means viewers get a more dramatized and concentrated depiction of Lagerfeld's rivalry with Yves Saint Laurent and his passionate romance with Jacques de Bascher, rather than the full breadth of his life’s journey.
Characterization also diverges between the mediums. The book offers in-depth psychological insight, revealing Lagerfeld's motivations, insecurities, and seldom-discussed vulnerabilities, often through direct testimony and nuanced analysis. The TV series, constrained by showtime and dramatic pacing, is more likely to depict Lagerfeld in broad strokes, emphasizing visual style and charismatic eccentricities but at times oversimplifying the man behind the myth.
Another notable difference concerns supporting characters and historical accuracy. The biography provides context for numerous important figures in Lagerfeld's life and the social world he inhabited, painting a rich tapestry of relationships and power dynamics. The series, by necessity, streamlines or compresses characters and events for narrative clarity, sometimes amalgamating real people or skipping crucial biographical moments that gave depth to Lagerfeld's persona.
Lastly, Bacqué’s book gives considerable space to the implications of Lagerfeld’s rise on the fashion industry as a whole, with behind-the-scenes details and longitudinal analysis. The series, with its fast-paced, dramatized approach, places more emphasis on romance, rivalry, and spectacle. As a result, the adaptation is an entertaining, style-focused retelling, while the book remains the richer, more complete source for those seeking deep biographical understanding.
Becoming Karl Lagerfeld inspired from
Kaiser Karl: The Life of Karl Lagerfeld
by Raphaëlle Bacqué