Law Roach describes his breaking-point phone call on the day after the Oscars

I have to apologize to Law Roach – after I read his interview with Vogue last week, I thought he announced his retirement from styling because he was burned out and “the well was dry.” Now that I’ve read his retirement interview in The Cut, I completely understand what was going on and it’s a wonder he managed to be an A-list celebrity stylist for so long, especially given the daily racist microaggressions, the disrespect, the personal politics and the outright racism within the fashion industry. Instead of burning the whole f–king industry down – which would be his right – he simply quit for his own mental health. I hope he finds an amazing job where he’ll be treated with respect and love. Anyway, he explains his exact breaking point – dressing one particular client for the Vanity Fair Oscar party – and it’s already turned into a huge blind item. You can read his full piece in The Cut here. Some highlights:

The lead up to the VF Oscar Party was his breaking point:

“You know, last week, for us, Oscars Week and building up to the Vanity Fair Oscar Party, is some of the most stressful times in the world. And I’ve always been a stylist that did multiple clients, so I’m trying to prepare for multiple clients that week. And I had a lot of pressure because of Meg [Thee Stallion] — it was her first time coming back and anybody seeing her since the trial. And so that was a lot of pressure, you know, because I wanted to make her feel secure and comfortable and make her feel and look as perfect as possible so that she can have the strength to do what she had to do.

So that morning I got a call from one of my clients, and it was her, her publicist, and somebody from a brand that I’m supposed to do project with, and I found myself on the phone with these three women, and I felt like I was defending myself because the one woman from the brand was like, “Oh, he’s not communicating, and you’re not gonna have a dress,” and all these things. And it was just a lot of things that were not true.

And that’s how we lose clients as stylists — somebody from a brand will say something to the publicist, then the publicist will say something to the client, and then, it’s this thing. I thought I had a really strong relationship with this client, and I thought that she knew that my goal always is to protect my clients.

And at that moment I just didn’t feel like I was being protected, because there’s no one who can ever say that they’ve worked with me that I didn’t pull my whole heart and soul into them or that I left them hanging and they didn’t have a dress. It’s never happened. No one can ever say that about me. And I was like, “Okay, yeah. Whatever, we’ll do whatever. We’ll work it out.” And then I got off the phone, and I was like, I’m literally depleted from the day before. I’m an extreme empath, and I give everything to the point, after that night, I could barely finish a sentence. I had given so much.

That call was very early the very next day after [the Oscars]. And the client was one of the clients that I dressed that night. And it’s just like, I got off the phone and I felt like I’m still fighting. I’m still fighting. I’m still defending myself. And one thing people who work with me also know is I don’t like to be managed or feel like I’m being chastised. You know what I mean? That just doesn’t work for me or my personality and especially when I feel like I’m giving so much. And I’m doing the job, I’m getting paid to do the job, and that’s the real of it. But the care and the love that goes in me to do my job, I just feel like I should sometimes be a little bit more taken care of, if that makes sense.

Why he said he’s tired of the lies and false narratives.

“I end up having a real connection with the client, and it very quickly becomes a thing where they trust me and understand me and we have this relationship. And that’s not the way it goes, especially in Hollywood. You have the gatekeepers, right? You have the person that’s in between you and the client, and all the scheduling, and you have to talk to this person to talk to this person. And I think what happens is a lot of times, they become intimidated by the relationships I’m able to have with the clients personally. And so what happens is it becomes a thing like I just don’t hear from the client anymore. Or I’m booked for jobs and then, all of a sudden, I’m released.

And then I’ll bump into the talent at a party or an event or whatever, and I’m always like, “Hey, what happened? I haven’t heard from you.” And they’re like, “Oh, yeah. Yeah, you know, I know my team reached out a few times, but you were busy. Our schedules didn’t match up.” Or, you know, “The whoever said that you were way too expensive,” and it’s always that.

It’s always the narrative of, “Oh, he’s never gonna treat you the way he treats Zendaya. You’re gonna get what she doesn’t want.” And that’s not true, because none of my clients ever look the same. Like, I don’t use edits. I don’t walk around with suitcases of edits that Zendaya didn’t want and offer ’em to other people. It’s always those narratives, and I’ve lost a bunch of clients that I really care for and really wanted to work with because of the gatekeepers.

[From The Cut]

He also addressed whether he was the one who told Priyanka Chopra that she wasn’t “sample size,” and he said that wasn’t the conversation and that he works with clients of all sizes (which is true). But the specific conversation has led people to believe that maybe Priyanka was the one on the call the day after the Oscars, the breaking-point call where he decided he was done. For the VF party, he styled Kerry Washington, Hunter Schafer, Hailee Steinfeld, Megan Thee Stallion and Eve Jobs. Law says he dressed a sixth woman in Galliano, but her dress ripped before she got to the party. So… who was the woman on the call? It doesn’t sound like it was Megan. I honestly don’t think Hunter is famous enough to pull that? Neither is Eve Jobs. It doesn’t sound like Kerry. People think it was Priyanka, just because… Law didn’t name her as one of his final clients, and he didn’t post her photos on his social (and Priyanka attended the VF party). I will hate it if Priyanka caused him to retire.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

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83 Responses to “Law Roach describes his breaking-point phone call on the day after the Oscars”

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  1. Seaflower says:

    I assumed it was Hunter Schafer, because of the way he described the brand manager and publicist as influencing the client and the “You’ll get Z’s cast offs” comment.

    • Kokiri says:

      I think so too, along with a big dose of racism towards both Law & Zendaya.
      Like, how dare Z get first choice & Hunter have to have castoffs?!
      Like that.

      • ML says:

        According to The Cut interview, Law Roach has been accused of giving other women he’s dressed Zendaya cast offs from a really long time. He’s constantly had to defend himself against those accusations, which is incredibly frustrating and sad.

      • Snuffles says:

        I could TOTALLY see someone (or a lot of someone’s) being insanely jealous of Zendaya and wanting to have what she has. Law’s undying loyalty. I could also see actresses and performers going crazy over who gets to wear what. The competition must be fierce.

      • Zazzoo says:

        Who can wear Zendaya’s cast offs? She’s like 5’10” and extremely slender. Hunter is the only other name mentioned here that could plausibly have Zendaya’s cast offs tailored to fit.

      • Normades says:

        The cast off comments were coming since a long time. I’m pretty sure Z is the reason Hunter is working with Law in the first place. The cast off comments were most likely coming from Anya’s team who left Law when she got a Dior contract.

      • Dominique says:

        I think the problem here is that everyone wants the zendaya magic that the law-zendaya collab has created. From the looks ive seen on his other clients, none of them seem to hit that WOW factor that zendaya’s outfitd do day in and day out on every single red carpet.
        But a big part of that magic is zendaya herself and that cannot be replicated.
        I can see the others being jealous because they felt that all they needed was Law to get them the clothes and they would look just as good.

      • Zazzoo says:

        Celebs are weird. As a model/red carpet persona Anya Taylor-Joy slays. She has such a different look than Zendaya I don’t see the point of competition. As an actress, Zendaya simply has a rare gift. ATJ has been fortunate in her transition to acting being cast in interesting projects that are about more than her looks. But Zendaya has something unique. Her work in Euphoria is beyond the range of many actors. Don’t compare yourself to that.

      • Normades says:

        Even if he and Z had something special he really was able to create magic with other clients too. Anya is the one that I think said she wanted to be a fashion girl and take risks and he did that for her. Her fashion game has not been as good since she left him. One of my fave collars is with Anne Hathaway. She has been looking absolutely fierce and amazing since hiring him.
        Anyways he really resented that people said he only gave the good stuff to Z when he created a “story” for each client.

    • Jais says:

      I don’t think it was Hunter. Hunter is friends with Zendaya so I don’t really see it. Don’t get me wrong, it could be but I don’t see any evidence that it is?

      • Kirsten says:

        Agree. Also, her two-piece outfit had to fit PERFECTLY or it would’ve been a whole thing — there’s just no way that wasn’t ready to go well before the party.

    • Louise177 says:

      What’s wrong with getting “castoffs”. I have no idea how this works but I assumed the stylist or designer would show the client 20 or so outfits. Then some of the same outfits as well as new ones would be shown to another client because the stylist/designer feels they would like those outfits. Although everybody is different, celebrities have worn the same outfits to different events all of the time.

      • Turtledove says:

        I don’t entirely understand either. Part of being a stylist is having an eye for what’s going to look great. So if he pulls 20 gowns for Z, and she wears one, I don’t think that means the other 19 are subpar. This guy has impeccable taste, her “cast offs” are going to still be gorgeous.
        Maybe it’s more like “why does Z get first dibs?” Zendaya always looks incredible. I think that is just her being her, mostly. But he also does an amazing job as her stylist, they are just a perfect match.

        So maybe someone is jealous of Z?

  2. Moderatelywealthy says:

    It could be Pryanka and I dont know the specifcs, but it read as if you have this two people who should be able to speak with each other but there are two other people in between being difficult. It would not susprise me if we are speaking of two white women here. Sounded a bit Karen behaviour. Pryanaka is indian and she is a big star there and she is getting bigger in western, so I could see her Hollywood team mostly being white people, they trying to “sell her” to white audiences and she being fiollowing through because it is what she thinks it will do for her.

    I say that because I get the feeling he was pretty bummed that the cliente did not get what was happening…you know, people of colour expect this sort of behaviour from white people. It is always shcoking when someone not white does not come to your defense.

    • Zazzoo says:

      I didn’t understand the Meg story. Who were the three people on the phone and what were they accusing him of?

      • Ceej says:

        I took it that he was putting a lot of attention into getting the right outfit for MTS to feel good in, and the publicist/brand rep of another client started telling their client he wasn’t giving them focus and hadn’t even got them an outfit because he wasn’t at their beck and call.

    • Fabiola says:

      It was not Priyanka. She was at the party. the client he refers to never made it so your long ass theory goes out the window.

    • Desi says:

      He didn’t style Priyanka for the Vanity Fair party. If you look at her Instagram, she tags someone else for the white silvery feather dress she wore (stylebyami)

  3. ThatsNotOkay says:

    It’s always the agent, manager, lawyer, spouse, best friend who ends up ruining the client’s relationship with the person who is actually working the hardest for them. There are lies and jealousy involved. Ego and money and status. I don’t blame him from not wanting to deal with the gatekeepers. They need their 10% and puff up the client with lies to protect their own skin.

  4. Talie says:

    I have mixed feelings – on the one hand, he speaks a lot of truths that need to be said. On the other, like we always hear, the stylists who start out behind-the-scenes, become stars too and it creates tension. We saw it in real time at the Louis show when he couldn’t sit front row. He considers himself a star too.

    This goes all the way back to Rachel Zoe when she was the ultimate image architect in the early-aughts, and then she slowly fell out with all the women she made into style icons when she got a publicist and made herself into a brand. I’m not sure who is right, but if he has the opportunity to move beyond styling, he should take it. As any normal person would.

    • Maddy says:

      If you read the full interview, he explains the LV situation. It makes total sense and had nothing to do with him considering himself a star.

    • Kokiri says:

      I believe the story of being upset at the LV show has been debunked.

      Also, he IS a star. He doesn’t have to consider himself one, he IS.
      Have you ever seen bad styling?! He’s a genius & should have been accorded the respect he earned & deserved.

      He knows his worth. There’s no room for “mixed feelings” here. He’s been treated terribly for his career with micro & macro aggressions. He knows his worth & he’s done.

      • Christine says:

        100% this.

      • Jillian says:

        The only “celebrity stylist” I can name and identify by face is Law Roach. He also did 2 seasons of a TV show on HBOMax, he is absolutely a star in his own right

    • AppleCart says:

      I thought a big part of why Rachel Zoe fell out with her clients. Was not due to her launching her own brand. It was due to the fact she was encouraging eating disorders in young women. To be more like her.

  5. Amy Bee says:

    I’d quit too if clients were treating me like that.

  6. Maeve says:

    Well…she isn’t a sample size – she’s a gorgeous looking 5’5” – but “You aren’t a sample size” is definitely one of those statements where it’s very much in the delivery and context as to whether it’s hugely insulting or not.
    I’m sure there’s probably brands who won’t give/lend free stuff to celebs if they have to do a load of customisation. Equally there’s brands who’ll do custom but you look at at and think “but it doesn’t fit.” And there are designers who actually take pride in making non-sample sized women look amazing. Steering a client in a particular direction because they aren’t a sample size and you want them to look good and saying “LOL girl, who you kidding, you aren’t sample!” are two different things.

    • Snuffles says:

      True. The comment could have been “The designer doesn’t want to customize a dress for you because you aren’t sample size” or “This designer will only work with clients that are sample sized.” Maybe Priyanka had her heart set on a certain designer and they refused to work with her and Law had to deliver the message, and Priyanka shot the messenger.

      • ML says:

        And apparently you (almost?) always need to pay for the dress when you’re not sample size. That might turn the being sample size into a status thing as well.

      • BothSidesNow says:

        @ ML, and who is “sample size” In Hollywood?? It would be extremely hard to dress someone in a sample size in HW and then we must factor in the egos to boot!! I imagine that Roach has dealt with many, many unpleasant people in HW that feel that they are “entitled” to certain perks whilst insulting those who are working hard to please them.

        I am solely heartbroken that LR has had defend himself, yet again, by some of these vipers who have decided that their “worth” is more important than the wellbeing of a designer who has worked his ass off for more than a decade and has been treated in such an abhorrent manner. Some of these people need Jesus and a smack on the head.

    • Yup, Me says:

      Not being a sample size should just be a descriptor, not a pejorative. Like saying “your skin is brown and we want to put you in the right colors.” But in an industry where people are hella neurotic and any and everything could be the reason for not getting a job, it’s like dancing on quicksand.

      I hope Law just focuses on building his next thing and recovering from all that he’s been dealing with in this industry.

    • Lux says:

      A commenter in The Cut explained it well by saying that designers create the original dress in “samples” (super limited amount) and the sizes are made to fit the models who, well model them. That’s <size 2. So the likes of Zendaya and ATJ naturally have easier access to those dresses as they require minimal alternations. Back in her heyday, Gwyneth Paltrow was described as a “designer’s dream” for being sample sized/able to wear the dresses right off the runway. Priyanka not being sample size is a fact, not an insult, but I agree with Maeve that it depends on the tone in which the comment was addressed.

      • Lux says:

        Wanted to add that “not being sample size” could be a gentle let down on the part of Law Roach to mask the real reason, which is likely that Priyanka was refused that particular dress because her star power wasn’t strong enough. Designers and ateliers want the biggest and best celebrities to showcase their couture, especially for the first off-runway look. To them, the ones who look the best in their designs will be the sample sized waifs and they’ll likely only lend a dress for alterations/customization for the megawatt stars. Famous as she is, Priyanka is not an A-lister, nor was she a nominee for anything.

  7. Maddy says:

    It’s not Priyanka. The 6th girl didn’t attend the party at all and Priyanka showed up styled by someone else.

    • Normades says:

      I don’t think it’s Priyanka either. It sounds like they fell out a while ago due to her handlers repeating or misquoting his sample size comment. Lots of people were speculating it was Kerry Washington because he didn’t tag her. She could have a white staff that was rude and impatient with him. Again, the problem doesn’t sound like beef between him and the client but rather him and the handlers.

    • Jais says:

      Yeah, this part is confusing to me. Is it the 6th person who ended up not making the carpet? Or one of the ones who did?

    • Lawcatb says:

      The 6th woman was probably H.E.R. Law did a thank post to his final five and included, “thank you to “HER” even though she didn’t make it to the carpet”. It didn’t seem like there was any bad blood with that situation . . . and Kerry was the lead picture.

  8. ML says:

    This is a really good interview in The Cut. It sounds as though burn out definitely played a role here: heartbreaking to hear about him realizing that he’s so consumed by his job that he didn’t have time for people in his life and had only met his nephew a few times before he died. Law Roach is an outsider in a very demanding environment who had to constantly prove himself. Losing clients due to middlemen, fashion, egos, money, different time zones…I hope his further journey allows him to relax and breathe and do what he loves. The straw that broke the camel’s back: whoever this was it sounds like it was just a matter of time. I hope he’s treated better from now on.

  9. Normades says:

    The brightest stars will always be the non nepo babies because they had to have a ton of talent and fight their way like hell to get there. His story with Z really shows 2 people who knew where they wanted to go and got there together.

  10. Slush says:

    *Update* from Law’s Twitter: while discussing the client who didn’t make the party because her dress ripped, he says “I wish the collaboration never happened”

    So it’s likely THAT client, and none of his clients who we know about from that night

  11. Dominique says:

    I could be wrong but i didn’t read this as racial micro aggressions against him. I work in corporate and i see this shit daily when its every man/woman for himself , putting their own egos first instead of working as team. The “i couldn’t do my job because YOU didn’t communicate” is a classic passive aggressive shit that ive dealt with this week itself. I can completly understand why he needs a time out, because the BS he is dealing with is even bigger as the egos are bigger in his situation.

    • Alse says:

      He mentioned it being like racial micro aggression and racism. So I will go with what he says in the interview and not try to say it is something else. It’s his experience and many others have agreed with him. Being the only black person who is being asked for his credentials at fashion shows. Come on

    • Concern Fae says:

      This. You really can’t separate racist and asshole. Racist (& misogynist) is basically the lowest difficulty setting for asshole. It’s a nightmare because corporate America has let assholes run amok because they think it improves the bottom line. Surprise, it doesn’t. But now they are stuck because this is the corporate culture almost everywhere. The younger generation is far more diverse and unwilling to put up with this garbage.

      These assholes may or may not behave badly to other white people, but they sure as hell are terrible to every POC they come across, which is unrelentingly horrible. The kicker is that if they are being racist, they will treat other white people nicely when there is a targeted POC around, just for that extra bit of gaslighting.

      I can’t even imagine what it’s like in the freelance Hollywood world. I bet a lot of people are there because they are too toxic for any employer with an HR department.

    • Ameerah M says:

      He said it was micro-aggressions and I believe him. Dont try to re-categorize what a Black person’s experience is. We know what a micro-agression looks and FEELS like.

  12. Jen says:

    I think the call was from Eve Jobs & her team. She is new to the modeling world, but her father being Steve Jobs has put a lot of eyes on her and I bet her team is hungry. She’s worked for LV last year and being prepped for a new LV campaign (and Law is working with them on a project or 2).
    Hunter is only repping Mugler. Kerry reps only beauty brands, Hailee reps small brands and Megan reps a lot of brands, but the only fashion one is Coach.
    Priyanka showed up to the VF after party in a subdued black gown & seems to not have a lot of photos on the red carpet. Maybe she came late because of the gown malfunction and did a quick change? I dunno. She also is mostly a beauty brand ambassador.

    • Concern Fae says:

      Somehow I hadn’t ever noticed Eve Jobs before this.

      What is the point of her becoming a model and “brand ambassador”? She’s lovely, but in a girl that your eye would be drawn to in a sorority group photo way. I miss actual models.

    • Josephine says:

      How disgusting if it is. She is no model or fashionista so it would be horrible if she was the one that drove him to retirement. It would be incredibly entitled for her to scream for more attention. She has a nepo-modeling job and she’s not good at it.

  13. Wilma says:

    The way he speaks about Meghan thee Stallion shows that he cares a lot about the clients.

    • Wilma says:

      Read the full interview. I didn’t know about him before (I’m not a fashion person), but I really liked the things he said. I came away impressed by his artistic vision. I recognize that drive you get from growing up poor and always being afraid that you won’t have enough food. I think I’ve only been able to live with a half empty fridge recently when I noticed I didn’t panic at the sight of my empty fridge. Poverty really does a number on you and the way you work, always being afraid of running out.

      • Christine says:

        Everyone should read the full interview, it made me cry, more than once, and I’m not a fashion person either. Law Roach’s entire life is inspirational, and the way he has been treated throughout his entire career should shame EVERYONE.

  14. dlc says:

    Eve Jobs….you come from one of the richest families and could do anything you want. You decide to professionally pose for pictures. WTF? The conditioning in this country that a woman’s beauty is the defining thing about her sucks.

    • Dominique says:

      Yup, makes me appreciate Jennifer Gates who is in medical school a whole lot more.
      I just went to see what Eve Jobs looks like, and saw nothing there to write about.

    • BQM says:

      At least she graduated Stanford first. She’ll have that to fall back on. This is probably a bit of fun. She’s 24–ancient in the modeling world to be starting out.

      • Betsy says:

        Which in itself is telling. By 24 years old very, very few women retain their teenaged size and shape and designers don’t enjoy designing for them as much, and 24 year old women are leagues ahead in maturity of someone just a few years younger. What does it say about the industry that dresses most of us when a woman 24 years old is past her prime (as far as they’re concerned)?

  15. Mandy says:

    Uhh there are tons of reports that this guy treats low level fashion and pr people like absolute garbage and refuses to pay his assistants anything close to a living wage. Apparently in the fashion/stylist scene he is a well known jerk and horrible to non famous people and no tears are being shed over his retiring. I tend to believe actual no name workers over this ego.

    • Lux says:

      Can you link to some of these reports? I would like to believe no name workers also, but it’s hard when there are is no concrete stories to cite?

      I was moved by his interview and story and can only say that what Law and Zendaya produced was magic. ATJ looked amazing under his styling—there is absolutely no denying his immense talent. Seldom have I been so consistently wowed by a stylist; with every collaboration, the star’s natural charisma shined through (Arianna’s girliness, amplified to the point of avant garde, nailing Celine’s irreverent flamboyancy, Anya and Zendaya slaying from head to toe, etc).

      • Josephine says:

        what he has created with Zendaya is truly legendary. hit after hit after hit. i agree, you just don’t see styling that never misses, and the two of them never missed and kept upping themselves.

    • Abbie says:

      Well both can be true. He can be right in saying he got treated like trash by his clients and people more famous than him, and he can also be taking out his own frustrations on non-influential people who are below him.

  16. elizabeth says:

    I read the interview on the day it came out. NY Mag has great interviews and articles. The entire interview is really good and worth a read. He loves Zendaya, but also gives a lot of credit to Celine Dion for changing his life.

    Some of his childhood details are heartbreaking, and he talks about how that experience has impacted him and his need to constantly keep working, leaving him with nothing outside his work.

    • BQM says:

      I think they’re his two definite faves or muses. There was an article on him years ago and those were the two photographed with him in the spread. Great way to show range in his styling too. Different races, ages, spheres of influence, styles, etc.

  17. Severine says:

    Why can’t all the stars just buy their own dresses? They have enough money to do so. So this is the first time this stylist has had to deal with a difficult situation? Wow. Just wow.

    • Blithe says:

      @Severine: likely because not all people are good at all things — and there are advantages to hiring professionals, even when the issues are ones of taste. This is especially true in appearance-driven industries.

      And, no, it’s hardly “the first time this stylist has had to deal with a difficult situation “ and most people who either read the Cut article, read the recent Celebitchy posts on Law Roach, or, really, read through and understood any other articles about racism or poverty or heck, life in America when you’re not a straight white male, would probably get that. “Wow. Just wow”. Unquote.

      I’ve been both inspired and educated by much of what Law Roach has put out there, especially this week.

    • Kirsten says:

      They do not have enough money to buy these dresses — some of these gowns cost six figures, and the jewelry can run into the millions.

  18. Shai says:

    It can’t be Priyanka because she was there, the mystery client’s dress ripped and she never showed up.

  19. jgerber says:

    I feel for Roach, but to boil it all down to one woman and trying to find the one bitch who is responsible for his burn-out and retirement? No, just no. I’m sure he’s had a lot to put up with, a lot, and whatever happened, it sounds like it was the last straw. So I’m really not down with finding the one woman and putting all the blame on her, whoever she is. There are a lot of entitled people and racists in Hollywood and I’m sorry he experienced all that. He needs to peace out for however long he needs, and then only work with the people who show him love and respect. There are so many people who appreciate his genius and vision.

    • Lens says:

      Agree completely. I like gossip as much as any celebitchy but trying to find out what woman was the last straw? No not me. It was like a lot of jobs people quit, cumulative shit. It seems like the worst job in the world trying to work with a bunch of egomaniac celebrities all wanting the best dress at the Oscars. I’d like it if he just worked with zendaya and that’s it. No one else. Not enough money in that I guess.

      • kirk says:

        Worse than all the egomaniac celebrities is having to deal with their gatekeepers and other people – in this case a trash talking brand rep who’s getting everyone riled with alarmist statements. Sounds like he plans on continuing relationship with Zendaya in whatever capacity.

    • Gems2712 says:

      I watched the full hour interview and he was CAPTIVATING. definitely this isn’t just a blind item. He’s movingly describing the racism that he has faced both in his career but also in his childhood. It’s a very powerful account of how much he’s suffered (a word he uses loads and to great affect) and the impact of being in a white industry. To reduce it to what woman did what does his whole statement a disservice, even if that woman was horrible and racist. It’s a bigger picture of systemic racism.

      Law said he might start at podcast, I would listen to him all day! He’s amazing.

  20. Sudie says:

    Hailey Steinfeld may be the is the actress who Law said he wished he had not collaborated with.

    • Ameerah M says:

      Y’all need to actually follow this man on social media. It’s not Hailee. He has done nothing but say lovely things about her on Twitter. It’s not anyone he actually styled that night.

  21. AmeerahM says:

    I always wondered why he suddenly stopped styling Anya and his comments explain a LOT. And she is worse for it because her style has been MID since she stopped working with him.

  22. kirk says:

    As someone who’s clueless about fashion, I’m latecomer to appreciating the genius of Law Roach, especially his penchant for using vintage fashion for the red carpet. Of all the retrospectives of his work now showing up, I like “A Look Back at Law Roach’s Celebrity Styling Highlights” in W Magazine the best.

  23. Emily_C says:

    People want it to be Priyanka because Priyanka’s not white. Also, he’s obviously calling out the “gatekeepers”, not any celebrity. But of course the gatekeepers control the narrative, and they’re the ones looking for a celebrity to throw under the bus.

    This was a gatekeeper issue. Some kind of administrative/management type. Some of those people get into stuff like this because of their admiration for artists (or writers, musicians, creative types generally.) Others do to make money, and they tend to be okay too. But some who get into it are wildly jealous of the people who actually *do* things, of creative people, and they will absolutely undermine and drain you dry.

    • Original penguin says:

      Agree – there’s a lot of negative energy against Priyanka. And I do agree it’s because she’s not white. Because she dared to marry a jonas brother. Because she isn’t a size 0. It feels a low key version of anti-Meghan rhetoric. I’m sure she can be a Diva, but I don’t think this is her- I think she parted ways with LR a while back

      • blue says:

        Why do you say “negative energy” toward Priyanka is because she isn’t white? I don’t sense “N.E.” toward Kerry W, Zendaya, or Megan thee S – who aren’t white. Priyanka in her print interviews has an extraordinarily high opinion of herself and blows her own horn too loudly. She’s not a very good actress either – she was bad in Quantico & Baywatch. Imo it has nothing to do with her skin color because there are many beloved talents who also aren’t “white.”

  24. jgerber says:

    Emily C, agree 100 percent.

  25. Kathryn says:

    I think he’s a genius stylist, but did anyone else see all the posts about him on Deux Moi – not that that is a trustworthy site at all. Anyway, said he horrible to his staff and just about everyone. Not sure what to believe, but there it is

  26. jgerber says:

    I saw him on 3 seasons of Legendary and he was very entertaining, partly because he wasn’t afraid to be bitchy and to “read” people.