Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 20 January 2026
📘 Source: Club of Mozambique

One of the top designers of his era, Italy’s elegance aficionado Valentino Garavani spent nearly half a century dressing the world’s great beauties, from Jackie Kennedy to Princess Diana before his death Monday at age 93. A funeral is planned for Friday in the Italian capital, with a lying in state on Wednesday and Thursday. Best known as just Valentino, the designer’s creations — many of them in “Valentino red” — were worn by the who’s who of the international elite, from Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn and Nancy Reagan to Sharon Stone, Julia Roberts and Gwyneth Paltrow in recent years.

When the empress of Iran, Farah Pahlavi, escaped the country during the 1979 revolution, she was wearing a coat made by Valentino. Dubbed “the Sheik of Chic” by Women’s Wear Daily in the 1980s, Valentino was celebrated by the New York Times in 1997 for his “single-minded dedication to glamour.” On the catwalk and in his own life, Valentino exuded luxury down to the last detail of his immaculate hairdo and caramel tan. With his five pet pug dogs and a private jet, he shuttled between his Roman palace, New York apartment, chateau near Paris, chalet in Switzerland and his 50-metre (164-foot) yacht.

Named after the star of silent cinema Rudolph Valentino, who was known for “The Sheik” among many other films, Valentino Garavani was born on May 11, 1932 in Voghera, a small town south of Milan. His father owned an electric cables business. As a boy he asked for made-to-measure shoes and was passionate about fashion.

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“I have had this illness since childhood,” he told the Italian edition of Elle magazine in 2007. “I only like beautiful things.” “I do not like seeing men without ties, in a jumper, women with vulgar make-up and shapeless trousers. It is a sign of a bad education and a lack of self-respect.” He left home when he was 17 to study at prestigious arts and fashion schools in Paris, where the decadent French style of Christian Dior had revitalised a grim post-World War II fashion industry and would deeply impact Valentino’s later aesthetic.

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Originally published by Club of Mozambique • January 20, 2026

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