Skip to main content

NEW YORK — Madonna will soon be dancing in her own shoes.

Madonna's New Dare


The music icon is making her fashion mark again with a line of footwear under the new Truth or Dare label, owned by MG Icon. The collection will launch for fall ’12 and will be produced by Aldo Group Inc., marking the first footwear license agreement for the company.

The deal came about through Aldo Product Services, a division created in February 2010 to handle wholesale, private-label sourcing and now licensing agreements.

MG Icon is a joint venture formed in 2010 by Madonna and her manager, Guy Oseary, and Iconix Brand Group Inc. Footwear will be the brand’s second product launch, following a fragrance that will debut in April.

“Footwear has always been a critical part of the plan,” said Iconix CEO Neil Cole. “And realizing that Aldo was willing to do wholesale, it was the perfect timing.”

Nicholas Martire, GM of Aldo Product Services, added that it was also time for Aldo Group to add new depth to its business. “It is a way for us to move forward,” he said of the deal.

The initial footwear offering consists of more than 60 styles, including flats, heels, booties and over-the-knee boots, set to retail for $89 to $349. Many of the dance-inspired looks will feature studs and cap-toe details. Madonna’s stylist, Arianne Phillips, will serve as the creative consultant.

But the pop superstar herself will also have constant input into the line’s development.

“Her fingers are really on this brand,” Phillips told Footwear News. “The first thing I did was remind her of all the shoes she wore over the years, and we took the styles that we can’t live without. You can always depend on her to bring her style and provocateur quality, but she also has a very feminine perspective.”

The shoe collection comes with the support of big retail players, including Nordstrom, Asos.com and Macy’s, which also was the launch partner for Madonna’s first retail project: the Material Girl line that hit in August 2010. This time, select stores will feature special displays to promote the Truth or Dare brand, and Selfridges in the U.K. will create a pop-up shop. The line also will debut at The Bay in Canada.

Beyond the name appeal associated with Madonna, the Macy’s team was impressed by the brand’s “great dress shoes and boots,” said Deanna Williams, a spokesperson for the retailer. “We think our customer will be excited about this line because it’s by such an iconic and innovative creative such as Madonna.”

Looking ahead, Cole said he plans to expand the brand globally to Germany, France, Spain and Italy in 2013.

Truth or Dare will target 27- to 50-year-old women, an older audience than Material Girl’s junior consumer. “[This customer] has graduated from Material Girl,” said Lanie List, chief merchandising officer at Iconix. “It’s what the sexy woman wears to suit all her needs, not just what’s sexy.”

Cole stressed that the new brand isn’t a typical celebrity enterprise due to Madonna’s involvement. “I don’t really look at it as a celebrity line,” he said. “The key is going to be great product and marketing, and the fact that Madonna is our partner is an added twist.”

To market the brand, Iconix will roll out print and online advertisements next month that feature the pop star. And there are plans for Madonna and her backup dancers to wear modified versions of the looks on her upcoming tour, which kicks off this summer.

But while the singer’s participation in promotions will be important, it will take more than a household name to ensure a successful launch, said Marc Beckman, founder and CEO of Designers Management Agency, a New York-based talent and brand management firm.

“Her attachment to the brand is critical — she has always been a fashion icon and people love her — but at the end of the day, the product has to be unique,” said Beckman.

In addition to shoes, the Truth or Dare brand will launch intimates later this year and is in discussions about legwear and additional accessories for 2013.

“Footwear has had a tremendous response and that inspires new product and categories,” said List. “We’ll make this a very organic growth strategy.”

Ultimately, Iconix and Aldo are predicting major opportunity for both their businesses, especially with global expansion.

Cole said, “We have so many different countries we can do business with, and there is so much [potential] to grow worldwide. That’s a bigger opportunity than a traditional U.S. footwear launch.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Making of Madonna’s First Album Cover

Carin Goldberg — the art director behind Madonna’s debut album cover — spoke to  the Cut  about her first experience with the then-unknown pop star. It’s the first question that anybody asks me, even today: What was it like to work with Madonna? People think that maybe something dramatic or interesting or kind of wild might have happened, based on, you know, Madonna’s persona. But I would say that Madonna was probably the easiest job I ever had — the most cooperation from a recording artist I think I ever had. She was a true professional, even at that young age. It was ’83, and at that point I had my own small design firm. Warner Bros. called and asked me to do her cover as a freelance designer. When I got the call, I rolled my eyes, because it was another [musician with a] one-word name. At that time it had become cliché to have a one-word name, because of Cher, so I remember thinking, God, it’s going to be one of those. So I really went into it with very little expec...

September 24 1992, Madonna baring her breasts and blowing kisses, At The Jean-Paul Gaultier fashion show.

September 24 1992,   Madonna baring her breasts and blowing kisses, Billy Idol in double leather... we explore the fashion show that raised $700,000 for AIDS research Jean Paul Gaultier  is renowned for many things – his exceptional tailoring, his conical bras, his impassioned approach to sociopolitcal causes in fashion – and, on September 2, 1992, all of these elements united for a show that definitely mattered. In honour of  amFAR  (The American Foundation for AIDS Research), Gaultier held a fashion benefit whose runway included everything from lip-synching to Dr Ruth dressed in rubber to raise money for a cause that devastated (and continues to devastate) communities around the world. "Tonight will be about protection... wear rubber and protect yourself!" – Jean Paul Gaultier "Tonight will be about protection... wear rubber and protect yourself!" explained Gaultier before the show. "I think fashion can make people thin...

On July 10 1985, The Playboy magazine issue of nude Madonna photos was released !!

Playboy  publishes nude photos of  Madonna  taken before she was famous. The singer did a number of nude photo shoots from 1977-1980, starting when she was an 18-year-old student at the University of Michigan looking for some extra cash and trying to form a band. Now a huge star,  Playboy  publishes some of the shots taken in 1979 and 1980 in a revealing spread. A year earlier, the magazine turned down nude photos of Miss America winner  Vanessa Williams , which their rival  Penthouse  published. "We think Vanessa genuinely didn't know what she was doing, didn't know her photos might be published," the article states. "Madonna, on the other hand, posed repeatedly for two noted photographers who routinely publish what they shoot." One of the photographers, Lee Friedlander, says of the shoot: "She seemed very confident, a street-wise girl." Madonna has little to say on the matter, but doesn't shy away. "I'm not ashamed,...