Source
December 17, 1925 (Thursday)
Berlin is a major export city for ready-to-wear. Now the ready-to-wear industry has chosen a queen for its huge empire.
In the facilities of the Sportpalast, thousands of people are
bustling and moving around very lively. One would think that the
modern rulers of the world no longer need this. Rathenau says in his
reflections: “Shrugging the shoulders and gesticulating with elbows
and palms are old fear reflexes that served to ward off the blow.”
Here, it is probably just the excitement about which fashion house
might have sent the winner of the Fashion Queen contest. No fewer
than 89 mannequins – ladies modeling clothes – pass the judges’
chair in a two-and-a-half-hour voting process. It is not beauty that
is judged, but grace, i.e. the overall impression in movement. Most
of the girlshave ragamuffin faces, if you’ll forgive the harsh
expression. The gamine look is modern. Some of the faces already
show too much knowledge of the Berlin frenzy. Each one is angling
for the judges’ favor with a wiggle of the hips and an imploring
look of victory, because fancy outfits don’t count here: they all
appear in little work shirts.
The audience participates by
applauding and shouting. The audience is cruel. They clap their
hands in obvious irony when one of these crafty, emaciated women
appears. No one judges as an expert, who would have to choose
slimness above all, but everyone judges as a man. For in the end,
everybody screams: number 10, number 10! Number 10 is not the “ideal
type” of the fashion magazines, that blonde thing that has been
photographed so often for the magazine
Die Dame, but a “full-figured”
young lady with a round, feminine face and calm, almost casual
movements.
Thus it is Sonja Jowanowitsch who is crowned. She is
of Serbian descent, was born in Semlin in Hungary, her father was a
court apothecary in St. Petersburg, and she attended grammar school
in Gatchina. She wants to buy herself a fur coat with the 1000 Mark
coronation gift. The fashion house she represents is bombarded with
requests for leave for the Queen. Tonight, Sonja Jowanowitsch is
appearing in a revue for the first time.
She no longer has to
worry about how to make her livelihood.
Source of original German text: Adolf Stein, Mecker’ nich! Rumpelstilzchen, Bd. 6, 1925/26. Berlin: Brunnen-Verlag, 1926, p. 119. Available online at: http://www.karlheinz-everts.de/rmp25-13.htm