A Tribute To The Men Who Won In Style

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A Tribute To The Men Who Won In Style

Words by Mr Jim Merrett

19 September 2021

If you speak to those most familiar with victory, it tends to be the near misses that they focus on. When it comes to such fine margins, it is the mistakes that they learn from – or are haunted by. That attention to detail is what takes them to the top of their game and keeps them there. That isn’t the case for the other 99.999 per cent of humanity, however. For us, it’s their moments of glory that tend to stand out. Winning isn’t everything, of course, and the giddy thrill that comes with clinching a prize only lasts so long. But to truly succeed, to be the best while looking your best (that attention to detail on show again), is to live forever in triumph. Here are five men who didn’t just come first, they dressed to win.

01.

Mr Muhammad Ali

The newly crowned world heavyweight champion Mr Muhammad Ali wasn’t yet “The Greatest” when this photograph was taken. He wasn’t even Muhammad Ali – he was still Mr Cassius Clay – but on this night, in this bar, he was a legend. The evening of 25 February 1964 was significant not just for Ali’s unexpected win over Mr Sonny Liston, but also for the boxer’s chance meeting with notable Black figures of the age: civil rights activist Mr Malcolm X, soon-to-be NFL champion fullback Mr Jim Brown and singer-songwriter Mr Sam Cooke. What did or didn’t happen at the Hampton House Hotel in Liberty City is the subject of Ms Regina King’s 2020 film One Night In Miami… But what we do know is that two days later, Ali announced his conversion to the Nation of Islam and changed his name on 6 March. The moment captured here is arguably the making of the man, but, holding court in eveningwear, he already looks made.

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02.

Mr Kazuo Ishiguro

Born in Nagasaki, Japan, but raised in leafy Surrey, England, Mr Kazuo Ishiguro’s outsider perspective perhaps allowed him to pen his most celebrated work, The Remains Of The Day, and with it provide a deft deconstruction of the British class system. Questions of identity run through his output, notably in Never Let Me Go, but if the Ishiguro experienced impostor syndrome while collecting his Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017, it did not show in the way he presented himself. His full evening dress suggests he not only knew the protocol, but treated the occasion with the reverence it required. Having won the Booker Prize in 1989, he was no stranger to such ceremonies. Many of us would be wandering around in a fuggy daze, much like his protagonist in The Unconsoled, but Ishiguro is in complete control.

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03.

Mr Nelson Mandela

Although South Africa’s first multi-racial election would not take place until later that month, with Mr Nelson Mandela inaugurated as president on 10 May 1994, you could argue that by early April, when this photo was taken, the great political leader had already won. Freed in 1990 after serving 27 years in prison, Mandela oversaw the dismantling of Apartheid, the vicious system of racial segregation imposed by the ruling National Party in 1948. In such circumstances it seems almost trivial to comment on the clothes Mandela wore during his election campaign, but history was being made, and the lawyer turned activist dressed with similar purpose. The more sober suits came later, but Mandela always looked most at ease in a printed shirt – a sartorial slant that he retained in office.

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04.

BTS

“There was a Beatle to suit every taste,” Mr Craig Brown notes in One Two Three Four, his thoroughly readable account of the Fab Four. It’s a marketing ploy that BTS – or their stylists – understand. By 2018, the K-pop wave was already riding high and the seven-man supergroup was collecting a Billboard gong for the second year in a row. They deployed a breadth of style choices, from a Gordon Gekko-like contrast shirt collar to the piped blazer and jaunty cap of an errant schoolboy. The group’s attitude, too, was a mixture of confident swagger and humble gratitude. For the event, the band had their own self-imposed rule: no drunk tweeting. Asked if any member had broken this commandment, RM, in an eye-grabbing aloha shirt, replied with a very Beatlesque refrain: “Not yet, not yet, sir!”

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05.

Mr Jack Nicholson

Arguably, Mr Jack Nicholson’s first Oscar triumph should have come sooner – the actor was already onto his fifth nomination, and, to date, is among the most decorated with three awards off the back of 12 nominations. “With my sunglasses on, I’m Jack Nicholson. Without them, I’m fat and 60,” he famously quipped several decades later and, as the nominations were listed on this night in 1976, Nicholson could be seen hiding behind his trademark shades. But as soon as his name was read out, he quickly whipped them off while reaching in to kiss his date, Ms Anjelica Huston, before striding up to collect his award. Here holding his award aloft, the sunglasses are back on his face. The tuxedo and bow tie ooze with old-school Hollywood glamour, but the dark glasses, like the win, are all Jack Nicholson.

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