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Shirley Manson – singer, actress and now style icon

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Published Date: 25 October 2008
SHIRLEY Manson and Sharleen Spiteri were among the winners in the Scottish Style Awards held last night in Glasgow.



Manson, the Edinburgh-born singer turned actress, was given the award for most stylish female and Spiteri for most stylish musician, while film director Richard Jobson was named most stylish man.

Recording artists Sandi Thom and Jon Fratelli were among the fashion lovers who gathered at the red carpet event at the Kelvingrove Art Gallery.

Other VIP guests at the ceremony – hosted by TV presenter Lauren Laverne – included Tracey Emin and Turner Prize-winning artist Douglas Gordon, who was one of the judges.

Mary McGowne, the awards' founder – said the winners had been chosen because of their longevity and individuality, and for presenting a positive image of Scotland to the world.

She said: "Shirley Manson, throughout her dazzling career, has always remained her authentic, individual and potent sense of style.

"She is very much her own person, confident in her own skin and her own personality, and that exudes style.

"Twenty-five years down the line, she is now one of the biggest television stars in America."

Manson, from Edinburgh, has recently branched into acting and has been acclaimed for her role as a robot villain in the TV drama Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. An ambassador for Mac cosmetics, she has been a champion of Scottish designer Jonathan Saunders, winner of the first Scottish Style Awards.

Musician turned film director Jobson was also honoured by the judges for his unerring sense of fashion.

Ms McGowne said: "He has maintained this cool credibility throughout his career – from being an art punk through a diverse career in television and now in film."

She said Spiteri, the Glaswegian-born Texas frontwoman and solo artist, had been recognised because of her ability to reinvent herself.

"She started as a classic rock chick and now she has gone unashamedly retro with a striking new image to mark her first solo album."

Fashion designer of the year was Deryk Walker, who has designed for Boudicca, Versace and produced a range of men's suits for Comme des Garçons. Tastemaker of the year was Lucy Yeomans, the editor of Harper's Bazaar, who was born alongside Loch Lomond.

The event featured a special runway tribute to Johnstons of Elgin, the traditional tweed and cashmere manufacturers founded in 1797 who supply to Hermes, Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Paul Smith. The company was honoured for its contribution to Scottish style.

Che Camille, the Glasgow boutique that won the retail award, was described by the judges as "unlike anything that has ever existed in Scotland."

One surprise was the award made to Monsoon as best high-street retailer of the year. The chain was honoured for initiatives to combat poverty among garment workers in Asia.




The full article contains 472 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 October 2008 11:51 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish Style Awards
 
1

Steven M.,

Salmondland 25/10/2008 00:38:55
Typical labour lies. If Scotland was independent everything would be great.
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 25/10/2008 00:52:54


I like the music of "Sharleen Spiteri" Texas was a good group, some favouites,...

1. Halo

2. Say What You Want

3

Incandescent,

25/10/2008 04:01:36
Charles. Why do you invite ridicule with your (literally) ridiculous punctuation? Is it that you simply don't know how to do it properly?
For example, why did you put her name in quotes yet elect to omit the colon that should have immediately followed it to denote two separate, yet closely related, sentences?
4

Scythia,

Glasgow 25/10/2008 09:59:39
The self-congratulatory Scottish "style" awards - AKA the Scottish naffness awards. Shirley might be best advised to hang low with this one. Being in the company of( rock-to-pop) Spiteri and (the common sl*t) come artist Emin,(not to mention a "design" house named "Boudicca") might just trigger a career nose-dive
through guilt by association.
5

Destroy the Planet,

25/10/2008 10:39:51
So no Krankies or Lulu then
6

Nellie,

Liverpool 25/10/2008 11:49:32
#3 It seems Charles only invites ridicule from you. For the rest it appears his meaning is understood quite well regardless of a few daft rules of punctuation, about which many experts fail to agree anyway. That's a sentence which is too long. (Or should that read "a sentence, which..."? And ought there be a comma after "quite well" before "regardless"? Such stuff is debated by grammarians with too much time on their hands.)
7

Nellie,

Liverpool 25/10/2008 15:50:46
#8 But she's a better Terminator, not to mention an actor, than Arnie! (Not that that takes much doing ...)
8

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 25/10/2008 16:01:32
3 Incandescent

Stop being such a pedant.

This is NOT a creative writing class although Charles Linskaill's "style" is certainly unique if not eccentric.
9

Douglas,

Bathgate 25/10/2008 19:34:16
Who will weep for poor Incandescent as he/she/it languishes in a comma? :o)

I think Charles is kidding us all (at least some of the time)
10

Douglas,

Bathgate 25/10/2008 19:34:50
Oops

.

 

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