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Culture & Artsby Mark Reutter9:44 amJun 17, 20140

Inside City Hall: Mayor wins kudos from Vanity Fair for her sartorial style

“Municipal government doesn’t often go hand in hand with glamour,” magazine says in praise of Rawlings-Blake. The evolution of a fashion plate.

Above: Mayor Rawlings-Blake dresses well for her appearances on “Meet the Press.”

Thirty years ago, Esquire magazine named William Donald Schaefer America’s best mayor. Over the weekend, Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake was ranked America’s best-dressed female mayor by another national publication.

Vanity Fair, scribe of skinny Hollywood celebrities and misbehaving billionaires, praised the mayor’s pioneering style that, it said, looks “so on point” for every occasion “that she should write a style guide for the modern woman in politics.”

It awarded her a position on the chic scale below Mayor Anne Hidalgo of Paris as the world’s best-dressed female mayor – and just behind Rahm Emanuel of Chicago as America’s top municipal fashionista.

Rawlings-Blake’s array of high heels – which recently found their way on neighborhood crime patrols and in photo ops with residents displaced from the 26th Street collapse – were cited by Vanity Fair as one of her signature styles.

Rawlings-Blake speaks to displaced residents of 26th Street before a press conference last month. (Photo by Fern Shen)

Rawlings-Blake speaks to displaced 26th Street residents before a press conference last month. (Photo by Fern Shen)

The magazine, for example, really dug her combo of stilettos and skinny jeans at the city’s Pride Parade.

You Are What You Wear

Looking good is important in the world of politics, all the more so for a female finding her way in a male-dominated profession.

Hillary Clinton knows it and Sarah Palin proved it, though raising the issue publicly can evoke cries of sexism.

Rawlings-Blake’s style differs from that of, say, Michelle Obama in its reliance on makeup, gloss, eyeshadow and accessories that belies a careful attention to detail and a flair for the dramatic (a bold, clunky necklace, an array of colorful bracelets).

Transformation

It hasn’t always been that way.

Rawlings-Blake battled overweight during much of her career in city government (which constitutes her whole career, starting out as a northwest Council member at age 25). The same problem beset her dad, the late state Delegate Howard “Pete” Rawlings.

Rawlings-Blake at a political rally in 2007 with state Sen. Catherine E. Pugh (center) and future mayor Sheila Dixon. (Brew file photo)

Rawlings-Blake at a rally in 2007 with future mayor Sheila Dixon on her far left. (Brew file photo)

But after becoming the city’s unexpected mayor in 2010 (due to the forced resignation of Sheila Dixon following her corruption conviction), Rawlings-Blake went on a slimming campaign that transformed her life.

Not only did she become one of the “biggest losers” at City Hall, she tossed out her wardrobe of shapeless suits and cut her lifeless straight hair.

She apparently needed to get control of her body as she took control of city government – and in the process, she pushed back the clock a good decade. (She turned 44 in March).

Diet Advice

Picture of Rawlings-Blake used by Vanity Fair in its slideshow of best-dressed mayors.

Rawlings-Blake in Vanity Fair. She came in 5th worldwide in the mayoral fashion sweepstakes behind Boris Johnson (London), Anne Hidalgo (Paris), Giuliano Pisapia (Milan) and Rahm Emanuel (Chicago).

Today, the mayor is known for giving out diet and exercise advice to constituents. She allots time (and sometimes campaign lucre) to salon stylists, and carries herself well at City Hall functions (where her outer office features an endless loop of photographs of her activities on a flat-screen TV).

Over the last two years, she’s turned heads while moonlighting as secretary of the Democratic National Committee and ranking officer of the U.S. Conference of Mayors.

She’s also lit up the talking-heads circuit on NBC’s “Meet the Press” and other broadcasts.

In short, she isn’t afraid to flaunt it.

A Secret Tip

As to how she does it, Vanity Fair says Rawlings-Blake favors well-tailored jackets and “a hairdo that’s far from dowdy.”

But the magazine forgets to give credit where credit is due. Last year the mayor confided to a local publication, “I get my makeup tips from RuPaul. I watch his ‘Drag Race’ show in freeze frame so I can get good tips.”

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