How Coco Chanel spent her exile in Switzerland
Coco Chanel’s grave in the Bois-de-Vaux Cemetery, Lausanne Keystone / Laurent Gillieron
French fashion designer, perfumer and Nazi agent Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, who died exactly 50 years ago, is buried in Lausanne. After the war she moved to Switzerland to escape criminal charges of collaboration, spending around ten years by Lake Geneva.
This content was published on January 10, 2021 - 12:00
Thomas Stephens Born in London, Thomas was a journalist at The Independent before moving to Bern in 2005. He speaks three official Swiss languages and enjoys travelling the country and practising them, above all in pubs, restaurants and gelaterias. More about the author | English Department
“Coco Chanel drank only champagne,” says a barman at the Beau-Rivage Palace Hotel, where Chanel had a suite. Living in exile could still be done in style, after all.
The luxury Beau-Rivage and the Lausanne Palace, where she also spent time, are both worlds away from the poorhouse hospice where Chanel was born in 1883 and the orphanage where she grew up and learnt to sew.
Through creative vision, hard work and knowing the right (and wrong) people, by 1935 Chanel was employing some 4,000 workers and had five boutiques in central Paris. However, after the war her past – notably working as a German agent codenamed “Westminster” (see box) – caught up with her and in 1945 she found herself with a one-way ticket to French-speaking Switzerland.
Once settled in Lausanne, she stayed and socialised at the top hotels and went for beauty treatments at the Clinique Valmont. She could also be found at the Steffen tearoom in Montreux, a meeting place for celebrities, and the Chalet-des-Enfants restaurant up in the surrounding hills.
Many of these places mention still Chanel in their marketing – the Chalet-des-Enfants website says she would stop there for a “bowl of milk and a slice of flan” and the Lausanne Palace even has a Coco Chanel Suite “largely inspired” by the designer. (At around CHF3,000 ($3,400) a night in summer this is a bargain compared with the CHF24,000 a night for the Coco Chanel Suite at the Ritz Paris – and the rate can go higher than that.)
She apparently rarely left her room at the Beau-Rivage, staying on her balcony and enjoying the view of the lake and mountains. One of her dogs is even said to be buried in a pet cemetery reserved for four-legged hotel guests.
However, when she did venture out for a lakeside promenade, the fact that her chauffeur was following her in a Cadillac suggests she wasn’t bothered about keeping a low profile.
Chanel in the 1950s The Granger Collection
But it wasn’t all parties and promenades. It appears Chanel also spent part of her time in exile preparing her grand return once the dust had settled. In 1954, at the age of 71, she returned to Paris and re-opened her couture house, presenting her first come-back collection.
Swiss burial
Not that she forgot Switzerland. In 1966 she bought a house, “Le Signal”, at Sauvabelin, in the wooded hills above Lausanne. The former finishing school, built in the Heimatstil, was where she would invite various celebrity friends, such as French ballet star Serge Lifar, for whom she had designed outfits.
“I have always needed security. In Switzerland one can have this security,” she once said.
Whereas Lifar died in Lausanne and was buried in Paris, Chanel did the opposite. She died on January 10, 1971, at the Ritz Paris, where she had lived for more than 30 years of her life. But she wanted to be buried in Lausanne.
Chanel being laid to rest in January 1971 Keystone / Str
Her grave, which she designed herself, is in the Bois-de-Vaux Cemetery, where her neighbours include Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the International Olympic Committee, and French lexicographer Paul Robert.
The grave is covered in white flowers (cotoneasters), as requested, and is next to a white stone bench. The gravestone features five lions (her lucky number and her astrological sign). What’s more, the stele is not on the tomb but in front of it – another wish. “I don’t want a stone on my head – in case I want to return,” she explained.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, none of this – not one word about her time in Switzerland – is mentioned in the timeline of the official Chanel website, which jumps from 1945 (headline: “GIs love Chanel”) to 1954 (“Welcome back”).
Coco Chanel and the war In 2011 a book by Hal Vaughan, a Paris-based journalist and former US intelligence officer, claimed not only that Coco Chanel was the lover of a German officer, Hans Günther von Dincklage, (which had been well-documented) but that they were spies who went on missions to Madrid and Berlin to recruit Nazi agents. According to the book, Sleeping With The Enemy: Coco Chanel’s Secret War, which was based on recently declassified French and German intelligence, Chanel was more than just a Nazi sympathiser and collaborator – she was a “vicious anti-Semite” and numbered Nazi agent working for the Abwehr, Germany’s military intelligence agency. The book gives her Abwehr agent number as F-7124 and code-name as “Westminster” (she had had an affair with the Duke of Westminster, one of the wealthiest men in the world). In 2014 a documentary on France 3, L’Ombre d’un Doute (The Shadow of a Doubt), confirmed that Chanel had worked directly for German military intelligence. It was the first time a French state broadcaster admitted that Chanel had spied for the occupiers. Saved by Churchill? When war broke out in 1939, Chanel shut her shops in Paris and during the German occupation lived in the Ritz Paris, also the residence of top German military staff. Her affair with von Dincklage facilitated this. It also helped with the release of her nephew (who some sources claim was in fact her son) from a German prisoner-of-war camp. According to Vaughan, in return she agreed to help the Nazis via “her powerful connections in London, neutral Spain and Paris”. After the war, while many women in France were punished for “horizontal collaboration” with German officers, Chanel was interrogated about her relationship with von Dincklage but not charged as a collaborator. “Churchill had me freed,” Chanel told her grand-niece on returning home, according to Vaughan, who interviewed the grand-niece. Some historians think UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill did this – if he did – to prevent Chanel from testifying and revealing the pro-Nazi sympathies of top British officials and royals, such as Edward VIII, whom she had got to know in the 1920s. In 1945 Chanel moved to Lausanne, where von Dincklage joined her for part of the time. In 1951 a photo was taken of the couple in Villars sur Ollon in canton Vaud. Following the publication of Vaughan’s book, the Chanel Group admitted in a statement that Coco Chanel had had a relationship with von Dincklage but it denied she was anti-Semitic. End of insertion
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Remember Gabrielle Chanel Through These 3 Books
Gabrielle Chanel, more frequently known as “Coco Chanel,” shook up the codes of women’s fashion, emphasising designs that allowed women to move freely and without hindrance.
A true icon of style, the designer imagined a modern, timeless wardrobe, combining chic and comfort, whose legacy is still very present in the style vernacular of today. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of her death, here are 3 books that will allow you to (re)discover her journey and quintessential style.
Coco Chanel: The Illustrated World of a Fashion Icon by Megan Hess
Famous fashion illustrator Megan Hess traces the personal and professional history of Gabrielle Chanel through a collection of drawings, punctuated by key moments that shaped her life and career. The book also features the most emblematic pieces of Coco Chanel’s style, from the little black dress to the tweed jacket and one of the most famous perfumes in the world, Chanel N°5. A tome that makes the reader realise just how much this inimitable style still influences, even more than ever, current fashion. It also serves as an anthology of the most delicious quotes from the founder of the maison in Paris’s rue Cambon.
Approximately 750THB
Mademoiselle: Coco Chanel and the Pulse of History by Rhonda K. Garelick
If you thought you knew everything there was to know about Gabrielle Chanel, this book could prove that you only in fact know a few of the most famous stories and anecdotes that marked the life of the French designer and great couturier. Rhonda K. Garelick not only highlights the influence that Gabrielle Chanel had — and still has — on women’s fashion, but also places each moment in a very specific historical and social context, thus retracing the journey of the young girl who spent several years in the orphanage of Aubazine Abbey before building an empire and becoming a world icon.
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Gabrielle Chanel – Fashion Manifesto (official exhibit catalog)
The Palais Galliera museum in Paris has imagined, with the support of Chanel, the first retrospective dedicated to the French designer Gabrielle Chanel, 50 years after her death. While waiting for the reopening of the museum, you can immerse yourself in the official catalog of the exhibition, which looks back at the evolution of Chanel’s style, from the jersey striped sailor top from 1916 to a selection of dresses from the 1930s and chic sportswear. The book includes numerous photographs and illustrations, and also focuses on Chanel N°5, one of the must-haves of the designer’s style.
Approximately 1,650THB
This story was first published by AFP Relaxnews.