Hats are not something you simply plop on your head. Hats are marquees — they announce who you are. They cap your story with an exclamation mark.
How fitting, then, that Carrie Bradshaw — the hat-crazy writer played by Sarah Jessica Parker on Sex and the City and the And Just Like That spin-off — chose a raspberry beret to top off her final outfit.
Well, maybe it wasn’t exactly a beret. Like my own favorite hat, which I fell in love with in Paris many years ago, Parker’s topper in the series finale of And Just Like That defies simple definition. It looked like a pink velvet brioche tied onto her head with a ribbon — but it was beret-like enough to keep me humming Prince’s “Raspberry Beret.”
We last see Carrie Bradshaw on Thanksgiving Day, and she’s dressed head to toe in berry tones — from her sequin top to her full crinoline skirt, an homage to the tutu Carrie wears in the first episode of Sex and the City. On the side of her head is the hat — the kind you find in a second-hand store.
“That jaunty little velvet-pink chapeau? It was a vintage style that has been in the AJLT wardrobe for years, just waiting for its moment,” costume designer Molly Rogers told Vogue. “Of course, we had to put a hat on.”
Of course. Some heads are destined to be crowned.
Think of … Charlie Chaplin’s bowler, Indiana Jones’ fedora, Coco Chanel’s boater, Jackie Kennedy’s pillbox, Abraham Lincoln’s top hat, Josephine Baker’s headdresses, Beyoncé’s oversized “Cowboy Carter” hat. And so on.
A hat is like a luggage sticker or a passport stamp: it shows where you’ve been.
My favorite hat came from a tiny, crowded chapeau shop in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, the artsy slice of the city where I have lived since I first came to the City of Light on my 25th birthday.