Singer shows her idea of “dressing up”

Jun 10, 2010 15:18 GMT  ·  By
Lady Gaga goes to her sister’s graduation in odd lace outfit and heel-less shoes
   Lady Gaga goes to her sister’s graduation in odd lace outfit and heel-less shoes

She can wear orbs for a hat – and nothing else – for the cover of a magazine, but Lady Gaga has a truly unique take on the whole concept of “dressing up.” Attending her sister’s graduation the other day, Gaga rocked a lace bodysuit and a hat with a black veil that completely covered her face, as the ultimate “in your face” gesture, the New York Post says.

It would seem that Gaga went to the same school as her sister and, in order to show the very people that once made her life a living hell that they should be sorry for how they treated her, she chose to dress up to the nines – in her own unique way. Her out-of-the-ordinary clothes have already been compared with something made from grandma’s lace, accessorized with an oversized lamp for a hat and widow’s veil, but this could be exactly what the singer wanted: to get people talking.

“Lady Gaga put on a very special show this week for the high school that made her life miserable – clearly delivering the message, I’m a star, the rest of you aren’t and you can all go to hell. Her command performance at her little sister’s graduation at the Convent of the Sacred Heart, on East 91st Street at Fifth Avenue Tuesday, was her way of rubbing the school’s face in the mud, several of her pals told The Post,” the Post writes.

“The Sacred Heart kids who made her an outcast because of her driving ambition to be star and her parents’ inability to buy her fancy clothing and purses could only watch in wonder as the girl they once knew as Stefani Germanotta wowed another awestruck audience. She dressed in a beekeeper’s hat and see-through pants and carried a Chinese-takeout-shaped Chanel bag as she strolled the grounds in sky-high platforms that let her stand tall without heels,” the same e-zine further reports.

The message she tried to deliver was clear: she’d made it on her own terms despite the fact that so many people in school, both teachers and colleagues, had tried to bring her down. If that was truly the case, she certainly did the job well.