Written by Craigh Barboza, CNN
For over a decade, basketball player Dennis Rodman was one of the most recognizable people on the planet, a headline-making machine known as much for his flamboyant style as his bad-boy antics on the court. (Oh, and he also won five NBA championships.) Now, thanks to “The Last Dance,” ESPN’s hit series about the Chicago Bulls’ dynasty of the 1990s, he’s back in the spotlight.
There are so many outlandish stories about Rodman that it’s hard to know where to begin.
A good place might be the time in 1996 when the Hall of Fame forward went out in full drag to promote his brazen memoir “Bad As I Wanna Be.” Rodman had gotten the cross-dressing idea from shock radio jock du jour Howard Stern, who pulled a similar stunt a year earlier for his own book release.
But it wasn’t just the fact that Rodman, who is six feet, seven inches tall, slipped into a custom-made, voluminous bridal gown that had been made in France. It was the entire look: from his Kevyn Aucoin runway makeup to the throng of tuxedo-clad women escorting him from a horse-drawn carriage into a Barnes & Noble on Fifth Avenue. He said he was bisexual and was marrying himself.
Dennis Rodman arrived at his 1996 book signing in a Hansom cab, wearing a wedding dress.
Credit: Pat Carroll/NY Daily News Archive/Getty Images
Provocative? Sure. Gender bending? Absolutely. But the stunt also generated the type of media frenzy most publicists only dream of. “Bad As I Wanna Be” quickly topped the New York Times bestseller list and remained on it for 20 weeks.
“That book elevated him to a new level of fame,” recalled Dwight Manley, who orchestrated the in-store appearance as Rodman’s agent and manager from 1995 to 2000. “I remember CNN had a half-hour newscast back then and Dennis’ book was on the crawl. It was the No. 1 story.”
Rodman, who entered the league in 1986, built his career in part on understanding how image can magnify a message and help him transcend sports. His journey from rebounding savant to transgressive fashion icon forced fans to reckon with their own ideas about gender and sexuality long before Caitlyn Jenner and “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”
In short, Rodman inspired people to drop all the pretense and be their authentic selves.
Dennis Rodman wore a sparkly top to the 12th Annual MTV Video Music Awards.
Credit: Ron Galella/Getty Images
Without Rodman, we wouldn’t have Russell Westbrook, Frank Ocean or Billy Porter.
“I think we’re all heirs,” said Sam Ratelle, the red-carpet designer and gender-fluid fashion pioneer. “Dennis taught us something hugely important: to not give a single fk! I see him in OutKast and Macklemore, in Burning Man, in all the ’90s trends that are seen on the catwalks, and even my own work with Billy Porter.”
Rodman’s look was a bit of everything — street, drag, trucker, Vegas showgirl, class clown, Adonis — occasionally all at once. The basketball star showed up at the 1995 MTV Video Music Awards in a pair of hand-embroidered baggy jeans and a glittery camisole top, with an exposed diamond belly chain. Two years later at the Oscars, he switched it up with an electric-blue tux and velvet top hat so big it needed its own ticket.
There was no telling what Rodman would wear — or do — from day to day.
Dennis Rodman wore an HIV/AIDS awareness ribbon emblazoned on his head in 1995
Credit: Noren Trotman/NBAE/Getty Images
And he was just as unpredictable on the basketball court. During a helter-skelter 14-year NBA career, Rodman set out to dominate the game without scoring a point. He shut down the game’s best offensive weapons, dived for loose balls with no regard for his own safety. He was the kind of player you loved to go to battle with but hated to face, even in practice.
Stylist Yolanda Braddy recalled a time when Rodman came to play a pickup game at a facility that Warner Bros. had built for Michael Jordan to use while he filmed “Space Jam.”