Naomi Campbell 40 plus and fabulous…Age
is nothing but a number!!
Her story from
Wikipedia
Naomi Campbell (born 22 May
1970) is a British supermodel.
Discovered at the age of 15, she established herself among the top three most
recognizable and in-demand models of the late 1980s and 1990s, and she was one
of six models of her generation declared "supermodels"
by the fashion world. Her personal life
is widely reported, particularly her relationships with prominent men—including
boxer Mike Tyson, Badr Jafar and actor Robert
De Niro—and several highly-publicized convictions for assault.
Early life
Campbell was
born in Streatham, South
London, the daughter of Jamaican-born dancer Valerie Morris. In
accordance with her mother's wishes, Campbell has never met her father, who abandoned her mother when she was four
months pregnant, and who went unnamed on her birth certificate. She took on the surname Campbell from her
mother's second marriage. Her half-brother, Pierre, was born in 1986. Campbell is of Afro-Jamaican
descent, as well as of Chinese Jamaican
ancestry through her paternal grandmother, who carried the family name Ming.
During her
early years, Campbell lived in Rome, where her mother worked as a modern dancer. Following their return to London, she was left
in the care of her maternal grandmother, Ruby, while her mother travelled
across Europe with the dance troupe Fantastica.
At five years old,
Campbell was enrolled at the Barbara Speake Stage School, and at the age of ten, she was accepted
into the Italia
Conti Academy of Theatre Arts, where she studied ballet.[6]
Career
1978–1989
Campbell's
first public appearance came at the age of seven, in 1978, when she was
featured in the music video for Bob Marley's "Is This Love". That
same year, she played Snow White in two episodes of the Children's Film
Foundation television series The Chiffy Kids. At
the age of twelve, she tap-danced in the music video for Culture Club's "I'll Tumble 4 Ya".
In 1986,
Campbell was scouted by Beth Boldt, head of the Synchro model agency, while
window-shopping in Covent Garden.[11] Her career quickly took off—in April,
just before her sixteenth birthday, she appeared on the cover of British Elle. Over
the next few years, Campbell's success grew steadily: she walked the runway for
such designers as Gianni Versace, Azzedine Alaïa, and Isaac Mizrahi, and posed for such photographers
as Peter Lindbergh, Herb Ritts, and Bruce Weber. By the late 1980s, Campbell was part of a
trio of models—the others being Christy Turlington
and Linda Evangelista—known
as the "Trinity", who became the most recognizable and in-demand
models of their generation.
When faced with
discrimination, Campbell received support from her friends; she later quoted
Turlington and Evangelista as telling Dolce & Gabbana, "If you don't use
Naomi, you don't get us." In
December 1987, she appeared on the cover of British Vogue,
as that publication's first black cover girl since 1966. In August 1988, she became the first black
model to appear on the cover of French Vogue, after
her friend and mentor, designer Yves St. Laurent,
threatened to withdraw his advertising from the magazine if it continued to
refuse to place black models on its cover. The following year, she appeared on the cover
of American Vogue, which
marked the first time a black model graced the front of the September issue,
traditionally the year's biggest and most important issue.
1990–2008
In January
1990, Campbell, who was declared "the reigning mega model of them
all" by Interview, appeared
with Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista, Cindy Crawford, and Tatjana Patitz on an iconic cover of British Vogue,
shot by Peter Lindbergh. The group was subsequently cast to star in the music
video for George Michael's
"Freedom! '90". By
then, Campbell—along with Turlington, Evangelista, Crawford, and Claudia Schiffer—formed an elite group of models
declared "supermodels" by the fashion industry. With
the addition of newcomer Kate Moss, they were
collectively known as the "Big Six".
In March 1991,
in a defining moment of the so-called supermodel era, Campbell walked the
runway for Versace with Turlington, Evangelista, and
Crawford, arm-in-arm and lip-synching the words to "Freedom! '90".
Later that year, she starred as Michael Jackson's love interest in the music
video for "In the Closet". In
April 1992, she posed with several other top models for the hundredth-anniversary
cover of American Vogue, shot by Patrick Demarchelier.
That same year, she appeared in Madonna's
controversial book Sex, in a set of
nude photos with Madonna and rapper Big Daddy Kane.
In 1993,
Campbell twice appeared on the cover of American Vogue; in April,
alongside Christy Turlington, Claudia Schiffer, Stephanie Seymour, and Helena Christensen,
and again, solo, in June. She famously fell on the runway in Vivienne Westwood's foot-high platform shoes,
which were later displayed at the Victoria and Albert
Museum in London. Despite her success, however, Elite Model Management,
which had represented Campbell since 1987, fired her in September, on the
grounds that "no amount of money or prestige could further justify the
abuse" to staff and clients. Elite founder John Casablancas described her
as "manipulative, scheming, rude, and impossible."
In the
mid-1990s, Campbell branched out into other areas of the entertainment
industry. Her novel Swan, about a supermodel
dealing with blackmail, was released in 1994 to poor reviews. It was ghostwritten by Caroline Upcher, with Campbell
explaining that she "just did not have the time to sit down and write a
book." That same year, Campbell released her album babywoman, named after designer Rifat Ozbek's nickname for her. A
critical and commercial failure, the
album produced the single "Love and Tears", which reached No. 40 on
the UK charts. In 1995, Campbell and fellow models Claudia
Schiffer and Elle Macpherson
invested in an ill-fated chain of restaurants called the Fashion Cafe. Campbell also attempted an acting career: she
had small roles in Miami Rhapsody
and Spike Lee's Girl 6, as well as a recurring role on the
second season of New York Undercover.
In 1998, Time declared the end of the supermodel era. By then, Campbell had mostly retired from
the runway, but she continued
print modeling. In 1999, she signed her first cosmetics contract with
Cosmopolitan Cosmetics, a division of Wella,
through which she launched several signature fragrances. In
November of that year, she posed with twelve other top models for the
"Modern Muses" cover of the Millennium Issue of American Vogue,
shot by Annie Leibovitz. The
following month, she appeared in a white string bikini and furs on the cover of
Playboy. In
October 2001, she appeared with rapper Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs on the cover of
British Vogue, with the headline "Naomi and Puff: The Ultimate
Power Duo"
After more than
two decades as a model, Campbell was still in demand. In
2007, she walked the runway for Dior's
sixtieth-anniversary fashion show at Versailles. In July 2008, she appeared with fellow black
models Liya Kebede, Sessilee Lopez, and Jourdan Dunn on the gatefold cover of a landmark
all-black issue of Italian Vogue, shot by Steven Meisel. In September of that year,
Campbell reunited with Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista, Cindy Crawford,
Claudia Schiffer, and Stephanie Seymour for "A League of Their Own",
a Vanity Fair
feature on the supermodel legacy.
2010–present
Campbell
appeared with Liya Kebede and Iman on the cover of the fortieth-anniversary
issue of Essence. The
following year, she posed while bound and gagged for the September cover of
Spanish V,
an homage to director Pedro Almodovar. Also
in 2011, Campbell starred as Duran Duran front man Simon Le Bon in the band's music video for
"Girl Panic!", with Cindy Crawford, Helena Christensen, Eva Herzigova, and Yasmin Le Bon portraying the other band members;
they appeared on the November cover of British Harper's Bazaar with the headline "The
Supers vs. Duran Duran".
Campbell
appeared with Kate Moss and performed in the closing ceremony
of the 2012 Olympic Games
on 12 August 2012. Naomi is
one of three coach/judges (along with Karolina Kurkova and Coco Rocha) of the 2013 Oxygen
network reality show The Face
hosted by photographer Nigel Barker.
No comments:
Post a Comment