Thứ Sáu, 18 tháng 7, 2008

Twiggy




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Twiggy
Born Lesley Hornby
19 September 1949 (1949-09-19) (age 58)
Neasden, London, England
Occupation model, actress, singer
Spouse(s) Michael Witney (1977–1983)
Leigh Lawson (1988-)
Official website

Twiggy (born Lesley Hornby; 19 September 1949) is an English supermodel, actress, and singer, now also known by her married name of Twiggy Lawson. A 1960s model known for her large eyes, long eyelashes, and thin build, she is regarded as one of the most famous models of all time. Twiggy went on to star in movies, judge on the reality show America's Next Top Model and, along with Fran Drescher, co-conceived the initial idea that was to become the internationally successful television series, The Nanny. She now models for Marks and Spencer to promote their recent rebranding, and appears in seasonal TV adverts with others such as Myleene Klass, as well as other forms of media for the campaigns.

Early life

Twiggy was raised in the London suburb of Neasden, the daughter of Nellie Lydia "Helen" (née Reeman), a counter-girl at a Woolworth's store and factory worker at a printing firm, and William Norman Hornby, a master carpenter and joiner.[1][2] She attended the Brondesbury and Kilburn High School in Salusbury Road, Kilburn.[3]

Modelling career



Twiggy during the "height of her modelling career"

In 1966, Nigel Davies noticed the young Lesley Hornby and offered her a modelling contract. She was only 16 and weighed 6½ stone (41 kg, 90 lbs).[4] Davies advised her to go by her childhood nickname, Twiggy, and renamed himself Justin de Villeneuve. After sweeping England as "The Face of '66" when her modelling pictures, taken by Barry Lategan, were made public, Twiggy arrived in New York in March 1967. It was believed that the Twiggy craze would die down within a month; Twiggy, however, became an instant icon and supermodel. Known for the high fashion mod look created by Mary Quant, Twiggy changed the world of fashion with her short-haired androgynous look. Her style has dominated the runways for forty years. She was also famous for drawing long, fake eyelashes under her bottom lashes. These are, unsurprisingly, named Twiggys.

Twiggy was regarded as one of the faces of 1960s Swinging London, along with other models, such as Celia Hammond.

On 16 June, 1967, Capitol Records released Twiggy's first single for the label "When I Think Of You" with "Over And Over" on the B-side.

In early 1968, Twiggy toured Japan and filmed advertisements for Toyota Motors and Choco Flakes breakfast cereal. In 1969 she did advertising work in the United States for Diet Pepsi Cola.

[edit] Life after modeling

After four years of modelling, Twiggy retired, claiming "You can't be a clothes hanger for your entire life!" She embarked on an award-winning acting and singing career, including Ken Russell's 1971 film version of Sandy Wilson's musical, The Boy Friend, for which she won two Golden Globe Awards. Since then she has played a variety of roles on stage and screen, including My One and Only and as Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion, opposite Robert Powell, in a 1981 television production.

In 1976, Twiggy signed to Mercury records and released the albums Twiggy and Please Get My Name Right, discs that contained both pop and country tunes. Twiggy sold very well, peaking on the UK charts at no.33, and gave Twiggy a silver disc for good sales. The album contains Twiggy's top twenty hit single, "Here I Go Again" and "Please Get My Name Right" made it to no.35 in 1977.

Twiggy married the American actor Michael Witney in 1977. They had one daughter, Carly, born in 1978. That marriage ended with his sudden death in 1983 from a heart attack. She met Leigh Lawson on the film Madame Sousatzka, and married him in 1988. They reside in London.

In 2003, she released another album, Midnight Blue, featuring previously unreleased material she had recorded from 1982–1990; the CD received glowing reviews and had duets on it with Leo Sayor and Carly Simon.

Twiggy's other recordings from 1985 failed to make the charts. Feel Emotion and Diamond have both been released onto CD format since.

In 2005, Twiggy joined the cast of the TV show America's Next Top Model as one of four judges. She also returned to modelling, fronting a major new TV, press and billboard campaign for Marks & Spencer, a British department store chain. In 2006, she portrayed herself as a nineteen-year-old in the radio play Elevenses with Twiggy for BBC Radio 4's Afternoon Play series.

In 2007, it was announced that Twiggy would not be returning to America's Next Top Model's 10th season due to scheduling conflicts. She will instead be replaced with supermodel Paulina Porizkova.[5]

Also in 2007, Sepia records released a previously shelved album that Twiggy recorded in 1979, Produced by Donna Summer and Jurgen Koppers. "Heaven In My Eyes ['Discotheque'] contains the 8 original tracks due to be released, plus 4 remixes by The Outpsider. The album was also made available on iTunes.

Twiggy still models at times. She is signed to London agency Models 1.

2008 saw Twiggy step up to support the Fashion Targets Breast Cancer campaign in support of Breakthrough Breast Cancer, alongside fellow celebrities: comedian Alan Carr, singer Natalie Imbruglia, actress Anna Friel and DJ & presenter Edith Bowman.

[edit] References in pop culture

  • Twiggy is mentioned in the Spice Girls song, "Lady is a Vamp" from their 1997 album Spiceworld.
  • Japanese band, Pizzicato Five released a song called "Twiggy Twiggy" (aka Twiggy vs James Bond) in the mid 90s, and mentions Twiggy quite frequently:

In a twiggy mini-skirt In a twiggy-like pose In a twiggy mini-skirt Skinny like twiggy, that's me...

  • Twiggy was the subject of a song in the popular 60s era musical 'A Slice of Saturday Night'. The opening line goes:

'I wish I had figure like Twiggy, so stick-like, so incredibly thin...'

  • Twiggy is mentioned in the Namie Amuro song, New Look, from her 2008 single 60s70s80s.
  • The 1973 David Bowie song 'Drive In Saturday' contains a reference to a girl sighing like 'Twig the wonder kid.' Twiggy subsequently appeared with Bowie on the cover of his 'Pin Ups' album.
  • Jeordie White, member of rock/metal group Marilyn Manson, has the stage name Twiggy Ramirez, in keeping with the rule that the band's members name themselves after the first name of a celebrity and the surname of a serial killer (Twiggy, and American serial killer Richard Ramirez). Marilyn Manson himself is named after Marilyn Monroe and Charles Manson.
  • Welsh band Manic Street Preachers released the song "4st 7lb" on their 1994 album The Holy Bible. Written from the perspective of a girl with anorexia, it includes the following lines:

Legs bend, stockinged I am Twiggy, And I don't mind the horror that surrounds me

In the Onion's news-compendium parody Our Dumb Century there is a story title "Twiggy Popularizing Eating Disorders". There is, however, no story written for it.

[edit] Appearances

  • 1966 Mattel issued a 'Twiggy' doll. It was Barbie sized, but with smaller bust and hips.
  • 1971 Film debut as an extra in Ken Russell's The Devils
  • 1971 First leading role in features as Polly in Ken Russell's adaptation of Sandy Wilson's pastiche of 1920s hi musicals The Boy Friend; initial collaboration with Tommy Tune
  • 1974 Made West End stage debut in Cinderella
  • 1974 Made second feature, the thriller W; co-starred with future husband Michael Whitney
  • 1974 Hosted own British TV series, Twiggs (later renamed Twiggy)
  • 1977 Makes an appearance on The Muppet Show.
  • 1980 Made cameo appearance in The Blues Brothers
  • 1981 Starred as Eliza Doolittle opposite Robert Powell in Yorkshire TV production of Pygmalion
  • 1983 Broadway debut in the musical, My One and Only, starring and co-staged by Tune; earned a Tony nomination
  • 1987 Played a vaudeville performer in the British TV special The Little Match Girl
  • 1988 Had supporting role in Madame Sousatzka, opposite second husband Leigh Lawson
  • 1989 Cast as Hannah Chaplin, mother to Charles, in the British TV-movie Young Charlie Chaplin; aired in US on PBS' Wonderworks
  • 1991 Co-starred in the ill-fated CBS sitcom Princesses
  • 1997 Acted in London stage revival of Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit
  • 1998 Played Gertrude Lawrence in the biographical stage musical Noel and Gertie at the Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor, Long Island
  • 1999 Returned to New York stage as Lawrence in Off-Broadway production If Love Were All, a revised version of Noel and Gertie, directed by Lawson; what set this edition apart were its tap numbers in period style; starred opposite Harry Groener's Coward
  • 2001 Co-hosted the British magazine programme This Morning
  • 2005 Was a judge on America's Next Top Model for Cycles 5-9
  • 2006 Twiggy was featured on the cover of the Icons issue of SWINDLE magazine

SHE OWNS THE NIGHT

With her otherworldly pipes, a lusty younger husband, and a record-shattering album, Mariah Carey is on the verge of all-encompassing world domination. But as Dan Crane quickly finds out, that doesn’t mean she keeps regular office hours.

Photographed by Alexei Hay
Styled by Joe Zee


“Do you hate me?” asks Mariah Carey, absorbing me into her well-toned figure with a firm hug. “I’m so sorry I’m late,” she says, gazing into my eyes as she pulls away and flutters both hands in the air to illustrate what I can only assume is her rationale. “The nails are still drying!”

It’s 12:37 a.m. I’m in the living room of a sprawling suite on a high floor of the Beverly Wilshire Four Seasons in Los Angeles, and “Mimi” is, in fact, over two and a half hours late for our Friday night interview. It’s classic diva: Make journalist cool heels downstairs in hotel bar while Mimi—what…? Has her nails done? Yes.

Why don’t I mind? Unlike today’s breed of talentless manufactured star churning out pop drivel, Mariah has been paying her dues for nearly 20 years—and the dividends continue to roll in. With the April release of her latest album, E=MC², and its tongue-in-cheek sing-along “Touch My Body,” the seven-octave vocal acrobat topped Elvis’ record for most No. 1 Billboard chart singles. Now, with 18 No. 1’s, it’s likely she’ll soon bump the record-holding Beatles (who have 20) from their top spot, all—with the exception of just one track—with songs she’s either written or co-written. Her eponymous debut was released in 1990 and went platinum nine times; she’s put out 10 more studio albums since and is the third-highest-selling female artist, behind Barbra Streisand and Madonna. She escaped a disastrous marriage to former Sony record exec Tommy Mottola and survived an “emotional breakdown” in 2001. With 2005’s The Emancipation of Mimi, the biggest-selling record of that year, she led a comeback coup, nearly erasing our memories of the critically and publicly eviscerated 2001 film and accompanying soundtrack train wreck known as Glitter.

(From ELLE)


Thứ Hai, 14 tháng 7, 2008



All those things
we never said
Publisher: Editions Robert Laffont
Contact details: 24 avenue Marceau

www.laffont.fr

Original Publication: 15/05/2008
Also available as: Manuscript in French
A romantic comedy set in a world that is larger than life…
A story that entices the reader to believe the unbelievable…



As far back as Julia Walsh could remember, she always had a difficult relationship with her father. They hardly ever saw each other. Hardly ever spoke, and on the rare occasions they did, they never seemed to agree on anything.

Three days before her wedding, Julia receives a phone call from her father’s personal secretary. Just as Julia had predicted, Anthony Walsh will not be able to attend his daughter’s wedding.

However, for once, Julia has to admit that her father’s excuse is irreproachable.

He’s dead.

Julia cannot help seeing the tragic-comical side of the situation. From one second to the next, her nuptial dreams transform into funeral plans. Even beyond the grave, it seems, Anthony Walsh has his own particularly effective way of disrupting his daughter’s life.

But the day after his funeral, Julia discovers that her father has one last surprise in store for her. Without a doubt, the journey of a life-time, and an opportunity to say, at last, all those things they had never said.

With this novel, Marc Levy creates a world of mischief and suspense. At its heart, lie the relationship between a father and daughter, and a tale of first love, the kind of love that never dies.

Chủ Nhật, 13 tháng 7, 2008



Miss venezuela become Miss Universe 2008







Thứ Bảy, 12 tháng 7, 2008

Natasha Bedingfield interview


She 26-year-old singer looks back on her teenage years and discovers what she might have done differently.

Where did you grow up?
My family comes from New Zealand, but I'm a London girl. I was born and raised in London, but I've got the blood of a New Zealander, so I always kind of felt like I didn't belong — in a good way.

Were you a good student?
I did actually like school. When I was 17, I was in college, but before that, I was home-schooled. I was very social. I liked to know everyone. I liked English and art and did a lot of painting. And for some reason I was good at math, but I wasn't an A student. I really had to work hard to get good grades.

Did you have an after-school job?
I got a job as soon as I could — 11 or 12. I started babysitting and then I got a part-time job at a pharmacy in England. I just remember loving the feeling of going out and buying my own clothes! I'd go bargain-hunting and get secondhand vintage stuff.

What was the worst popular trend when you were going to school?
Scrunchies! People would make their own, and put their hair in a ponytail. I wore them all the time.

Do you have a quote in your high school yearbook?
We didn't have one, but "Unwritten" was really a song I wrote for myself. “Live with your arms wide open” — I think that's what I'd write in a yearbook.

What did you want to be when you grew up?
The thing is, I really started to have dreams for myself when I was 17, but I was always afraid people were going to laugh at me. I finally just said, "Alright. I'm going to write songs, even if they're bad. I’m just going to keep writing until I get good." That is what “Unwritten” is about — just not worrying.

What is the craziest thing you ever did to get a guy to notice you?
Before I was 17, I really wasn't into boys. I was quite shy, so I didn't really want them to notice me. I'd push them all away! I never really did anything big [for them]. I just started dressing nice and making eye contact.

What was your style when you were 17? What is it like now?
It was kind of vintage. I wasn't wearing any designer stuff and I didn’t like wearing jeans very much. I still don't. I'd wear skirts and dresses, and trouser pants. It's changed a lot. You can be more over-the-top as a performer, experiment more, and be more of an individual. Now, I'd call it individual/classic/quirky.

What kind of clique were you in back then? Now?
I wasn't really in a clique. I just tried to be friends with everyone. Now, I have my own little clique. I have the best friends ever. I like taking them away on holidays and long weekends. We’ll go somewhere like Italy or Brazil. We're really crazy together!

What were your hobbies back then? Now?
I was interested in art (I loved painting), music, being with friends, and shopping. Now, [I’m into] music, water sports, the gym, going on adventures, and trying to find new places I've never been.

What rumors were people spreading about you then? Now?
I just remember being conscious of what everyone thought back then. I'm not so self-conscious now, because my job has forced me to not care what people think. I think I used to think up what people were thinking of me, which they probably weren't.

What nicknames did you have back then? Now?
Tasha and Tashy. That's about it. Now, my boyfriend calls me Twinkle Toes, because if I'm doing something, I kind of pick up on my toes a little bit.

Who was your best friend? Are they still your best friend now?
My sister has always been my best friend. She's two years younger than me, but she's very wise. I did have a best friend in school, but we don't keep in touch anymore.

What did you do for fun? Now?
I would make music. I'd love to just jam and go shopping. Now, if I'm in New York, I go out clubbing at night or I'll go and just be in nature, which I really love. I love to go to New Zealand and just swim and sunbathe. I love going online and checking out YouTube. I actually like blogging and going on MySpace and Facebook as much as I can.

What advice did your parents give you when you were 17? Now?
“Choose your battles, because you're not going to win every fight but you should choose the important ones. You can let a few slide.” My parents are so good for advice. They’re very supportive. I'll stop home and my mom will talk about her charity, Global Angels, which helps children all over the world. It puts a perspective on everything.

What did you worry about back then? Now?
I wanted to be liked by everyone. I worried about meeting someone and not remembering their name, or offending them, or making mistakes, or whether I was normal. Now, I worry about stupid things like "What's the next album gonna be like? How do I make sure I have enough time for this person?"

What was your high school boyfriend like? What is your boyfriend like now?
I don't really want to talk about [my high school boyfriend], but my current boyfriend does a lot of different things. He's very talented and very creative but he's not in the industry, so it's very nice. He’s much more balanced.

Who was your idol back then? Now?
I didn't have any posters on my walls of any boy bands or stuff like that. I loved Brandy, Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, and Sting. Now, I listen to as much music as I can. I fill my iPod up with Jeff Buckley, Radiohead, the Beatles, John Mayer, Feist, and Goldfrapp.

What would you say now to your 17-year-old self?
Dear Natasha, Make the most of every day. It doesn't matter if you fall over. You can get back up again. Love, Natasha

Natasha Bedingfield is 26 years old. Her debut album, Soulmate, is out now!