Top 10 Tips To Becoming A Supermodel: How To Be A Supermodel
Top 10 Tips To Becoming A Supermodel: How To Be A Supermodel
Becoming a supermodel isn’t impossible, though hitting the lottery may be an easier score. Undaunted? These 10 tips will help.
One day, you’re a gangly 14-year-old girl scarfing a Big Mac at McDonald’s. The next, you are the highest-paid model in the world, stalking the runways of New York, Paris and Milan, Italy; yours is the face of everything from Dolce and Gabbana to Victoria’s Secret to Apple computers; you’re dating mega-hunks like actor Leonardo DiCaprio and quarterback Tom Brady. It happened to supermodel Gisele Bundchen.
Didn’t it?
Yes and no. There were many, many steps in between burger and hunks. And even for the most beautiful, the most outgoing, perfect young woman, the odds are far better at the lottery counter. But still, every year, some women do make it. It isn’t impossible. So how does a pretty teen girl go from nobody to supermodel?
In Pictures: A Day In The Life Of A Young Model
In Pictures: Top Ten Tips To Becoming A Supermodel
In Pictures: The Five Most Important People In Modeling
A handful, like Kate Moss, take the express route. She was a 14-year-old in JFK Airport when she was first spied by an agent for London’s Storm Model Management. Others, like Victoria’s Secret angel Adriana Lima and Australian sensation Gemma Ward, accompanied a friend to a modeling contest, only to end up being the discovery.
“It’s the girl who never thought she could who gets discovered. The prettiest girl in school doesn’t always make the best model,” says Ivan Bart, a top agent with IMG Models, which reps Bundchen, Heidi Klum and Kate Moss.
But for most others, the slog up the ladder follows a routine path. Girls send photos into a local or national modeling agency (only a Polaroid is needed) or show up for an open casting call. Agencies generally hold them once a week. Victoria’s Secret’s Alessandra Ambrosio took a modeling class in her hometown of Erechim, Brazil, then urged her mother to move with her to S?o Paolo, where she was scouted by a local agency. Soon she won a modeling contest sponsored by Elite, one of New York’s biggest agencies.
Modeling conventions, where local agencies can introduce promising models to bigger agents, are another possibility. Model Amy Wesson, Maybelline face Jessica White and former male model Ashton Kutcher were discovered at the International Modeling and Talent Association convention, held twice a year in New York and Los Angeles.
Once a girl is signed with a big agency (in New York, where the biggest are located, this would include IMG, Elite, Next, Women and DNA), she is sent on what is called “go-sees”–castings for photographers, editorials and runway shows.
During Fashion Weeks in New York, Paris and Milan (held in spring and fall), a model can be sent on as many as a dozen go-sees a day for six weeks. It’s this grueling and low-paying internship process that determines whether a model can burst out of the anonymous pack.
Getting cast in an important designer’s show, like that of Marc Jacobs or Prada, can instantly launch a career. Not getting cast at all can mean a one-way ticket back home. Depending on her experience, a model is usually paid $250 to $1,200 an hour for runway work. But a beginner model takes home little or nothing. Everything from cabs to airfare to the agency’s 10% fees (20% if the girl is still signed with a local agency) is deducted from her salary, and many designers don’t pay at all.
“I have no idea how much I make,” says newcomer Edythe Hughes, 17, a teen scouted in a Columbus, Ohio, mall two years ago. (Forbes followed Hughes around for a day. See “A Day In The Life of A Young Model.”) This season, she strutted the runways in New York for Vera Wang, Rebecca Taylor and Jill Stuart.
Hughes is advanced $150 a week for expenses and probably won’t see much more than that. But she doesn’t mind: “Before this, I was working as a librarian, making $8 an hour.” Last season, Hughes worked as an “exclusive” model for Calvin Klein and banked $9,500 for one show (and 15 hours’ prep time). Of that, she thinks she netted about $5,000, but she isn’t sure. With luck, Hughes will get a better grip on her finances this year. She’s hired an accountant.
Runway may not pay, but it can pay off. It’s here that a model can be scouted by the star makers of the industry–editors, photographers, cosmetic company executives. It’s here that front-row fixture Anna Wintour might take notice of a girl and put her in the pages of Vogue. The new face of Estée Lauder, Hilary Rhoda, was spotted at a New York fashion show by Balenciaga’s lead designer, Nicolas Guesquiere, who then brought the unknown catwalker to the attention of his friend Aerin Lauder, Estée’s granddaughter and the company’s creative director.
Rhoda, a 20-year-old from Chevy Chase, Md., joins a long line of faces who became ubiquitous on billboards, commercials and beauty counters the world over, thanks to the cosmetic giant. Karen Graham was its first contract model, and she lasted 15 years (this before retouching). In the 1990s, the brand made Paulina Porizkova one of the most famous faces on the planet. It also launched the modeling career of Elizabeth Hurley, who, at the time, was known primarily for being Hugh Grant’s girlfriend. Next came supermodels Carolyn Murphy and Liya Kibede (who is being phased out this year).
Contract models for larger cosmetic brands are generally paid $300,000 to $2 million a year, depending on exclusivity and the amount of days the model is expected to work. Murphy, who models for other brands, earned an estimated $5 million last year. Rhoda raked in $2 million.
Estée Lauder’s models are chosen by its top four executives, including Aerin Lauder. Candidates are brought in for a photo shoot and put in mock-up ads. They interview with the executives, who want to make sure the girls are well spoken and can handle store and media appearances. Group President John Dempsey claims that, when it comes to making a final decision, there’s never dissension in the ranks: “Everybody’s eyes go to one girl.”
Rhoda, says Dempsey, was chosen for her healthy all-American look and her maturity: “She has the presence of someone five or six years older.” The models are required to be a “positive role model” and have a “morals clause” in their contracts. No wonder the brand tends to eschew Hollywood starlets. The face of its new fragrance, Private Collection, is 37-year-old Aerin Lauder herself.
At Victoria’s Secret, which has made superstars out of dozens of models, including Gisele Bundchen, Adriana Lima, Heidi Klum, Tyra Banks and Alessandra Ambrosio, executives don’t have to rely on personal preference to pick their next faces. They can measure a girl’s potential in cold hard cash.
“Some girls sell incredibly well,” says Chief Marketing Officer Edward Razek. Computers track each photograph in every catalog. Not surprisingly, girls who move merchandise end up moving up the corporate ladder to supermodeldom.
As for girls like Edythe Hughes, only time will tell if she’ll end up a supermodel or back in Ohio. Keeping her hopes high, but not too high, she says her goal would be to work with a photographer like Steven Meisel or become a popular editorial model like Gemma Ward. “There’s not too many Tyra’s anymore,” she says.
In Pictures: A Day In The Life Of A Young Model
In Pictures: Top Ten Tips To Becoming A Supermodel
In Pictures: The Five Most Important People In Modeling
1. Stop Eating. Grow.
Be at least five foot nine, weighing 110 to 120 Ibs. This would give you a body-mass index of about 16 to 18. “Models starve themselves, and we tell them to,” says Richard Habberley, a top agent with Elite, which reps Victoria’s Secret hottie Alessandra Ambrosio and Maybelline face Jessica White.
2. Be Photogenic.
Send sample photos to a local or national modeling agency. Don’t bother spending money on professional photos. Agents can spot your potential from one Polaroid. It also helps if you have whatever look is “in” at the time. This season, it is pale, otherworldly-looking girls who have one “flaw”–a large nose, a gap in her front teeth. Remember, next season, the in look could be completely out.
3. Get Signed.
Move to a big city like New York and have a big agency, like IMG Models or Elite Model Management, behind you.
4. Be Quiet.
Models don’t say much of anything during their casting sessions and runway shows. “They have to be a beautiful blank slate,” says model rep Ivan Bart.
5. Don’t Party. Don’t Be a Diva.
Models who are late to a 9 a.m. hair and makeup session or come with bags under their eyes will quickly develop a bad reputation. “These are long days,” says Edward Razek, who chooses which models get Victoria’s Secret contracts. “Attitude is important. We are not interested in divas.” Hear that, Naomi Campbell?
6. Befriend Powerful People.
Getting noticed by an editor like Anna Wintour or a photographer like Steven Meisel can mean the difference between being an anonymous runway stalker or a famous supermodel.
7. Date Celebrities.
Gisele Bundchen dated Leonardo DiCaprio and is now hooked up with quarterback Tom Brady. Kate Moss has an on-off (currently off) relationship with drug-addled Brit rocker Pete Doherty. If you’re the face of Estée Lauder, choose your celebrity boyfriend wisely. The brand has a “morals clause” in its contract.
8. Expand Your Brand.
Gisele Bundchen licenses her name to a footwear company and may be starting a lingerie line at H&M. Kate Moss has a line of clothing at retailer TopShop. Heidi Klum designs a line of jewelry through Mouawad.
9. Now You Can Talk.
Tyra Banks has two TV shows (The Tyra Banks Show and America’s Next Top Model); Heidi Klum has one (Project Runway). Gisele Bundchen has had roles in movies like Taxi and The Devil Wears Prada. Alessandra Ambrosio had role in HBO’s Entourage.
10. Don’t Gain Weight. Ever.
Heidi Klum was lauded by the press for appearing runway-ready a mere eight weeks after giving birth to her second child. Shortly afterward, she renegotiated her deal with Victoria’s Secret. Tyra Banks, who doesn’t even model anymore, was excoriated for some paparazzi photos showing she’d gotten a bit wide in the hips.
Top 10 Tips To Becoming A Supermodel: How To Be A Supermodel
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