Timeless Beauty: ‘Special’ Tribute to Laetitia Casta

-Updated for Laetitia Casta’s Birthday 5/11/2021

Born in Pont-Audemer, Normandy, France in a rural countryside, Laetitia Casta, guided by virtues of love, creativity, beauty, and passion, would not only go onto to be a national symbol for her country, but an actress and model that broke norms, questioned prevailing thoughts of the day, and became an inspiration to countless the globe over.

Yet before international stardom, Laetitia spent her childhood in the woods, getting her clothes dirty, taking swims in the river and play-fighting with her older brother. As a tomboy, at school, Laetitia could only admire her crushes from afar as she had no idea how to communicate her feelings to boys.

Even with being tomboy who spent her time in the outdoors and dirt earth, Laetitia dreamed of a more fantastical reality outside of her beloved woodlands and animals:

“When I was young all I did was dream, dream, dream. I felt like a ghost, invisible. I lived in my own fantasy world. I just wanted to be alone and to be close to nature, play in the woodland with the frogs and animals. In my world, everything was beautiful. Maybe that’s why I took to modelling, so that I could carry on playing the characters in my imagination. I was so shy outside, but on the inside I was like a volcano.”

I’ve been living without you
I know all about you
I have run you down into the ground
Spread disease about you over town

I used to adore you
I couldn’t control you
There was nothing that I wouldn’t do
To keep myself around and close to you

Laetitia began to take modeling jobs in secret. Word got out and other girls following in Laetitia footsteps would be dismayed when they didn’t get the job, Laetitia would simply respond, “It’s not about beauty.”

In 1993, at the age of 15, Laetitia was vacationing with her family at a beach in Corsica when a photographer named Frédéric Cresseaux from Madison Models happened to notice her and invited Laetitia’s father and her to Paris.

Not too long after the encounter, Laetitia went to her first casting call with her father. But before she stepped through the door, her father took her aside and said, “You’re my daughter, and for me you are the best and most beautiful. But for other people, maybe not.” “He didn’t want me to get hurt,” says Laetitia, “he didn’t want me to dream too much.”

When Laetitia walked inside, she was blown away by the other beautiful women and felt insignificant in comparison. “So I go up, and I see all these girl,” says Laetitia. “And I say, ‘What I am doing here?’ I feel like a big sausage! I was with my big eyes looking at those beautiful girls — this kind of girl that if you saw on the street, you are like, ‘Wow!’

— and I said, OK, Laetitia, be strong, be strong.’ I think I have to try something else. I think I have to try something else. I have to give something that someone else doesn’t have. Be open, be sincere. So for me it was to maybe give — maybe gonna sound stupid for you — but give some love.” She smiles. “And I’m very lucky, they pick me.”

Laetitia did her first runway for the French designer Jean Paul Gaultier. Laetitia never wore makeup before hitting the runway. She even screamed when she saw herself in the mirror for the first time. “I looked at myself,” she says, “and I was scared. Because it was not me. Something changed. It was something new — a woman.”

By the age of 16, Laetitia’s life had all the hustle and bustle of a full fledged fashion model, already having her first three covers in a single month while constantly traveling and doing shoots. Her parents allowed Laetitia to model full time and leave school because they didn’t want her to regret the opportunity.

Laetitia’s father gave her a speech and made her promise to work hard, stay at home, and stay nice. Laetitia flew out to America to meet Ralph Lauren in a conference room before a mass of marketers and planners. “Laetitia could hardly speak English,” recalls Richard Phibbs, one of the first American fashion photographers to work with Laetitia.

Even back then, Ralph said Laetitia would be a star. The designer asked Laetitia to turn around so the room could get a better idea of her proportions. “Do you know how hard that is?” Phibbs says. “It was like twenty-five sets of eyes staring right at her. She did it with such a kind of grace and sweetness. Most people would have buckled.”

Viva La Vida

By the time she turned 20 and only four and half years into her modeling career, Laetitia was already a household name, she appeared on more than 50 magazine covers, became a brand ambassador for L’Oréal Paris, was featured in campaigns for GUESS? Jeans, walked the the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show in consecutive years, and appeared in SI Swimsuit and in Rolling Stone consecutively.

Laetitia also had the honor of walking in Yves-Saint Laurent’s 40th anniversary show. The two would have a long, endearing friendship until Yves-Saint Laurent’ death in 2008. Even today, Laetitia cherishes and thinks fondly of Yves-Saint Laurent:

“I had no clue what feminity was when I started in fashion. In fact, Yves Saint Laurent was the first person who made me feel like a woman. He asked me, “What do you want to wear?” Nobody had ever asked me that before, so I said, “OK, I want to wear a dress with flowers,” as a child would say, a bit ridiculous. And he made the most beautiful dress for me, covering me in roses for his 1999 show.’

Do you have an opinion?
A mind of your own?
I thought you were special
I thought you should know
But I’ve run out of patience
I couldn’t care less

We were both so shy and sensitive. ‘We held on to each other from drowning.’ I miss him very much, because you don’t have many people like that in your life. One, if you are lucky. My favourite memories are of laughing about his dogs, sitting on his knee, flying to New York with him… But I feel him still, here, all around me. Not a ghost, but his spirit, his energy.

Herb Ritts, Karl Lagefeld, Jean Paul Gaultier, Yves Saint Laurent, and Ralph Lauren took a natural liken to Laetitia. Yves Saint Laurent even considered her to be one of his creative muses. In 1999, Laetitia was bestowed with the most impressive honor of all, when French mayors decided she would serve as the new bust of Marriane, which is one of the most endearing symbols of the French Republic.

In that same year, Laetitia made her foray into cinema, appearing in movies, TV shows, and plays like Asterix et Obelix contre Cesar, The Blue Bicycle, and Ondine. She was also recognized at the 22nd Cabourg Romantic Film Festival and received the Golden Swann Award for Best Actress.

Do you have an opinion?
A mind of your own?
I thought you were special
I thought you should know

At the peak of Laetitia’s career she was viewed as something of an oddity, a bit of rebel, and a free spirit. For one, she stood at 5’7″, the average height for models is around 5’9″. Laetitia was also a curvaceous marvel witch ran counter to the anorexic and anemic models that began to become fashionable in the 90s and 2000s. Laetitia was even regarded as “the antidote to the Kate Moss waif.”

Not to mention, Laetitia was a proud foodie before it was even a thing. David Lipsky remarked: Unlike many people in her profession, Laetitia eats: hamburgers, mashed potatoes, chocolate especially. “Sometimes, when I’m with other models and someone doesn’t eat, I feel sympathetic,” she says. “Because it’s like a circle — when you love food, you love life; when you love life, you love to do love. I love those things.”

Laetitia also has a bubbly personality and is a free spirit. When she was younger, she would dance in supermarkets, fling water balloons from her hotel balcony in New York when she got bored. She even invited a homeless man to dine with her once in London as he was walking by the restaurant.

–She has long chestnut hair and a wide face — when she smiles, it goes as round as a tomato.

Writer David Lipsky recalled how People were perplexed at Laetitia’s happiness: People will read about her and say, “Why’s she so happy? I don’t like Laetitia Casta.” But Laetitia disagrees. “Why I shouldn’t be happy?” she asks. “Because everybody’s not happy? I don’t understand that, either — and I have a big French mouth.”

Laetitia was also a rebel as a supermodel and a nonconformist. She never let her height and curvy figure deter her from becoming a model. She even refused to straighten her crooked teeth just for the sake of her career, stating, “I like my crooked teeth.” Although she was highly valued by the Victoria’s Secret brand, she parted ways with them when they just wanted her to be relegated to a sex symbol, despite Laetitia being very opinionated.

I used to amuse you
I knew that I’d lose you
Now you’re here and begging for a chance
But there’s no way in hell I’d take you back

Although Laetitia was initially a critic of the #METOO Movement, she has since taken a more sympathetic position, urging for balance and understanding on both sides:

“There’s a lot of talk nowadays about desire and about the way that men view women. Of course, we can’t tolerate any lack of respect – that kind of behaviour must be denounced and punished by law – but I’m not comfortable when things get censored. It doesn’t have
to be ‘us’ versus ‘them’, we can work together,” she places her hands flat, with the tips of her fingers touching. “I believe very strongly in femininity and masculinity, it’s about finding the balance. When people talk about desire, they’re usually referring to male desire. We don’t hear enough about women’s desire… It’s as if desire was a purely masculine attribute.”

Laetitia immensely loves children and being a mother. “I eat what I want, give birth to children – everything is like a normal woman.” She was appointed as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador on December  9, 2016, where she aids children living in conflict areas. She also made a documentary about children of immigrant parents in France and their travails.

“It’s exasperating to see how the adult world pressures children, says Laetitia, “We have to let them find their own inner force. I always tell children to define themselves in terms of themselves and not in terms of others.”

From an awkward tomboy who played in the woods with her older brother who struggled to express her romantic intentions to male classmates, to one of the most celebrated supermodels ever, Laetitia broke the norms for being a supermodel and icon while elevating notions of inner beauty, creativity and intellect.

It’s almost a parody in and of itself that Laetitia ever became a model. She never fit any conventions, she still doesn’t and that’s probably what made her truly ‘special.’ She had her own idea of beauty and it resonated with others. She had her own idea of happiness and she was happier for it. She wasn’t afraid to love and was loved in kind. She had her own ideas and beliefs, and you couldn’t help but respect her for it.

Do you have an opinion?
A mind of your own?
I thought you were special
I thought you should know
But I’ve run out of patience
I’ve run out of comments
I’m tired of the violence
I couldn’t care less

Like Laetitia once said to a classmate who wanted to model, but found it more difficult than expected, “It’s not about beauty.” What is it about? Laetitia pauses. “From inside.”

W Magazine: Wishing For Naomi Scott, Aladdin’s New Princess Jasmine and Hollywood’s Next Movie Star

Slated as being the next breakout star in Hollywood, Naomi Scott set to play Princess Jasmine in the live action Aladdin being released in a few weeks from now, is already an industry favorite for all the right reasons. First of all she’s immensely talented as an actress and singer. I’ve listened to a few songs off of her Promises EP, and it’s probably better than anything in pop or R&B today. Her voice is so soulful and leaves an impression. She even gets to perform an original song in the movie.

Naomi also has impressive acting chops. Disney, Guy Ritchie, and the producers were completely smitten by the soulful Londoner. The studio executives only needed to see 40 seconds of her audition tape to decide that Naomi was a natural shoe in for the role. Elizabeth Banks director of the new Charlies Angels movie says, “People are going to see a lot of range from Naomi. I think this is going to be an epic year for her.”

Apart from her distinct acting and musical talents, and good looks, Naomi is a total tomboy, girl next door, a devout Christian and is just totally likable. The casting of Naomi was met with some criticism because she’s not of Middle Eastern heritage, but has Indian and English ancestry. Yet Naomi took the criticism in stride and is focused on delivering the best possible Princess Jasmine for the big screen.

You can read the rest of the amazing article here. There’s so much to love about Naomi and I’m so excited about her future. Plus it’s Naomi’s birthday today. Happy birthday Naomi! Hollywood, the sun rises on a grateful universe indeed ♡ #TaurusGirlsRule

Don’t Leave Me Hanging on The Telephone: Tribute To Bettie Page – The Greatest Pinup Glamour Model of All Time

**Updating Soon**
43044943_bettie-bangless2

Pretty Baby

5McnTux7_oBorn April 22, 1923, in Nashville, Tennessee, it was a hard knock life for Betty May Page, the second child of Roy and Edna Page’s six children. Struggling against the backdrop of the Great Depression in the late 20s, Roy moved his family throughout the south for stable work, yet nothing paid off.IX93Il9y_o

Edna was forced into the role of provider and Bettie at the age of 8, filled the void and looked after her other siblings. Due to the lack of financial support from Roy and his marital infidelity, Edna filed for a divorce when Bettie was 10, and her and her two sisters were placed in orphanage.

Bettie and her sisters took to performing arts as children to distract from the reality of being orphans. They pretended to be Hollywood actresses and mimicked the beautiful models shown in photos.

Bettie knew an education would be her way out of poverty and made her mind up to become a teacher, enrolling in high school in 1937. As a student, she was a member and program director of the Dramatics Club, secretary treasurer of the Student Council, coeditor of the school’s newspaper and yearbook; she was even voted “Most Likely to Succeed.”

Stars live in the evening
But the very young need the sun, uh-huh
Pretty baby, you look so heavenly
A neo-nebular from under the sun
I was forming, some say I had my chance
The boys were falling like an avalanche

Ya ya baby
La Dolce Vita is a magic dance
No-one was listening
Pretty baby, un petite ingenue
A teenage starlet, I fell in love with you

Bettie was crushed to have barely missed being named valedictorian by .25%, and lost the opportunity for a 4 year scholarship at Vanderbilt University. But Bettie was named Salutatorian of her class, winning a $100 scholarship to Peabody College.

After high school, Bettie earned a teaching credential. But her career in the classroom was short-lived. “I couldn’t control my students, especially the boys,” she said. Bettie’s boyfriend of two years, Billy Neal was drafted after the Pearl Harbor attacks, and against her better judgement, Bettie said yes when he proposed to her.

After earning her Bachelor of Arts degree from Peabody College, Bettie moved to San Francisco to be with Billy. It was in San Francisco that Bettie got her first modeling job at a local furrier where Bettie modeled fur coats for clients.

One Way Or Another

By 1948 she had divorced Billy as he had become violent and jealous after returning from the war. Bettie moved to New York City where she enrolled in acting classes while working as a secretary.

In 1950, during a walk along the Coney Island shore, Bettie met Jerry Tibbs, a police officer with an interest in photography. Tibbs took pictures of Bettie and put together her first pinup portfolio. Bettie and Tibbs became good friends and it was Tibbs who suggested Bettie wear bangs because of her high forehead. Bettie continued to sport the bangs even decades later.

vlcsnap-2019-04-25-18h23m08s218 (2)“She was a white woman from a small southern town and he was a black man from New York City, and I think that speaks volumes about Bettie and how she was willing to break with the social mores of her time to do what she felt was natural, good, and right.”

– Karen Essex

Tibbs introduced Bettie to numerous other photographers including Cass Carr who organized outdoor photographic sessions, which Bettie intensely enjoyed. In a matter of months, Bettie’s modeling career had taken off. Camera clubs led to posing for various magazines such as Wink, Eyeful, Titter, and Beauty Parade.

While gracing countless men’s magazines and becoming a pinup queen, Bettie began to work with Irving and Paula Klaw in 1951 at Movie Star News, a successful photography and pinup art studio at the time.

“She was such a great model. She was so vivacious and she could strike any pose: ‘Okay, Betty, give us a horror shot. Give us a happy shot.’ It was just a natural instinct with her – a super gal.”

– Paula Klaw

366897425_tumblr_p07vy8WjY81uowzuvo1_1280_123_94loWhile working for the Klaws, Bettie perfected her modeling and posing even more, incorporating a more Gothic, BDSM aesthetic in her shoots leading her to be dubbed the “Queen of Bondage. Bettie236689582_tumblr_p0c31kixm01waoixuo1_1280_123_25lo would dawn lingerie, fishnets, boots, use whips and wear custom fetish outfits while acting out a bondage or spanking scene. Her work with the Klaws would go onto influence fashion designers and models for decades to come.zf8PeSYzTOQEX7G6ZDp5evtgrPFuw1JQshXm5dF49PY_l

In 1953, Bettie auditioned for an apprenticeship at Sea Cliff Summer Theater in Long Island where she studied acting under the tutelage of Herbert Berghoff. With Berghoff’s encouragement, Bettie secured several roles in various New York productions as well as various television appearances. Her off-Broadway productions included Time is a Thief and Sunday Costs Five Pesos. Bettie even appeared on the Jackie Gleason show.

Her most professional photographs were taken in 1955 by fashion photographer Bunny Yeager. They included shots of Bettie nude posing with cheetahs, frolicking in waves and deep-sea fishing, and a January 1955 Playboy centerfold of her winking under a Santa Claus cap.

In the late 50s, Bettie became a target of Estes Kefauver, a U.S. senator from Tennessee who led the charge on hearings that targeted indecent and pornographic publications. Bettie was subpoenaed to testify before a court because of her work with the Klaws which wasn’t pornographic.

Just Go Away

704657468_Postcard_123_213loAfter many years of being a target of Kefauver, harassment and intimidation from the FBI, failed relationships, and feeling her life going “adrift,” Bettie walked away from it all at the age of 35. She quit modeling and moved to Florida, where she married again to a younger man.Betie wEFWBv2

After an argument on New Year’s Eve in 1959, Bettie went walking and noticed a white neon sign over a little white church with its door open. After quietly taking a seat in the back, she had a born-again experience. Page immersed herself in Bible studies and served as a counselor for the Billy Graham Crusade.

Decades after Bettie disappeared from public life, she had unknowingly become a pop culture icon during the great Bettie Page revival from the 1980s to 1990s. Painters, comic book artists, fashion designers, supermodels, pop stars all drew inspiration from Bettie Page. You could see her likeness from Madonna, comic books like Dave Steven’s “The Rocketeer,” fashion catwalks and art galleries.

Don’t be cruel
Be a thing-sweet thing as a rule
Don’t be sad
I left you in the street, you’re pre-fab
I had to get away
Don’t go away sad
Don’t go pre-fab
Don’t go be bad
Don’t go away mad
Just go away (go away)

Don’t Leave Me Hanging On The Telephone

Although Bettie Page influenced countless with her beauty and magnetic personality, it was those same indelible qualities that attracted sadness and misfortune to Bettie’s life like a lightening rod. Bettie grew up with a mother who was emotionally detached, and a father she describes as a womanizer and sex fiend that would molest Bettie and her sisters.

I’m in the phone booth, it’s the one across the hall
If you don’t answer, I’ll just ring it off the wall
I know he’s there, but I just had to call

“All I ever wanted was a mother who paid attention to me. She didn’t want girls. She thought we were trouble. She didn’t help with homework or teach me to sew or cook. She didn’t go to the school plays I was in or go to my high school graduation. When I started menstruating at 13, I thought I was dying because she never taught me anything about that.”

Bettie had no problem attracting men as she was married three times, had lovers and admirers, but all of her relationships seemed ill-fated or destined for failure from the start. From a jealous and abusive husband, to having to suffer crazy ex-wives, Bettie just seemed to be unlucky in the love department.

Don’t leave me hanging on the telephone
Don’t leave me hanging on the telephone

Despite Bettie being very strong willed, even in the face of being a victim of molestation from her father and being raped by a group of sailors in the ’50s, her past and hectic lifestyle finally took it’s toll in 1979 when she was arrested after an altercation with her landlady. Doctors diagnosed her with acute schizophrenia, and she spent 20 months in a state mental hospital in San Bernardino, and subsequently placed under state supervision for eight years.

I learned that she was paranoid schizophrenic, that’s an enormous cross to bear. And where as she had her parents to thank for her amazing good looks, it was a mixed blessing because her parents were also responsible for this genetic predisposition towards paranoid schizophrenia. Plus her mother didn’t want her and her father molested her. Those are heavy burdens to deal with.

– Richard W. Bann

In spite of Bettie’s personal demons she wasn’t one to be ever unkind, bitter or arrogant. All the photographers, artists, writers and personal friends like Dave Stevens who had the chance to meet or professionally work with her, all loved Bettie and spoke highly of her.

I heard your mother, now she’s going out the door
Did she go to work or just go to the store?
All those things she said, I told you to ignore
Oh, why can’t we talk again?
Oh, why can’t we talk again?
Oh, why can’t we talk again?

1100169No matter what hardship Bettie faced in life, she took it in stride and always rebounded. A bit of darkness might of hung over Bettie’s life, but the love, beauty, and kindness she exuded, reciprocated to her in kind. And until her dying day, countless people like Dave Stevens, who passed shortly after Page, jumped at the opportunity to help Bettie in her time of need.

“I’ll always paint Bettie Page,” De Berardinis said after Bettie’s death. “But truth be told, it took me years to understand what I was looking at in the old photographs of her. Now I get it. There was a passion play unfolding in her mind. What some see as a bad-girl image was in fact a certain sensual freedom and play-acting – it was part of the fun of being a woman.”51hPM2dyiuL

Bettie was a playmate for January 1955, won Miss Pinup Girl of the World, dubbed the Queen of Curves, Queen of Bondage, and the Dark Angel! A poor girl from Tennessee without much prospects in life became a defacto pioneer for the sexual revolution, progressive thought, art, fashion, and challenged our ideas about femininity and nudity.

“I was not trying to be shocking, or to be a pioneer. I wasn’t trying to change society, or to be ahead of my time. I didn’t think of myself as liberated, and I don’t believe that I did anything important. I was just myself. I didn’t know any other way to be, or any other way to live.”

Most importantly, Bettie was her own woman who in a bigoted and sexist society, broke all the rules, defining and expressing herself, and wasn’t afraid to love. It’s almost funny how Bettie “parallels” with Blondie’s breakout album Parallel Lines and Debbie Harry’s story. Both women were unwanted by their parents, nearly counted out by everyone, and faced hardships because of their beauty. But both ultimately ended up changing the world and the perception of women.

It’s good to hear your voice, you know it’s been so long
If I don’t get your calls, then everything goes wrong
I want to tell you something you’ve known all along

It’s pretty funny how society today has this mass disdain for beauty and does everything it can to tarnish it. But the Betties and Debbies are screaming over the telephone somewhere trying to make us see reason again to almost no avail, trying to tell us something we’ve known all along.

Don’t leave me hanging on the telephone

Bettie was the greatest, her influence can still be felt today, and she won’t be forgotten anytime soon.