Amanda Lepore
Amanda Lepore | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation(s) | Nightlife Icon, Model, Entertainer |
Modeling information | |
Height | 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m) |
Hair color | Platinum Blonde |
Eye color | Brown |
Amanda Lepore is an American model, nightlife and fashion icon, performance artist, and transgender public figure. She has appeared in advertising for numerous companies, including M.A.C. Cosmetics, Mego Jeans, The Blonds, Swatch, CAMP Cosmetics, and Heatherette, which has used her likeness on clothing as well as hiring her as a model. Lepore is also noted as a regular subject in photographer David LaChapelle's work, serving as his muse. She participated in his Artists and Prostitutes 1985-2005 exhibit in New York, where she "lived" in a voyeuristic life-sized set.[1][2]
Early life
According to Michael Musto, Lepore was born Armand Lepore[3], and grew up in the Essex County community of Cedar Grove, New Jersey.[4][5] Lepore told a reporter "from day one she knew she was a girl," and in her teens she began making costumes for a go-go dancer in exchange for hormones.[3] She says her parents soon took her from public school and hired a private tutor, then took her to a psychologist who helped her get a hormone prescription.[6] Lepore says she then got married and moved in with her in-laws, who assisted her with getting sex reassignment surgery.[6] She says she left the marriage after several years and moved to New York City in 1989. In 1990, before becoming a fixture on the New York nightlife scene, she started working in a nail salon, as well as being a dominatrix.[6] She soon met David LaChapelle and began collaborating with him.[6]
Modeling and acting
Lepore has appeared in fashion magazines, including French Playboy, Ponytail, DAMn and TUSH. She is on the cover of Lords of Acid's 1999 album Expand Your Head and on Thighpaulsandra' 2006 album The Lepore Extrusion.
Lepore had a cameo in the 1998 documentary Party Monster: The Shockumentary as well as the 2003 film Party Monster. She was also featured in Another Gay Sequel in 2008. Lepore has also had cameos in music videos for artists including Elton John, Thalía, The Dandy Warhols, Girl in a Coma,[7] Grace Jones, Keanan Duffty, and TIGA for his cover of "Sunglasses at Night."[8] Lepore appears in many of Cazwell's music videos, including "Watch my Mouth"[9] and "All Over Your Face".[10]
She was Chief of Parade at the 2010 Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.[3]
Possessing the hourglass measurements of 39-23-37 and standing at 5'2, Amanda Lepore is very petite.
Music
Her first single, "Deeper," is a 2003 trance dance song written by Wigstock drag queen Lady Bunny.[11]
In 2005 Lepore released her first album, Introducing... Amanda Lepore, which contains "Champagne" and "My Hair Looks Fierce". In 2007 she released two remix albums, Fierce Pussy and My Pussy E.P. Lepore also sings the main title for Another Gay Movie, "I Know What Boys Like". She also performs "Cotton Candy", from the soundtrack of Another Gay Sequel.[12]
Lepore was a part of True Colors Tour 2007, a 15-city North American benefit tour sponsored by the Logo channel, hosted by comedian Margaret Cho and headlined by Cyndi Lauper.[13] The tour benefited the Human Rights Campaign, PFLAG and the Matthew Shepard Foundation, and it included Erasure, Debbie Harry, The Gossip, Rufus Wainwright, The Dresden Dolls, The MisShapes, Rosie O'Donnell, Indigo Girls, The Cliks and other special guests. In 2009, Lepore performed at the Majestic Theatre during Metro Pride Fest in Detroit with The Divas of the Majestic: A Divine Lites Productions.[14]
Her second album I...Amanda Lepore was released in 2011.[15]
Merchandise
In October 1999 Swatch released "Time Tranny", a watch designed by LaChapelle with Lepore on the face displaying a printed crack on the glass and marble stripes as the background. A second version displays no cracked glass and a blue and yellow striped background.[16] In April 2006, Integrity Toys launched an Amanda Lepore doll produced by Jason Wu as a benefit for AIDS charities.[17] Lepore has a line of cosmetics in partnership with CAMP Cosmetics called "Collection Lepore", as well as a signature perfume.[18]
Discography
- Studio albums
Year | Album |
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2011 | I...Amanda Lepore
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- EPs
Year | Album |
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2005 | Introducing... Amanda Lepore
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2007 | My Pussy
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2008 | Fierce Pussy (The Remix Album)
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2010 | Cazwell and Amanda
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- Singles
Year | Title | Album |
---|---|---|
2006 | "I Know What Boys Like"
|
Another Gay Movie Soundtrack |
2009 | "Cotton Candy"
|
|
2009 | "My Hair Looks Fierce"
|
- Music videos
Year | Title | Director |
---|---|---|
2009 | "Cotton Candy"[19] | Bec Stupak |
2010 | "Marilyn"[20] | Leo Herrera |
2011 - Turn Me Over
2010 - Get Into It Cazwell feat Amanda Lepore
2011 - Doin It My Way
References
- ^ LaChapelle, David, (2005). Artists And Prostitutes Taschen America Llc, ISBN 9783822816172
- ^ Williford, Daniel (2009). Queer Aesthetics. Borderlands, Vol. 8. No. 2.
- ^ a b c Olding, Rachel (February 27, 2010) Fantastic plastic. Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Peden, Lauren David. "Shopping with...Amanda Lepore", Dominican Today, September 28, 2005. Accessed July 6, 2011. "But that's what makes Amanda (nee Armand) Lepore from Cedar Grove, New Jersey so great. The boy who grew up to be a Vargas pinup girl may be all manufactured artifice on the outside - huge blond hair, huge red lips, huge gravity-defying boobs."
- ^ Musto, Michael (March 11, 2008). Christian From Project Runway Has a Boyfriend! Village Voice
- ^ a b c d Amanda's Story on amandaleporeonline.com via Internet Archive
- ^ Road to Home (music video) on YouTube
- ^ Sunglasses at Night (music video) on YouTube
- ^ Watch my Mouth (music video) on YouTube
- ^ All Over Your Face (music video) on YouTube
- ^ Page Six (July 10, 2003). How Lopez lost Vogue cover. New York Post
- ^ Monroe, Kennidi (December 22, 2008). Interview: Season Finale, with Amanda Lepore. TrannyTalk 101
- ^ Chinen, Nate (June 20, 2007). Power to the People (and Some Pop Too). New York Times
- ^ Staff report (July 16, 2009). Electra Lites to leave Detroit. PrideSource
- ^ Visco, Gerry (June 29, 2011). Bash Compactor: Golden Girl. New York Press
- ^ Clark, Hazel; Brody, David (2009). Design Studies: A Reader, p. 493. Berg, ISBN 9781847882363
- ^ Lopez, Vincent (May 9, 2006). Toys, p. 64. The Advocate
- ^ Iannacci, Elio (March 17, 2011). The new transsexual chic. Macleans
- ^ "Cotton Candy" (music video) on YouTube
- ^ "Marilyn" (music video) on YouTube
External links
- American female models
- American people of Italian descent
- American people of German descent
- Club Kids
- Living people
- New York City nightlife
- People from Cedar Grove, New Jersey
- Transgender and transsexual entertainers
- Transgender and transsexual musicians
- Transgender and transsexual models
- LGBT musicians from the United States
- 1967 births