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== Biography ==
== Biography ==
=== Early life ===
=== Early life ===
Macpherson was born Eleanor Nancy Gow, in the [[Killara, New South Wales|Killara]] neighborhood of [[Sydney]], Australia, and she was the daughter of Peter Gow, a former president of a [[National Rugby League|Sydney rugby league]] team, the [[Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks]].<ref>timeout magazine "Colourful Sydney Identity #50", 19 November 2008, edition</ref> Her mother Frances worked as a nurse before she married. Macpherson reportedly grew up in Killara, a [[North Shore (Sydney)|North Shore]] suburb of Sydney, and she attended the [[Killara High School]]. Macpherson is the eldest of four children including the businesswoman and environmentalist Mimi Macpherson.<ref>[http://mimimacpherson.com.au/mimi-biography/ Mimi Macpherson], biography</ref> Macpherson’s parents divorced when she was 10 years old, and she was moved away with her mother and two siblings. Her mother later remarried, and a clerical mistake in registering at her new school meant that her name was changed from her father's, Gow, to her stepfather's, Macpherson.<ref>{{Citation
Macpherson was born Eleanor Nancy Gow, in the [[Killara, New South Wales|Killara]] neighborhood of [[Sydney]], Australia, and she was the daughter of Peter Gow, a former president of a [[National Rugby League|Sydney rugby league]] team, the [[Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks]].<ref>timeout magazine "Colourful Sydney Identity #50", 19 November 2008, edition</ref> Her mother Frances worked as a nurse before she married. Macpherson reportedly grew up in Killara, a [[North Shore (Sydney)|North Shore]] suburb of Sydney, and she attended the [[Killara High School]]. Macpherson is the eldest of four children. Macpherson’s parents divorced when she was 10 years old, and she was moved away with her mother and two siblings. Her mother later remarried, and a clerical mistake in registering at her new school meant that her name was changed from her father's, Gow, to her stepfather's, Macpherson.<ref>{{Citation
| last = Davidson
| last = Davidson
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Revision as of 07:22, 2 September 2010

Elle Macpherson
Elle Macpherson
Born
Eleanor Nancy Gow
SpouseGilles Bensimon (1982–1989) (divorced)
Modelling information
Height6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[1]
Hair colourlight brown[1]
Eye colourbrown[1]
Websitehttp://www.ellemacphersonintimates.com

Elle 'The Body' Macpherson (Template:Pron-en; born 29 March 1963) is an Australian model, actress, and businesswoman. She is perhaps best known for her record five cover appearances for the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue beginning in the 1980s. She is also known as the founder and primary model for a series of business ventures including Elle Macpherson Intimates, a lingerie line, and "The Body", a line of skin care products. According to Forbes, Macpherson possesses assets around £60 million. In 2010, she became the host and executive producer of Britain's Next Top Model.

Biography

Early life

Macpherson was born Eleanor Nancy Gow, in the Killara neighborhood of Sydney, Australia, and she was the daughter of Peter Gow, a former president of a Sydney rugby league team, the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks.[2] Her mother Frances worked as a nurse before she married. Macpherson reportedly grew up in Killara, a North Shore suburb of Sydney, and she attended the Killara High School. Macpherson is the eldest of four children. Macpherson’s parents divorced when she was 10 years old, and she was moved away with her mother and two siblings. Her mother later remarried, and a clerical mistake in registering at her new school meant that her name was changed from her father's, Gow, to her stepfather's, Macpherson.[3][4]

Rise to fame

By the age of 17, Macpherson enrolled at Sydney modeling agency Chadwick's. Before beginning her college studies, Elle visited the United States with the intent of spending one year doing modeling work in order to earn money to pay for her college education. Macpherson traveled to New York City, where she initially signed up with the Click Model Management company. This became the beginning of a 25-year stay in modelling work.

Macpherson's modelling career began in 1982 with a television commercial for Tab which established her as a "girl next door" figure in Australia.[5] By 1986, Time magazine had already put her on the cover (with a feature entitled "The Big Elle"). By that time, she had also appeared on the covers of Elle, GQ, Harper's Bazaar, Vogue, and Playboy.[citation needed]

Already possessing some widespread name recognition, Macpherson cemented her high profile through frequent appearances in Elle, where she appeared in every issue for six straight years. During that time, and at the age of 21, she married Gilles Bensimon, the creative director of Elle.[6]

Eventually she gained even more exposure through Sports Illustrated magazine's annual Swimsuit Issue. She appeared on the cover a record five times: 1986, 1987, 1988, 1994, and 2006. Her popularity had reached such a level that Australian government offered her a position on its tourist commission as an unofficial ambassador.[7]

Business career

In the 1980s, together with Linda Evangelista, Christy Turlington, Naomi Campbell, Pavlína Pořízková and Cindy Crawford, Macpherson became part of the new generation of supermodels. In 1994, she left her agency, Ford Models, to work more lucratively for her own company, Elle Macpherson Inc. This company would serve as a financial and organizational base for her later endeavors.[8]

MacPherson soon went on to produce her own highly popular series of calendars, each of which was accompanied by a "making of" television program in 1992, 1993, and 1994. She used this success as a springboard to create the "Your Personal Best – The Body" series of workout videos.[8]

Macpherson later diversified her portfolio of businesses, and in 1990 launched her lingerie collection 'Elle Macpherson Intimates' in partnership with Bendon Limited Apparel. Intimates met with remarkable international success, becoming the single best-selling lingerie line in both Great Britain[9] and Australia[10] Breaking the mould of many models, Macpherson took an active role in the development and management of the company, serving as Chief Marketing Officer and later Creative Director. While nursing her second child, she spearheaded the development of a signature maternity bra line.[11] Intimates has retained a high brand recognition into the 2000s, appearing as a featured brand on America's Next Top Model.

More recently, Macpherson created her own label of beauty products: "Elle Macpherson – The Body". She has launched or served as spokesmodel for campaigns by Boots,[12] Invisible Zinc,[13] and Hot Tuna.[14]

The BBC-TV series The Money Programme aired a documentary which followed Macpherson through her day-to-day business as she continued to develop her international lingerie business.

In March 2008, Macpherson signed a three-year spokesperson deal with Revlon cosmetics. She has since been featured in print and advertising campaigns for that company;[15] it has been announced by Macpherson herself that she would expand her underwear line by creating a new Lingerie Collection baptised 'Obisidion' which would be launched in Spring 2010.[16]

Acting career

Macpherson made her movie debut playing an artist's model in the 1994 Sirens, which also starred Hugh Grant, Sam Neill, Tara FitzGerald, Kate Fischer, and Portia de Rossi. Macpherson gained nine kg (20 lbs.) to disguise her athletic frame for the period role.[17] After Sirens, Macpherson followed with a two-year series of acting roles, appearing in films such as Woody Allen’s Alice, Batman & Robin alongside George Clooney, The Edge with Anthony Hopkins, and The Mirror Has Two Faces with Barbra Streisand.

In 1999, Macpherson appeared in five episodes of the American TV series Friends, as Joey's roommate and girlfriend, Janine Lecroix. Macpherson went on to act in the movie Jane Eyre with William Hurt, and she has also appeared alongside Ben Stiller and Sarah Jessica Parker in If Lucy Fell. Her most controversial acting was in the Showtime cable network miniseries, A Girl Thing, in which she plays a woman experimenting with bisexuality along with Kate Capshaw.

Macpherson played the modeling agent, "Claudia Foster" in the "CW"-network drama series, The Beautiful Life, appearing with Mischa Barton, Sara Paxton and Corbin Bleu. The show centered on aspiring models working for a modeling agency, trying to make it big in New York City, and in the Fashion World.[18] The show was canceled after two episodes.

Britain's Next Top Model

On February 2, 2010, Macpherson was announced as the new host of Britain's Next Top Model, taking over from Lisa Snowdon. She will also serve as executive producer on the show. Joining Macpherson on the revamped show will be OBE winning fashion designer Julien MacDonald, fashion stylist Grace Woodward and male model Charley Speed.[19]

Extortion attempt

On 12 and 23 July 1997,[clarification needed] William Ryan Holt and Michael Mischler broke into Macpherson's Los Angeles house while she was away on business in Chicago. They stole an estimated $100,000 worth of jewellery, $6,000 in cash, and nude photographs. The two were arrested on 4 August 1997.[20]

Mischler, 29, pled guilty to one count of attempted extortion and one count of burglary. He received a six-year and eight-month prison sentence. Holt, 26, a former U.S. Air Force enlisted man and a military-justice convict out on parole, pled guilty to one count of extortion, and he was sentenced to one year in prison.

Humanitarian and philanthropic work

Macpherson is a European Ambassador for RED, an initiative set up by Bono and Bobby Shriver to raise money and awareness for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria[21] to help eradicate AIDS for women and children in Africa; she is also an ambassador for UNICEF.[22] In her native Australia, she is an ambassador for the Smile Foundation, which helps the families of children with rare diseases and organizes government research grants.[4]

Personal life

Macpherson met Gilles Bensimon in 1982 on a photo-session for Elle magazine. They were married in 1985, and divorced in 1989.[6]

Macpherson has two sons with her former long-term boyfriend, French financier Arpad Busson, whom she never married. Her sons are Arpad Flynn Alexander Busson (born 14 February 1998), and Aurelius Cy Andrea Busson (born 4 February 2003). Macpherson and Busson began their romantic relationship in 1995, became engaged in August 2002, but called off the wedding in July 2005.[citation needed]

Macpherson resides most of the time in the United Kingdom along with her two sons. She speaks fluent French and conversational Italian and Spanish.[11]

Controversy

In an interview with The Times Online via Twitter in July 2010,[23] Elle Macpherson openly admitted to consuming powdered rhinoceros horn, stating that the substance, which is illegal under CITES and has been shown to have no health benefits, "works for me" and tastes like "crushed bone and fungus". Animal welfare groups such as IFAW strongly condemned her support of an illegal trade which is hastening the extinction of several rhinoceros species.[24]

Filmography

Year Film
1990 Alice
1994 Sirens
1996 Jane Eyre
If Lucy Fell
The Mirror Has Two Faces
1997 Batman & Robin
The Edge
1998 With Friends Like These...
2000 Friends
2001 A Girl Thing
South Kensington
2009
The Beautiful Life (TV Series)
2010–
Britain's Next Top Model (TV Series)

Further reading

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Elle MacPherson Profile. Accessed 8 August 2008.
  2. ^ timeout magazine "Colourful Sydney Identity #50", 19 November 2008, edition
  3. ^ Davidson, Andrew (23 March 2008), "Elle Macpherson looks good with Intimates", The Sunday Times, London
  4. ^ a b Above Magazine, Fall 2008. "Body Talk with Elle Macpherson," p. 16–31
  5. ^ http://www.lifelounge.com/Elle-Macpherson-Tab-Commercial.aspx
  6. ^ a b ES Magazine, Evening Standard, 23 April 2004, p. 30–33: "Before starting college, Elle went on a skiing trip to Aspen, Colorado. On the way home, she was persuaded by her Australian modeling booker to stop off in New York City to see if she could get some work. She stayed for 20 years, marrying the photographer Gilles Bensimon at 21. She was his muse, but the age difference (He as 20 years older) proved to be too great, and they divorced six years later (1989).”
  7. ^ http://nymag.com/fashion/models/emacpherson/ellemacpherson/
  8. ^ a b The Daily Mail, Sunday You Magazine, 15 September 2002, p. 28–33: "The Elle calendar became a worldwide hit, and a new version has been produced twice since, while her 1995 video, Your Personal Best Workout: The Body, was also a bestseller."
  9. ^ The Sunday Times Business, 23 March 2008, p. 17: "Macpherson, supermodel-turned-lingerie queen, has made that her leitmotif. Elle Macpherson Intimates range is the biggest selling brand of fashion lingerie in Britain."
  10. ^ Tatler, July 2002, vol. 297, num. 7, p. 98–107
    "We’re going through Elle’s underwear. This is what she does. She designs knickers and bras. She's very good at it, very successful. It makes her more money than modeling, and Elle has made a lot of money modeling."
  11. ^ a b The Wall Street Journal Europe, Style Journal, Winter 2006 Edition, p. 36–42: "And so, Macpherson made the transition from model, to designer and chief marketing officer for the growing product line. The company credits her with the ideas for many products, including its successful maternity-bra line, which Macpherson designed while nursing her second child."
  12. ^ http://uk.fashion.popsugar.com/2302422
  13. ^ Danks, Katherine (4 January 2008). "Elle Macpherson is new face of WA sunscreen". The Sunday Times.
  14. ^ http://www.just-style.com/article.aspx?id=94291
  15. ^ Vogue
  16. ^ ^Elle Macpherson's New Lingerie Collection, Obsidion
  17. ^ Elle Macpherson biography at IMDb
  18. ^ http://www.cwtv.com/shows/the-beautiful-life/cast
  19. ^ "Elle Macpherson takes over Britain's Next Top Model", BBC News, 1 February 2010
  20. ^ The Smoking Gun
  21. ^ http://www.theglobalfund.org/en/privatesector/red/?lang=en
  22. ^ GQ Australia, Winter 2006, p. 90–99: “I am working on projects like my ex's education program [ARK, a charity that funds schools for needy children world-wide], with Bono and the American Express RED project – which is all about poverty and AIDS support – and UNICEF's breast-feeding program.”
  23. ^ http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/fashion/article7139977.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2
  24. ^ http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0702-hance_macpherson.html

External links