Lauren Hutton

Lauren Hutton

Hutton attending the premiere of The Union at the 2011 Tribeca Film Festival
Born Mary Laurence Hutton
(1943-11-17) November 17, 1943
Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.
Occupation Model/actress
Years active 1963–present

Lauren Hutton (born November 17, 1943) is an American model[1] and actress. Hutton notably appeared on the cover of Vogue magazine on 28 occasions and earned more than any other model within a decade-long period.[2]

Early life

Hutton was born Mary Laurence Hutton in Charleston, South Carolina, United States. Her parents divorced when she was young. After her mother remarried, her last name was changed to her stepfather's name, "Hall", although he never formally adopted her.[3] She graduated from Chamberlain High School in Tampa, Florida in 1961, and was among the first students to attend the University of South Florida in 1961.[4][5]

Hutton later relocated with former Tampa disc jockey Pat Chamburs, 19 years her senior, to New York City, where she worked at the Playboy Club.[6] The pair later moved to New Orleans, where she attended Newcomb College, then a coordinate college within Tulane University,[2] and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1964.[4]

Modeling

Hutton returned to New York, changed her name to "Lauren Hutton", and became a popular fashion model, "cover girl" (appearing on the front cover of Vogue magazine a record 41 times[7]) and commercial spokesperson. She was advised to correct the slight gap in her teeth and tried using morticians' wax to cover the gap, cutting a line in the middle of it; this was followed by the use of a cap, which she would often swallow, laugh out or misplace.[8] Hutton eventually retained this "imperfection" and the All Movie Guide stated that it "gave her on-camera persona a down-home sensibility that other, more ethereal models lacked."[4]

In 1973, Hutton signed a contract with Revlon cosmetics, worth US$250,000 a year for 20 days' work, a professional relationship that lasted for ten years. Hutton's initial contract with Revlon involved representation of the Ultima II brand. Twenty years later, she signed a new contract with Revlon to be the spokeswoman for Results, a collection of corrective moisturizing treatments.[2]

In 1993, Hutton performed as a runway model for designer Calvin Klein and The New York Times responded by publishing an article in Hutton was "just as good as the current flock of fledglings."[5]

In 1997, Hutton became a brand ambassador and appeared in multiple advertising campaigns for the Australian department store David Jones; in 2001, she was replaced by Megan Gale.[9]

Hutton was presented on the November 1999 Millennium cover of American Vogue as one of the "Modern Muses".[10]

Following her recovery from a motorcycle accident in 2000, she became the spokeswoman for her own signature brand of cosmetics, "Lauren Hutton's Good Stuff", a line of cosmetic products for mature women.[11] The brand was sold primarily in the USA, but was also available through secondary distribution channels throughout Europe and South America.

In October 2005, Hutton was interviewed on ABC's Good Morning America program in relation to the future release of an edition of Big magazine that was entirely dedicated to Hutton's career and included eight pages of nude photos. Hutton agreed to pose nude for the feature, titled "Lauren Hutton: The Beautiful Persists", when she was 61 years old, and explained to GMA:

I want them [women] not to be ashamed of who they are when they're in bed. Society has told us to be ashamed ... The really important [thing] is that women understand not to listen to a 2,000-year-old patriarchal society.[12]

Hutton, who is supposedly one of four women offered US$1 million by Larry Flynt to pose nude, also explained that she first sought permission from her 14 godchildren, who told her the photographs would be "inspirational".[12]

In 2008, Hutton accepted an offer from Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen to appear in the lookbook for their clothing line The Row, and explained in 2010: "I saw the clothes, and they were wonderful, real simple, minimalist designs... Ash had a place on the beach, so we did it at her place... And they would dance on the deck, and I would do what they were doing. And it was good."[13] During the same year, retailer Mango launched a fashion collection inspired by Hutton's personal style.[5]

Alongside celebrity models such as Iman and Paulina Porizkova, Hutton was one of the panel members in a roundtable discussion for the "Model as Muse: Embodying Fashion" gala, an annual event organized by the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute. Held in May 2009, the discussion occurred at New York's Minetta Tavern. Photographs of Hutton were also displayed as part of a historical fashion exhibition that acknowledged the significance of models.[5][14]

A third-party licensing brand of the Jim Henson Company, Henson Independent Properties (HIP), entered into an agreement with Hutton in November 2010 to act as the global licensing agent for her merchandising program. Targeted at women over 40 years of age, the brand launched products such as eyewear, handbags, and luggage, and home décor, globally in 2012. HIP's senior vice president at the time referred to Hutton as a "trailblazer" in the press release.[5][15]

Hutton was also a guest judge on the fashion designer reality television show Project Runway in 2010.[16]

In terms of fashion work, 2011 was also a fairly busy year for Hutton, as it commenced with her selection as the house model for the Alexis Bittar jewelry brand in February. Designer Alexis Bittar, a recipient of the CFDA Accessory Designer of the Year award, personally selected Hutton after choosing Joan Collins for the previous year. Hutton stated that Bittar's jewelry is "like art and still doesn't look like anything I have ever seen."[17] Hutton then appeared alongside people such as actress Shuya Chang and Annie Lennox's daughter Tali Lennox in the spring 2011 ad campaign for the Club Monaco retail brand. The lookbook was photographed by Ryan McGinley, the youngest photographer to be featured in the Whitney Museum of American Art at the time of the Club Monaco shoot.[18]

As of March 2014, Hutton is represented by the IMG Models agency and is one of their "Special Bookings" models. Julianne Moore and Liv Tyler are also represented by IMG under the same category.[19]

Acting career

As an actress, Hutton made her film debut in the Paper Lion (1968), and she won notices for her performances in James Toback's The Gambler (1974), opposite James Caan.[20] She also starred in John Carpenter's TV movie Someone's Watching Me! (1978) and played the wealthy adventurous adulteress in American Gigolo (1980). Important roles in major films were relatively few, however, and her acting career diminished during the 1980s, with most of her appearances being in minor European features or American films that fizzled at the box office, such as Lassiter (1984), Once Bitten (1985),[21] and Guilty as Charged (1992).

In 1984, she was offered a role for a TV series, Paper Dolls. MGM decided to produce a weekly series based on the TV movie for ABC, recasting several of the original roles from the 1982 production. However, the series was short-lived and was canceled after 13 episodes. In 1986, she starred opposite Stacy Keach in The Return Of Mike Hammer. In the spring of 1987, Hutton had a starring role opposite William Devane in a sci-fi themed ABC Movie of the Week titled Timestalkers, that did well with both the critics' reviews and the TV ratings.

In 1995, Hutton was cast in the CBS soap opera Central Park West, playing the wealthy socialite Linda Fairchild until the show was canceled the following year.[4][5]

The following year, Hutton's late-night talk show for Turner Original Production, Lauren Hutton and..., debuted and ran until 1997.[11] Hutton's partner at the time, Luca Babini, was the director, set designer and post-production supervisor of the talk show, and the couple founded Lula Productions as part of their arrangement with the Turner media company.[2]

Hutton appeared in her first feature film in two decades with the 2009 release of The Joneses, in which she starred alongside David Duchovny and Demi Moore. When asked about her decision to play the head of a marketing company, Hutton explained:

I thought it was an extraordinary script, and a great idea, this stealth marketing. My character had worked with Demi [Moore] when Demi was an 18-year-old, having her sitting on bar stools at expensive bars and ordering certain champagnes and certain cigarettes. And now she has little pods of these families all over the country, and she's got them in rented houses for a year at a whack to heist all the neighbors. And I thought that capitalism could be as vicious as anything they ever came up with in the U.S.S.R. And certainly to some degree, we do seem to be involved in that, don't we? All these people who do double jobs of acting were on red carpets wearing diamonds and $20,000 dresses, and that's a full-time job. I never did that.[13]

Personal life

Hutton met Luca Babini on a film set in 1991 and he said of the relationship's development in 1996: "I was coming out of a divorce, and she became like a sister to me. Then I fell in love with her. And I loved her feet, which say so much about a person." Babini also referred to Hutton as "accessible and down to earth," and described her as a person with "very clear opinions" that she was willing to express.[2]

In October 2000, Hutton joined a motorbike group, which included actors Dennis Hopper, Laurence Fishburne and Jeremy Irons, to celebrate "The Art of the Motorcycle" exhibit at the Hermitage-Guggenheim museum in Las Vegas, Nevada. Prior to the journey, Hutton informed the Las Vegas Review-Journal: "I love the feeling of being a naked egg atop that throbbing steel. You feel vulnerable — but so alive." En route, Hutton crashed near Hoover Dam, on the border between the US states of Arizona and Nevada, going over 100 miles (160 km) per hour, and suffered multiple leg fractures, a fractured arm, broken ribs and sternum, and a punctured lung.[5] Hopper later recalled from before the start of the ride: "She had on a little helmet, sort of tied under her chin. It was cute. And Jeremy [Irons] came up to her and said, 'You got to be kidding.' He took it off her and gave her a proper helmet."[22]

Hutton is the original vice-president of the Guggenheim Museum Motorcycle Club, and, in 2003, was a board member of the National Museum of Women in Arts in Washington, D.C., US.[11]

As of 2014, Hutton has never married, but was involved in a 27-year-long relationship with her manager Bob Williamson, who squandered some US$13 million of her money.[3] Hutton later explained that he had saved her life on five occasions and made sure that she "didn't get seduced by the work." She spoke of a void that Williamson filled:

I didn't have a father, and I wanted to be a child with a protector. I'd never seen a shrink, and there was a psychological situation that clearly needed to be addressed. But, you know, I wanted to see the world and how people lived and think about who are we, how are we, why is the world? And Bob did that for me.[7]

In July 2013, Hutton revealed that she was in the process of writing her memoir, which may be titled Smile, and also explained the value of traveling and exploration in her life thus far: "whenever I came back from Africa or the Antarctic, head swelling with the beauty of it all, I found I was loving life again. You look different because of everything that has gone on inside of you..."[7]

Quotes

Selected filmography

References

  1. Barron, James (September 24, 1995). "SIGNOFF; Maybe Late-Night Success Is About The Smile". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-14.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nancy Wolfson (March 1996). "The Loves of Lauren Hutton". Cigar Aficionado. Cigar Aficionado Online. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  3. 1 2 Simon, Alex. "Lauren Hutton: No Nip/Tuck Required". Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Lauren Hutton". New York Times. 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Lauren Hutton". Voguepedia: The World of Fashion in Vogue. Conde Naste. 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  6. Meacham, Andrew (April 19, 2009). "Pat Chamburs: Tampa DJ who once lived with Lauren Hutton". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved September 7, 2012.
  7. 1 2 3 Guy Trebay (June–July 2013). "Lauren Rides Again". Town & Country. Hearst Communications, Inc. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  8. Blasberg, Derek. "Lauren Hutton: The Wild One". Retrieved 7 September 2012.
  9. "The Story of David Jones". David Jones. David Jones. 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  10. Lee, Helen (April 11, 2007). "Vogue's 'World's Next Top Models' cover". SassyBella.com. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  11. 1 2 3 "Perfect Illusions: Eating Disorders and the Family". PBS. 2003. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  12. 1 2 "Lauren Hutton Poses Nude at 61". ABC News. October 21, 2005.
  13. 1 2 Irene Lacher (18 April 2010). "Lauren Hutton: 'I haven't slept in 10 years'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  14. Eric Wilson (4 May 2009). "A Museum Gala Where High Cheekbones and Higher Hemlines Rule". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  15. "HIP Launches Lauren Hutton Licensing Program". Global License!. ADVANSTAR COMMUNICATIONS INC. 17 November 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  16. "Hessian sack couture". Sydney Morning Herald. 8 October 2010. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  17. "Lauren Hutton for Alexis Bittar". Grazia Daily. Bauer Consumer Media. 2 February 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  18. "Spring 2011 Ads: Ryan McGinley Snaps Club Monaco". Daily Front Row. Daily Front Row. 25 January 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  19. "Special Bookings: Lauren Hutton". IMG. IMG. March 2014. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  20. 2013
  21. B-Sides: Hands Off Jim Carrey, He Belongs to Me
  22. 1 2 3 4 5 Mary-Jayne McKay (10 May 2002). "Lauren Hutton Shows Beauty Is Ageless". CBS News. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  23. The Wall Group (13 November 2013). "Wall of Inspiration | Lauren Hutton". The Wall Group. The Wall Group. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  24. 1 2 Katherine B. Weissman; Lambeth Hochwald. "Lauren Hutton's Personal Style Tips". Oprah. Harpo Productions, Inc. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  25. "Lauren Hutton: ageless style". Classiq. Classiq. 15 November 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.