S T Y L E & D E S I G N
Back In Bloom
Floral prints are a perennial spring favorite, and this season they're back, along with mega-model Gisele Bundchen, who returns to fashion after an eight-month hiatus. Joel Stein catches up with the Brazilian bombshell
By Joel Stein
Monday, February 9, 2004
She wasn't all that hot. I mean, sure, she looked like a model,
but when she showed up for the cover shoot, she was weirdly
skinny in her baggy pants and a little tomboyish, so I didn't
have that depressing sense of knowing here was something
otherworldly I'd never have. Gisele Bundchen, God bless her, even
had the remnants of a zit she had popped that morning. "I love
squeezing them. I have these big mirrors in my house so even if I
don't have one, I look for one to squeeze," she says, her eyes
widening. She also likes popping other people's pimples,
sometimes going for them without permission. "Not a lot of people
let me pop them anymore. And all my friends have pretty good
skin. I should be a facialist."
Even with her makeup applied, Bundchen was still in the realm of
our planet, the kind of woman who turns every head on a SoHo
corner. Then, hair in curlers and wearing a robe, she posed for a
few Polaroids to check the lighting. The faces she made--mouth
open, eyes squinting, lips pouting, chin thrust forward--are
lasered into my memory. They broke my heart, just as I had
feared.
Modeling, Bundchen explained, is acting, which she is doing for
the first time in this fall's movie Taxi, in which she plays a
bank robber. "Everyone can look beautiful in a picture with the
right photographer and lighting. I like a challenge," she says.
"I like when someone puts makeup on me that makes me look like
I've been destroyed. It's not as far from who I am." Though
Bundchen, 23, luckily never quite uses the phrase "to find
myself," the woman who is probably one of the highest-paid models
ever is reappearing this spring after taking eight months off in
Brazil. "I wanted to work on myself," she says. "I found out that
I need to be happy with myself in order to be happy with anybody
else. I wasn't happy with myself. I'm very impatient. I wanted to
find a balance where I could work and have fun." Since returning
to her home in Los Angeles (she also has residences in New York
City and Sao Paulo), she has spent a lot of time on her very
rigorous version of chilling out: riding horses, surfing and
learning circus trapeze. "You can do a split in the air," she
says. "You can have a guy on another trapeze catch you." I am
officially depressed.
Bundchen feigns ignorance of being one of the few runway models
whom straight men can name. "I think guys like me because they
like girls in lingerie," she says about her Victoria's Secret
work. "They like any girl in lingerie." Bundchen is surprisingly
wise.
When she's not working, Bundchen rarely wears makeup and almost
never lipstick. "Lipstick makes you look older. When a woman
wears lipstick, she can't wear any other makeup," she says. After
her eight months off, she has conflicted emotions about her
profession. "I cannot criticize my business because it's the
business I'm in. But I don't want to live in it; I just want to
work in it. In fashion, they make you feel like you're beautiful
and great, and it can get to your head. You can think you're
better than other people." So she walks around L.A. in baggy
clothes and no makeup and is almost never recognized. And when
people do spot her, they're often unsure it's really her. "I hope
they don't get disappointed with me in person," she says. And I
know that they do, and I also know that it's not such a bad
thing.
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