Showing posts with label Nan Goldin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nan Goldin. Show all posts

Yulia Kharlapanova and Jimmy Paul

Yulia Kharlapnova and Jimmy Paul backstage at the Banana Republic show, October 15, 2009:





On Friday, October 16, Joshua Jordan generously gave me his collection of Index Magazines & Another Magazines.

Joshua Jordan recently launched a comprehensive new website, StudioJordan.com

Index Magazine was a wonderful print magazine. It featured interviews with people who had experienced life, made something great happen and had something relevant to say.

In 1997, Bruce Hainley interviewed Jimmy Paul for Index Magazine:

Jimmy Paul, 1997

WITH BRUCE HAINLEY

I first met Jimmy Paul when he still worked at the Oribe salon in the back of the Parachute boutique on Columbus Avenue. Few hairdressers are in greater demand, especially for editorial work. So while he can only be found one day a week in the Garren salon at Henri Bendel, his work can be seen everywhere - Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, W, Arena, L'Uomo Vogue, Interview, i.e. in any fashion magazine that matters. He has had his fingers in the hair of every model worthy of the name, both men and women. The true sign of his talent might be that he is the hairdresser of choice for many models when they get their hair done for themselves. The last time I was at Garren the exquisite up-and-coming beauty, Jaimie Rishar was waiting to have her hair touched up for her birthday; a Prada frock had already been specially delivered for the occasion. Jimmy himself appears on the cover of Nan Goldin's book on drag, The Other Side, and in work by Jack Pierson. When Goldin did her beautiful shoot for Visionaire of Helmut Lang apparel, when Jack Pierson followed Naomi Campbell around for Harper's Bazaar, it was Jimmy who did hair. In his work he combines strict tonsorial skill with a keen artistic eye. He isn't afraid to take inspiration from wherever he needs it, but his greatest gifts may be humor and genuinely disarming sweetness. The true history of hairdressing has yet to be written, when it is the most winsome chapter will be devoted to Jimmy Paul.

BRUCE: What do you look for in a good haircut?

JIMMY: I like when it looks really easy. The person is comfortable. You almost think, "That person looks great!" and the fact that the hair looks good is an afterthought. I like when there's a funny charm to it: a trend or a response to a trend that comes out of specific neighborhood - a tail or some weird shelf. Haircuts that look like they've grown out are the best, and when I do a haircut I like to make it so it looks as if the person doesn't have to think about it. It suits the face and it's not really a haircut at all. I don't do that many haircuts - I mean I don't cut something in them that announces: HAIRCUT. I just try to follow the person's head.

BRUCE: I love the word hairdresser. I wonder if you could say a little about that word, how it resonates for you.

JIMMY: Beautician is a word that sounds very small town, very utilitarian. Fine. Hair Stylist always sounds like a small town person trying to be fancy. Hair Stylist, a hairdresser at the mall. Nothing wrong with that either. Hairdresser sounds humble - I don't even know why - but at the same time it shows I have respect for myself. Hairdresser has an old world connotation to it. I don't spend a lot of time dressing hair, which means flossing it, since the average person doesn't want their hair dressed. Hairdresser works for me. If anybody ever refers to me as a hair stylist, it's like, my name's Jimmy and if anybody calls me James it irks me.

BRUCE: How and when did you decide that this is what you wanted to do?

JIMMY: I have to go really early. My mother's a hairdresser. She was my first influence. My mother was also, in my opinion, a beauty and wore cosmetics. She's always created an illusion, always had amazing hairdos, always worn makeup, and always dressed up. I love my mother and I grew up thinking what she would do was magic. She had power - her beauty, creating her looks. The fantasy she would create was always an escape for me. I remember wanting to be a hairdresser - and I don't blame my mother for what I'm going to say next, because it's really just a product of society - but I wasn't encouraged to be a hairdresser. I grew up in Pittsburgh, and if you were a hairdresser in Pittsburgh, you didn't make a lot of money, you were often ostracized for being homosexual, and because most male hairdressers were homosexual and my mother always had high hopes for me, she thought I should be a doctor or a lawyer or something like that - which I never considered being.

BRUCE: So did things start to click in your teens?

JIMMY: I started to go into a pure fantasy world as a teenager. I knew I wanted to be in the fashion business or in show business, but I didn't know what exactly I wanted to do. I spent many years wanting to be a female model - complete fantasia but that's where my head was. I was going to move to New York to do whatever I had to do to be a female model but be a man. When I was growing up Way Bandy was famous for being a makeup artist. It was very exciting for me to see him on TV and in magazines. I could tell that he was an effeminate homosexual and I also saw someone famous for creating illusion, for putting his ideas of what's beautiful on women. It was exciting. I started to look at fashion magazines to the point of obsession. And there were hairdressers! I remember a picture in Vogue of John Sahag and a model together, by Dennis Piel I think. He had done her hair: and they both had similar haircuts! There was a hairdresser in Pittsburgh named Leslie Bryner. He died of AIDS and was a very flamboyant homosexual. This was when GQ was very exciting, very on edge - late '70s, Bruce Weber, Barry McKinley. I remember being really really blown away by an ad in GQ for Charivari with a guy who had an amazing new wave haircut. I went to the airport with my mother and saw this hairdresser, Leslie Bryner, in a full-length fox coat and mustard yellow leather pants and a Charivari bag. I thought: hairdresser equals fantasy.

BRUCE: Were you doing drag at this point or was that only when you came to New York?
JIMMY: No, no, no. This was pre-drag. I didn't start to do drag until I was about 20. Louis Angelo, who is my oldest friend and who works at Garren too, and I started to hang around together. Our fantasies were to be male models. We were really influenced by the Avedon photographs for Gianni Versace where there were groups of male models standing like this. [Jimmy does a severe pose.] The male models had scarves wrapped around their necks into a kind of cowl - very sexy. Louis and I would go around with our scarves like that and we would do this walk we made up: the Shoom. It had a lot of shoulder.

BRUCE: Andy Warhol was from Pittsburgh. Interview was a hot magazine then, I remember devouring every issue. Was Warhol an influence, someone people talked about in your scene?

JIMMY: Around age 15 I started to go out a lot: clubpeople and nightclubbing ended up being a huge influence, my high school even. Warhol and Interview weren't what the nightclubs in Pittsburgh were about. Drugs and sex and dressing up were. I found out about Warhol's being from Pittsburgh in a book one day at the library. There was a department store where, I read, Warhol did windows and displays. I thought, Well, you know, Andy Warhol did that and look at him now. He definitely gave me a lot of hope, but I never ever thought I would ever get anywhere near models, let alone be able to do their hair. Anyway, around age 16, my uncle brought me to New York on a church-sponsored trip to St. Patrick's Cathedral, where by the grace of God we stayed on 43rd Street. All the prostitutes were still on 42nd Street. It was like a Donna Summer video - unbelievable, the most divine thing. On that trip I got my first issue of Interview.

BRUCE: Do you remember who was on the cover?

JIMMY: Yes, that actress, Rachel Ward. How exciting to see Interview put models - Rachel Ward was just a model at the time who was gorgeous gorgeous and did commercials and was doing some screen tests - without any reason on the cover. I pored over that issue of Interview: I took that thing home and I knew it cover to cover. It was my only issue for about a year and I looked at it probably every day. The Saks catalogue, Redbook, the things that filled my fantasy world were not really weird things when I look back at it. André Leon Talley once said something about how it meant so much to him, the fantasy of magazines and being able to get lost in them ... I was, you know, battered by the neighborhood and all that, but I was always able to go into complete fanstasyland via magazines. I was thinking about all of this the other day. I love any movie that has real models in it - in Klute there's a go-see that Jane Fonda goes on, and there's a big line up of real models. In Annie Hall there's a scene where there's a famous model, she's an extra. Her name is Shaun Casey. She was in an Estée Lauder ad, shot in Arizona. For some reason as a teenager I fancied I looked a little bit like her and that I should move to Arizona. My aunt lived in Arizona, and I made efforts to move there to stay with her. Luckily she found out I was gay and wouldn't let me come. At the time I was very disappointed I didn't get to go and look like Shaun Casey in Arizona in Estée Lauder ads. Instead I moved to San Francisco and met transvestites. I started to play around with makeup, I started to wear makeup as a boy. I was in a fashion show as a boy. I started to dabble. Fun, but I got so broke and hungry that I had to move back home for the summer. I met a guy and I moved to New York on my 19th birthday. My first month in New York I was go-go dancing on the bar at the Pyramid, where there was a young drag scene starting.

BRUCE: Drag queens pride themselves on their specific look. Could you describe your early drag look and the queens at the Pyramid who inspired you?

JIMMY: I was try to look like a real girl. I was even wearing my own hair, kind of spiked up, red lipstick and vintage dresses, stuff like that. Trashier and trashier. I started to wear wigs and everything else. A-flip-in-high-heels kind of look but punk. I met Tabboo!, who has been a huge influence on my life - we became roommates and friends. At the same time, I met Ethyl Eichelberger. Ethyl was the person who told me to got to beauty school. She simply said, The drag performing is one thing, but you have to have something to fall back on. She was a hairdresser and went to ...

BRUCE: Ultissima Beauty Institute

JIMMY: Yes. Hair was an income for him. Ethyl and Augusto Machado and Madame Ekathrina Sobechanskaya (a man named Larry Rée), those three people were really moms to all the young queens. They were a big part of why I didn't get into wanting to have a sex change or get into prostitution. They were doing something radical. They were performers. I was directionless, I didn't know what I wanted to be. I could have been a junkie, had a sex change, who knows what. They helped guide me to skills for how to take care of myself. Another major influence, let me not forget, was Danillo. He was a hairdresser, a beautiful man who was also into wearing makeup and dressing fabulously and going out, but he always had money - I mean always had money to take care of himself. He was somebody doing exactly what I wanted to do but he was taking care of himself and I wasn't able to. One day it hit me: go to beauty school.

BRUCE: Where did you go?

JIMMY: I went to Robert Fiance on a grant and a loan. School was great: you could skip, you could be late, people were lovely and encouraged me. Debi Mazar was in my class. There were a few people in my class who stood out - every freak like me who went to beauty school - and they're doing great. Everybody else was from the boroughs, very normal. You would think New York beauty school would be a free-for-all, but believe me big time, it's not. I started to work at a haircoloring parlor which was very trendy at the time. I got fired. Some of the places I worked in closed. It took me a while to be able to figure out to look notice credits in magazines - names of photographers, stylists, hairdressers, etc. I saw a big Steven Meisel ad for Oribe. An incredible photo. I decided to start all over again. I was maybe 23, thought I was ancient and that everybody in town would want to be an assistant at Oribe, that everybody had heard of Steven Meisel, etc. You know what? They didn't, they hadn't. Nobody. They needed an assistant, it was an emergency, and they were so happy I wanted to work there.

BRUCE: For years I thought your name was hyphenated and a single name like Cher or the big '80s male model Attila. How did you get your name?

JIMMY: I started to work for Danilo. Very tumultuous. There was a guy named Omar who was Oribe's agent and who completely took me under his wing. My drag name was Paulette, and Tanya Ransom, the head drag queen at the Pyramid, who hired the go-go dancers, came up with it. One night I was in this outfit the queens made out of tulle for me, and Tanya said I looked like a French perfume model and should have a French name. It can't be Jimmy, we'll call her Paulette. Lady Bunny, who's a dear friend, started to call me Jimmy Paulette. Then Danilo called me Jimmy Paulette. Omar started to get me photo shoots, little photo shoots for Interview, front of the book kinds of things - baby stuff. Omar had to have a name for me. My last name is Miskovich - too long. Omar said, How about Jimmy Paulette? No, that doesn't work. How about Jimmy Paul?

BRUCE: How did you come to be photographed in drag by Nan Goldin?

JIMMY: Jack Pierson and I were roommates, so I was hanging around with this Boston crowd. People would talk to me about Nan Goldin. Everybody loved her and worshipped her work. She was a notorious junkie, and she was always a Big Thing. I was working as an assistant at Oribe. I had a really big ego as a drag queen, but I did not exist the same way as a hairdresser. Drag put me on an emotional roller-coaster: I would go into full fantasy and wouldn't be prepared for the big letdown whenever I didn't get the same attention out of drag. So I made a decision: I cut with drag to concentrate on hairdressing. Around the same time, I met a guy. We were boyfriends for three years. He hated that I did drag. I would not even consider doing drag while I was with him, but the salon was going well, my freelance career was starting to click. And I met Nan.
BRUCE: So you weren't doing drag when you met her - how did that photo happen?

JIMMY: I broke up with the guy who hated drag. Lady Bunny called me and asked, Do you want to be on this float we're doing for Gay Pride Day? On the spur of the moment, I said yes. I went out and bought all new stuff, new high heels. I had some wigs, but I bought an outfit. I invited Nan to come over. I lived near where the float was going to meet, so Tabboo! and Miss Demeanor, friends of mine, also came over to get ready at my little apartment. Nan brought her camera. I had never been photographed by Nan before, so I didn't really realize what might go on. I thought she was taking snapshots. Tabboo! and I were putting our makeup on in the same mirror. There's a famous photograph by Diane Arbus of these two transvestites backstage, their shirts off, their wigs off. All of sudden Tabboo! and I had our shirts off and our wigs off, our makeup on. Nan said, This is the best picture I've ever taken in my life. We were like, Wow, great, not thinking anything of it. When you're in drag, it's fantasia. To the point where you don't really even think, Oh, I've got my wig on and I ain't got my shirt - I'm gorgeous! Nan was just taking pictures, we were just camping. Little did I know that one day the pictures would be great.

BRUCE: She chose that photo for the cover of The Other Side.

JIMMY: Oh my god, yes! But as with hairdressing, some people know models have hairdressers doing their hair, some people think that's the way they look all the time. Some people have never heard of this book, some amazing people have. I'm proud to be a part of it and that the efforts that I put into drag as a young man have been so rewarded. But the thing that I'm most proud of - this might sound strange - my favorite thing about the pictures in the book is that there's an idea that we're friends. I love the fact that Tabboo! and I are together but we're not having sex: we're doing this fun thing, it doesn't really have anything to do with sex per se or anything like that. In the book you can tell that we're actually having fun and that we're not tragic. Sometimes people think that's what I do every day, that maybe I am a prostitute. I do look like a prostitute in the book. Thank God there are transvestite prostitutes, I get tremendous inspiration from them! The fact is: I hadn't done drag in years when the pictures were taken, it was my first time back at it, and I probably did drag maybe only two other times after that.

BRUCE: Let's shift gears a bit. You are in great demand for photo shoots. How did you start to really understand how hair works, especially when photographed?

JIMMY: Steven Klein was the first photographer I ever worked with who was a perfectionist: he cared about the hair. In any fashion photograph, even though you might do something with clothes, the hair is a really big part. It fills up a lot of the picture. It determines the way a girl looks. Not to say that a girl in a hat can't be fantastic, that a girl with slicked back hair can't be can't be fantastic. A lot of times I work with hats and slicked back hair. But if the hair is showing at all, it might be secondary, it might not be that big of a deal, but bad hair can ruin a photograph. I should also mention fashion stylists Victoria Bartlett and Joe McKenna, from whom I learned a great deal. The fashion stylist is probably the most unsung person on a fashion shoot. Grunge was a big help for me. I got grunge. A lot of hairdressers didn't. Danilo said I was one of the first queens to do rock drag. Rock fashion has been a huge influence on my esthetic. My career began to kickstart because I got grunge: using grease in hair.

BRUCE: Could you give me a few words to describe a grunge haircut?

JIMMY: A grunge haircut is something dirty: you might put grease and powder and stuff in the hair to make it look like that. Kurt Cobain had perfect hair - it was colored, it was damaged, it was broken on the ends. I would raise the hair to make it look like Kurt Cobain's, put oil in it, color it. If anyone has hair like Kurt Cobain - don't change it! It's the ultimate. Because of grunge I met Steven Meisel. He gave me a big chance. I got to do Vogue with him. I worshipped everything he did for years, and it was great to work with him and, on that shoot, the legendary model of the '50s, Donna Mitchell.

BRUCE: What is it like to have your hands in Donna Mitchell's hair?

JIMMY: A complete fantasy. I adore the history of models and makeup and hair. I can spot a model by her hair and makeup alone. I think I have a great ability to get excited by a talent like Donna Mitchell's: the power of looks. I mean I just sort of did something that maybe anybody could do - any hairdresser could do - but I was also able to help her, to give her emotional support. I believe that's what a hairdresser does, besides doing technical work. You're able to give people support. They see you putting effort into what they look like and that helps them gather up their strength and put their beauty across - to feel powerful. They get excited by the way they look and they're able to use that. I'm excited that Jackie Onassis went to Kenneth, that Billy Baldwin decorated Kenneth's salon, and that they both knew Truman Capote. That is why I want to do this: to be in this long line of queens - in public! Everybody I named was a small town queen just like me. I'm the furthest thing from an aristocrat, but I could do an aristocrat lady's hair, or I could do the hair of a hooker who goes out with an aristocrat. It's a laugh, we could be going out to a fancy restaurant and the most beautiful women in the world could come up and give me a kiss and say, Jimmy!, know my name like the back of their hand because I've helped them get their look across. It's just a complete giggle. I think I'm able to give that to people, maybe not every time but ... Usually a barber won't give you the boost that a queen with some humor can.

BRUCE: You said to me that for the longest time you felt doing men's hair would be a bore. Then you did the Italian's men's fashion week and it was a blast. Could you talk about the difference - the shift or the similarity - between working with sexy guys and beautiful women?

JIMMY: Well I went to Milan with Steven Klein to do L'Uomo Vogue and Arena. The flamboyance of what was going on was incredible. Dandy freestyle! Blown dry hair! The hair and clothes were super and so funny. It's a very tricky time for women's fashion. It's a bit transitional, things are very serious - and the hair is very serious. Editors are very strict about what you're doing. Whereas with men, right now, on some of the shoots, they've allowed me to have a sense of humor. Big '70s hair: it's hysterical. You're allowed to get a giggle out of looking at it. Working with women's hair is what I mostly do, but to do guys - although I'm not really attracted to straight guys, you know I can't deny that I think the guys are sexy because they are, they're beautiful, and they're always playful - but my favorite things are like a shoot I did for Italian Vogue. A bikini store. The models had suntan oil all over them, bikinis, big bouffant hairdos, and full faces of makeup. Something like that gives people some respite from their daily drudgery. That's what I think the job is in fashion, its service to the world, what gives it integrity: it's a break from the doldrums.

BRUCE: Sexy too.

JIMMY: It is sexy: seeing people doing their own things.

BRUCE: What do you think of Shampoo?

JIMMY: Shampoo! Julie Christy! A straight hairdresser always makes me giggle. There are actually a lot of them. A lot of European hairdressers are straight - it's a European tradition, hairdressing.

BRUCE: Hair words are so great. Could you just give me a few words for certain hairdos, to describe certain haircuts?

JIMMY: OK. There's the bob. Very, very boring. But if you say, the '60s Sassoon bob ... You could say the gamine look, but better to say the Jean Seberg gamine look or the Mia Farrow gamine look. Shag is an over-used word that was sort of a big trend a year ago. But if you say the Klute shag, the Jane Fonda Klute shag, or if you say Warren Beatty's hair in Shampoo - his shag! - you really conjure something up. The Cher look: her bangs in the '60s with the side chunks - I mean there's nothing more divine. I definitely always have a reference, but words like "bob," "shag" alone don't give much to me. I would say instead Shelley Duvall - incredible movie hair woman. Nashville and Annie Hall. Shelley Duvall means meticulous braids and stuff I can't even believe! In Shampoo Julie Christy means frosting. I think Jon Peters did a lot of the hair for Shampoo. I'm not 100% sure, but what he did for Barbra Streisand - the Superstar perm look is beyond! I mean a lot of people might think that's an abomination, but not me. I think it's heaven. When I first started to be on the gay scene, the cruising scene or whatever, I would always think, Well maybe I shouldn't tell people I'm a hairdresser, maybe I should tell them I'm a plumber. But now I'd never deny what I do: I get to make my dreams come true on a daily basis.

I believe the children are our future.

I believe the children are our are future.
Teach them well and let them lead the way.
Show them all the beauty they possess inside.
Give them a sense of pride to make it easier.
Let the children's laughter remind us how we used to be.
Everybodys searching for a hero.

Teri Toye, ph: Steven Meisel for Lei


Wayne Sterling of The Imagist opened my eyes to an amazing interview in the new V Magazine:

In 1984, Teri Toye, a striking transgendered fashion student and fixture of the New York nightlife scene, became an instant modeling sensation when she opened her friend Stephen Sprouse’s runway show. Soon she was walking for Gaultier, Comme des Garçons, and Chanel, and posing on the pages of German Vogue; Steven Meisel, Nan Goldin, and David Armstrong all considered her a muse. But as quickly as she became a star, she disappeared from the fashion world, returning home to Des Moines, Iowa, where she still lives and works in historic preservation and real estate. Here, the equally illustrious fashion designer and stylist André Walker (along with friends Carlos Taylor and Pierre Francillon) talk to their old pal about the glory days.

ANDRÉ WALKER Hi, Teri Toye. How are you?

TERI TOYE Well, I’m good. How are you?

AW I was thinking, My God, I have to confess. I really feel like there are so many other people who could have done this interview.

TT I was shocked that they wanted to have me as a Hero in the magazine. They sent me some issues and everyone is so famous. But obviously, I’m honored to be considered someone’s hero, so of course I had to do it.

AW That’s the whole excitement behind this, Teri. When you look back on the things that you did, and your story, it serves as a template. Nobody knew exactly how the transgendered operation would work itself out in society. Now we have it, we know that it’s a look. People are human. You did a lot of things in your time. Basically, how did you feel about yourself before you actually started modeling? What was your goal when you left the house and walked down the street?

TT I just wanted to enjoy my life. I moved to New York to study at Parsons and hopefully to work in the fashion business. Of course, then I transitioned. I did work in the fashion business as a model, which was an amazing kind of gift and just an incredible validation. It means more to me now than it did then. I was just happy to travel and meet and work with people whose work I enjoyed. I worked with all the designers I loved. I was more interested in personal relationships than business.

AW I can totally understand that, because at the time, things weren’t as strategic as they are now. Basically, you would go out to a nightclub and end up making a connection and getting a job, which would lead to another. How did you feel about the nightclub scene?

TT I immediately found the nightclubs and Studio 54 much more fun than class at Parsons.

AW You went to Studio 54? I am destroyed! That’s an era I missed out on. I had to live Studio 54 through WWD. Luckily my mom had a subscription. What was Studio 54 like? Were you doing drugs? What was up?

TT I was dancing.

AW You were dancing! Were you floating? Did you have a model agency?

TT I had Click in New York and City in Paris.

AW How chic! How did you see yourself? Was it just a fun thing for you to do, or did you think to yourself, Oh my God, I’m going to take this and really milk it?

TT I never thought that. It was never a goal of mine to become a model. I was asked to do it, and of course I did, and I was enjoying it, and that’s it. But at the time, I liked everything else about modeling—the traveling, the parties, the social life, my friends—but the modeling I wasn’t that interested in. It was very intimidating to do those shows, and I was never crazy about the pictures. If I knew then how good I looked, I would have been a bigger bitch.

AW What were some of the high and low points of this modeling career-slash-muse-slash-icon deal?

TT Well, I can’t think of any low points, but there were plenty of high points. Obviously, the Stephen Sprouse show at the Ritz, which was my first fashion show, was exciting.

AW So cool, I was there too! I think I was sitting in Polly Mellen’s lap. She cradled me… Was the first outfit that Day-Glo green? Was it green? Yellow-green? Lime-green? I can’t remember.

TT I think it was a black fur coat and hat. Fake fur.

AW That kind of Dr. Seuss hat! So cool…

TT Another high point: I walked with Jean-Michel [Basquiat] in Comme des Garçons when they did a show in New York. He’s been dead twenty years this year. I walked with Veruschka in a Thierry Mugler show in Paris. That was a high. I did a lot of shows for Thierry Mugler.

AW We’ll get on our little search engines now. That’s hot.

TT Obviously, doing the Chanel show was a high.

AW Yes, I remember the Chanel show. It was all glamour. You have to do something for my new magazine.

TT You have a new magazine?

AW Yeah, totally—it’s sick. When and why did you leave New York City?

TT I left in 1987, because the city was changing and my personal relationships were changing. A lot of people were dying, and I just wasn’t happy anymore.

AW What relationships are you referring to?

TT With dear friends like Way Bandy dying…the list goes on and on.

AW In 1986, after no one paid attention to my collection, I fled to Barcelona and hid out in London for two years, and came back in 1988. I guess a lot of people were leaving New York at the time.

TT It was heartbreaking, you know, and people would call me and would give me anxiety. I felt like I was missing everything. And then for a while, people called periodically to tell me about someone who’d just died. Eventually then I just lost touch with most of the people I know who still live there. I still have a couple of close friends I keep in touch with.

AW What about Jean-Paul Gaultier? What was your relationship like with him? I mean as far as I can see, Jean-Paul was responding to something that was already taking place when he chose you to model in his show. You’d already done Stephen Sprouse and had been on the scene in New York, so it was only normal for Jean-Paul to ask you to participate.

TT Well, I love Jean-Paul. I first did his show when he came to New York and did a show there, and then I would always do his shows in Paris. We would also get together socially when I was in town. I think he was just being supportive, and he liked what was happening everywhere in fashion.

AW What about Stephen Sprouse? In my mind, Teri Toye and Stephen Sprouse are like synonymous. What was your relationship with him?

TT We were friends and had been for years before he launched his first collection. You probably associate the Teri Toye look with him because everyone wore Teri Toye wigs in the show.

AW Exactly! What about Steven Meisel?

TT We also had a personal relationship. We had been friends for years before Steven became a photographer, when he was a fashion illustrator. Actually, one of the first times I ever modeled was for Steven in a fashion illustration class he taught at Parsons.

AW Stop, that is so sweet. So you were like a life-drawing model?

TT Only a couple of times. Once for Steven’s class, and then for Antonio [Lopez]. AW At the time, were you androgynous or were you a boy?

TT No, I was Teri Toye.

AW Oh, you were Teri Toye? Work it out. This is the first chance I’ve had to talk to you since we knew each other back in the day. We both had our own worlds around us.

TT I think the last time I saw you, you skated off.

AW Into the sunset!

TT It was on Canal Street, in Manhattan. It must have been the ’80s. You used to rollerskate on the street.

AW I was always on skates. It was shocking.

TT You looked amazing on them too.

AW Did Nan Goldin ever take portraits of you?

TT Nan Goldin always had a camera in her hand and was always trying to take everyone’s picture. If ever you would get in a compromising situation, she’d be right there. We were friends, and I used to hang out with Nan in her loft while she put together her slideshows. We would sit together all night and watch her slides.

AW That’s amazing.

TT It would’ve been more amazing if we’d had glow-in-the-dark extension cords.

AW What about David Armstrong?

TT I love David Armstrong.

AW What about Richard Hell and the Voidoids? Did you know Richard?

TT Yeah, I knew Richard, but not well. I mean, everybody knew everybody. It was like a small town.

AW What about Max’s Kansas City? Did you ever hang out?

TT No, that’s just a little before my time, I’m happy to say.

AW Really, how can you not have gone to Max’s Kansas City when you went to Studio 54?

TT I guess I’m just not as old as you think. How old do you think I am?

AW I really have no idea. I’m 42. Hold on, Pierre wants to ask questions now.

PIERRE FRANCILLON Hello, Teri Toye. How are you doing?

TT I’m good. How are you, Pierre?

PF I was really honored when André suggested I ask you a few questions.

TT I haven’t seen you in a hundred years.

PF Yeah, but a hundred years is a minute, baby.

TT Whenever I see people I haven’t seen for twenty, twenty-five years, I always think that if I’ve aged as much as they have I’m going to kill myself.

PF Oh, really? I haven’t aged at all. I don’t know if you have this recollection, but one day you were wearing a Gaultier green pantsuit, walking down Houston Street, coming from the East Side, going to Soho, and you were listening to Dionne Warwick. It was such a great look. Are you still connected to fashion? Do you still find inspiration in fashion?

TT Well of course. Doesn’t everyone?

PF Which designers are you feeling? If you were to walk in somebody’s show, who would you walk for?

TT I like all the same ones, and then there are a lot of new ones.

PF Who are the new ones?

TT I love Alexander McQueen.

PF We have all hailed to the queen.

AW What was your experience like with Karl Lagerfeld?

TT That was amazing, and Karl was lovely. After the show, he told me I was the toast of Paris. It wouldn’t have meant so much if anyone else had said it.

AW Are you still in contact with him?

TT No, I’m not. I’m not in contact with anyone.

AW That’s chic. That’s a full answer to my question. So what are you doing now? What’s life like in Iowa?

TT Well, I have a house and dogs and a family.

AW Family? Husband? New husband?

TT No, I’m happily divorced. I have a mother, a sister, and her four children.

AW Is Tammy out there? I don’t know who Tammy is, but Carlos is asking about her.

TT Tammy’s my sister, and yes, she lives next door to me. Family is family.

AW You are outrageous. Is Tammy a girl too?

TT Yes.

AW Will you guys shut up and let me ask my few questions? We just wanted to make it fun for you. Carlos was asking what kind of looks you’re wearing this fall. Do you watch that show America’s Next Top Model?

TT I watch it once in a while.

AW Do you know this transgendered model called Isis on the show? Have you seen her? What do you think about that on national television?

TT Go, Tyra. I think that Isis must be very brave to put herself through that.

AW Work it out. I always wanted to ask you, Teri. You are basically transgender royalty, fashion royalty. When you stopped, who took over? Who do you feel carried the torch?

TT Well, I kept the torch.

Nan Goldin - Mariacarla & Veruschka





Nan Goldin photographed Mariacarla & Veruschka in Paris on January 24-26, 2008 (stylist: Beat Bolliger) for the New York Times Magazine.

Nan Goldin is an American fine-art and documentary photographer. She is known for her book & performance art piece "The Ballad of Sexual Dependancy" (1986). Her new paperback "The Devil's Playground" is available at Amazon.com

Veruschka is the most iconic of all the models represented by Women Management. She has worked with every major photographer: Richard Avedon, Irving Penn, Helmut Newton & Steven Meisel. Today Vera is commited to creating her art.