Six years ago, Crystal Renn was battling an eating disorder. If she hadn’t put on 32 kilos, she wouldn’t have become the successful model she is today. In fact, she might not be alive. By Louise France
I am sitting with one of the world’s most successful models in an Italian restaurant in New York, and the model is eating. First she demolishes the contents of the bread basket, then she sets upon a prosciutto, polenta and smoked mozzarella starter that, by my estimate, must surely be 764 calories of creamy, fat-laden comfort food, followed by a main dish of red snapper. I’m all for skipping pudding but she’s a fan of the crème brûlée. She orders two, one for me, one for her. She gives the brittle topping a brisk whack with her spoon. “Isn’t that just the best bit?” she says.
Six years ago, Crystal Renn was an unknown “normal”-size model. She weighed 45 kilograms and easily fitted into the size 0 designer samples routinely sent out for photo shoots. Despite being both skinny and beautiful – eyes like a homeless labrador, hip bones like handlebars – modelling jobs were few and far between. Home was a shared flat owned by her former agency (which she refuses to name, presumably for legal reasons). Lunch was undressed lettuce and a stick of sugar-free gum. As an alternative to swallowing actual food, she’d tune into food programs on television. She’d watch the presenter bake a tray of brownies and her brain would send an automatic message to her parotid gland: her mouth would flood with saliva.
If Renn had remained as thin as many of her fellow models, we would never have met. She might, by her own admission, not even be alive. Now she’s the best-known and best-paid “plus-size” model in the business, sought after by photographers like Steven Meisel and Patrick Demarchelier.
Renn won’t tell me how much she earns – “It would be kind of sick” – but I imagine that it must be in seven figures. She’s modelled in the catwalk shows of designers like Jean Paul Gaultier (admittedly, the majority of designers would most likely balk at using her) and fronts an advertising campaign for plus-size UK clothing brand Evans (which delivers to Australia, visit evans.co.uk). She weighs, she says, around 76 kilos. She’s a size 14 (on occasion she’s gone up to a size 18). In the real world she’d be pretty average. In the screwy weight-obsessed modelling industry, she really is the elephant in the room.
With the help of a ghostwriter, she’s written a vivid, very readable, rather wise memoir called Hungry. She’s only 23, which is precociously young to be considering one’s autobiography. However, she has already lived enough for several lives.
I can’t imagine the book will sit particularly well with the mainstream modelling industry. She is devastating about what the business is like for the young women who dream of being the next Kate Moss: the pressure to stay thin, the unspoken camaraderie among anorexics, the shared flats that sound more like coops for battery hens.But for anyone who is at all thoughtful about women and weight and the so-called obesity crisis, it is a revealing portrayal. Wannabe 13-year-old models should read it, as should their mothers. Renn would make an excellent patron for any charity that deals with young women and body image.
Crystal Renn and I meet again the following day. Apart from her fingernails, which are bitten down to the quick, a habit that dates back to the days of her eating disorder, she exudes ruddy good health. She sits cross-legged in an armchair, keen to talk. I don’t think I’ve ever interviewed someone this intense. I decide that she’s not the kind of person who does anything half heartedly, whether it’s starving herself, being interviewed or falling in love – two years ago she married Greg, a school teacher, and the first man she’d ever had sex with.
We flick through some modelling pictures of when she was thin. When she talks about her old life she seems to slip back into it, as if hypnotised. “I see someone who has nothing inside, who is unfeeling, incapable of understanding what is happening to them. I think that is a picture of someone who looks like they are dying. That is me facing death at a really young age. I was all bones.” She pauses. “My face looks weirdly bloated. My lips don’t match the rest of my face – it looks as if I’d had lip injections. My back would stick out more than my front. I am just a straight line. At the time, that is what I thought I needed to be.” She suspects the picture would have been retouched – to make her look bigger.
Unpicking why Renn spent three years of her life starving is not easy. We could start with the day a modelling scout picked her out at school in Clinton, Mississippi, when she was 14 and a healthy, dessert-eating size 12. Renn says she never looked at any glossy magazines and had no concept of whether she was beautiful or not. “He got up from his chair and said: ‘You are going to be a star. You can live in New York. Travel the world.’” Then came the deal-breaker. “He brought out a tape measure. ‘Let me measure your hips,’” he said. They measured 109 centimetres. The number, says Renn, meant nothing to her. The scout told her she had to lose 25cm.
That evening, she ate her last carefree, calorific meal: a fried cheesecake. Over the following months, the scout came back twice to check on her progress. By the time her hip measurement had shrunk to 84cm, she’d lost 40 per cent of her body weight.
Or we could go further back. Back to when Renn was a baby. When Renn was three months old, she was dropped off at her grandmother’s house in Miami by her mother – and left there. She was premature, underweight and clearly neglected. In her memoir, “Lana” is what Renn calls her mother. Lana was 17 and had run away from home five years earlier. For months, Lana did not return, and when she did she’d sleep on the living room settee for a few nights before disappearing again. “She was the strange lady who came round once in a while,” Renn says. “In home videos you can see her trying to talk to me and me moving away from her. You can see the discomfort in my body language. Or I’d blatantly ignore her. I didn’t trust her.”
Renn was brought up by her grandmother and, until she died when Renn was seven, her great-grandmother – both of whom she adored and who adored her in return. The likable, loquacious, inquisitive person who sits in front of me plainly has something to do with these two women. “I could have been in a very, very bad place otherwise. Living somewhere on drugs, maybe drinking, maybe not even here. I could have been conditioned to think suicide was an option.” Yet however distrustful she was of her mother, she was also drawn to her. “I had all these questions in my mind to do with what she had done to me. Why did my half-sisters live with her? Was I unwanted? Was I unworthy? I thought it was my fault."
By the time Renn was 12, Lana seemed to have found some stability in her life, and so Renn persuaded her grandmother that they should move to Mississippi and live together − one big happy family. Like many abandoned children, she had a bottomless ability to forgive Lana and a fantasy in her head of how this new life would be. So they swapped the cosmopolitan, multicultural Miami for Clinton, the kind of place where, according to Renn, “you get married at 17, have children, go to church, get a job. People don’t even have passports because nowhere outside the town exists.” A peaceful home was exchanged for chaos and, at times, violence.
Renn describes it as “a war zone”. Renn and her mother rarely see one another and she has no idea if her mother will read the book or not. She speaks about her obliquely, in riddles almost. Reading between the lines, something pretty catastrophic happened to her mother that, to some extent, explains the way she would lash out. She was a victim, too. What Renn does say is this: “My mother ran away when she was 13. She had no education after sixth grade. She lives in a world of her own. Take
someone like that, put them on the street … She got addicted to many things. She is traumatised forever in a way that I don’t think will ever be fixed.”
She was mentally unpredictable? “She could not cope with me being there. It set her off. When you feel such extreme guilt and you cannot make sense of the trauma then you have to blame it on someone. She blamed me.”
By the time the scout came along, Renn was, I imagine, in a high state of anxiety without even realising the extent of it. She and her grandmother had fled Lana’s house six months earlier after a final showdown. Losing 25cm around her hips must have seemed a doddle: getting thin enough to become a model was a way to gain some control over her life. It was also a way to disappear, to internalise everything, to hide. I suggest to her that, having been rejected as a baby, the perfect model shape meant acceptance. She denies this. “I was very secure with my grandmother.” However, she does agree that the anorexia was her “ticket” out of Clinton, Mississippi. “When somebody says you can lose this amount of weight and escape everything that is currently happening to you – that is the moment that caused the eating disorder. To be a model – that was my ticket.”
Renn writes: “The stereotype of models is that we’re brain dead, but some of us are just starving.” Between the ages of 14 and 17, getting thin and staying thin was Renn’s obsession. The day she looked at her legs in the mirror and saw a gap between her thighs was a day of celebration. In 2001, the scout’s agency signed her up and she left school and moved to New York.
To be fair to her agency, they told her not to lose any more weight – they lied on her modelling card and said she was heavier than she was – but on the other hand, there was constant pressure to stay thin. She had all the signs of
someone with an eating disorder, but no one took her to one side. In photographs she is pasty, gaunt. She looks as though she has a near-fatal illness – which she did have.
There was some income through modelling, but not much. It doesn’t sound like she was very good at it. She was too obsessed with her diet. “Now the problem was how to maintain what I had accomplished. That is very hard when your body doesn’t want to be 43kg. When it is naturally more like 80kg.” She barely ate, she took diuretics, she joined two gyms so that she could exercise for eight hours a day without being questioned. Her shoe size shrank. This horrifies me more than anything, more than the palpitations, the pain in her throat, the nights when she would get out of bed, cram a spoonful of peanut butter into her mouth, swish it about and then spit it out. “Even feet have padding,” she says, sounding astonished that I had never thought of it.
The strange thing is it all stopped as abruptly as it began. Renn’s body began to reject the extreme regimen, and she put on weight. The agency noticed and called her in for a meeting. “I knew what was happening,” she writes in the book. “They were going to take Polaroids and rub the truth in my face, like a dog trainer pushing a dog’s nose in its excrement.”
“You need to go on a diet,” the head of the agency said. “I have a $40,000 job for you in two weeks. It could make you. But you have to get the thighs down.”
She refused. A week later she signed on with Ford, an agency which has always had a reputation for supporting the careers of plus-size models, and she started to eat again. “Pizza, peanut butter, chocolate mud cakes. I ate a lot of those.” She describes how she would sit on the sofa watching daytime television, eating cheesecake every day. “Those first few months, it was absolutely amazing. It was heaven.” I wonder if it was as easy as this – what must it have really been like to lie in the bath and look at her body and see new folds of flesh when for all that time she’d been as straight and rigid as a clothes peg? She says: “Each pound was a discovery. I liked it. I felt myself becoming more who I am. I had a cleavage suddenly. I started wearing heels, short dresses, colour. I was becoming the weight I naturally am. It felt like I was a woman, finally.”
The recent brouhaha around the photograph of naked plus-size model Lizzie Miller in US Glamour magazine goes to show just how passionate people get about weight and body image. Miller’s photograph, replete with modest pouch of belly fat, became a news story despite the fact that this is how the majority of women look when they take off their clothes (if they’re lucky). It’s the same with Renn. Everyone has a view on how she should look. Stylists have complained about “having to do the fat girl” when she turns up for shoots. She’s turned up for jobs only to find that the clothes don’t fit. On websites, people write “barf” underneath her pictures. On the other side of the debate, some photographers have deliberately made her look fatter than she is. She happily admits to having cellulite, but there have been shoots that have been lit to accentuate it. Then bloggers complain that she is not fat enough. “Everyone expects me to be this huge woman,” she says.
The irony, of course, is that Crystal Renn is really not fat. She’s not even chubby. She’s 175cm tall. Her vital statistics are 97-79-107cm. The idea that she’s plus-size seems daft, I suggest. But she resents the idea that everyone has an opinion on the breadth of her thighs. “If they judge me for not being big enough, is that not the same as judging me for not being thin enough? When do we stop? My size shouldn’t matter,” she says. “Let’s get rid of straight-size and plus-size. It’s bullshit. Just say model. Full stop.”
This is a bit like having her cake and eating it (which I suppose is what she is doing, both literally and within the industry). She’s in a business that is predicated on judgement values. Part of her success is because she’s known as the plus-size model. Indeed, read the book and she sounds like a spokesperson on behalf of overweight Americans who she thinks are in danger of becoming marginalised and demonised. At the same time, she rails against the trend away from the Amazonian supermodels we were used to in the ’80s. She argues for an end to sample sizes and underage models, both of which perpetuate the notion that size 0 is normal.
Ultimately, Renn has no answers. She doesn’t have the solution to the increasing rates of girls with anorexia. But she speaks a great deal of sense and you can’t help but wish her well. She’s a much better body role model for teenage girls than someone like Victoria Beckham or the Olsen twins. “I’m a curvy girl. You can’t erase it … Women should be able to look at me and think: ‘She’s beautiful.’ But also: ‘I could look like that.’”
I am sitting with one of the world’s most successful models in an Italian restaurant in New York, and the model is eating. First she demolishes the contents of the bread basket, then she sets upon a prosciutto, polenta and smoked mozzarella starter that, by my estimate, must surely be 764 calories of creamy, fat-laden comfort food, followed by a main dish of red snapper. I’m all for skipping pudding but she’s a fan of the crème brûlée. She orders two, one for me, one for her. She gives the brittle topping a brisk whack with her spoon. “Isn’t that just the best bit?” she says.
Six years ago, Crystal Renn was an unknown “normal”-size model. She weighed 45 kilograms and easily fitted into the size 0 designer samples routinely sent out for photo shoots. Despite being both skinny and beautiful – eyes like a homeless labrador, hip bones like handlebars – modelling jobs were few and far between. Home was a shared flat owned by her former agency (which she refuses to name, presumably for legal reasons). Lunch was undressed lettuce and a stick of sugar-free gum. As an alternative to swallowing actual food, she’d tune into food programs on television. She’d watch the presenter bake a tray of brownies and her brain would send an automatic message to her parotid gland: her mouth would flood with saliva.
If Renn had remained as thin as many of her fellow models, we would never have met. She might, by her own admission, not even be alive. Now she’s the best-known and best-paid “plus-size” model in the business, sought after by photographers like Steven Meisel and Patrick Demarchelier.
Renn won’t tell me how much she earns – “It would be kind of sick” – but I imagine that it must be in seven figures. She’s modelled in the catwalk shows of designers like Jean Paul Gaultier (admittedly, the majority of designers would most likely balk at using her) and fronts an advertising campaign for plus-size UK clothing brand Evans (which delivers to Australia, visit evans.co.uk). She weighs, she says, around 76 kilos. She’s a size 14 (on occasion she’s gone up to a size 18). In the real world she’d be pretty average. In the screwy weight-obsessed modelling industry, she really is the elephant in the room.
With the help of a ghostwriter, she’s written a vivid, very readable, rather wise memoir called Hungry. She’s only 23, which is precociously young to be considering one’s autobiography. However, she has already lived enough for several lives.
I can’t imagine the book will sit particularly well with the mainstream modelling industry. She is devastating about what the business is like for the young women who dream of being the next Kate Moss: the pressure to stay thin, the unspoken camaraderie among anorexics, the shared flats that sound more like coops for battery hens.But for anyone who is at all thoughtful about women and weight and the so-called obesity crisis, it is a revealing portrayal. Wannabe 13-year-old models should read it, as should their mothers. Renn would make an excellent patron for any charity that deals with young women and body image.
Crystal Renn and I meet again the following day. Apart from her fingernails, which are bitten down to the quick, a habit that dates back to the days of her eating disorder, she exudes ruddy good health. She sits cross-legged in an armchair, keen to talk. I don’t think I’ve ever interviewed someone this intense. I decide that she’s not the kind of person who does anything half heartedly, whether it’s starving herself, being interviewed or falling in love – two years ago she married Greg, a school teacher, and the first man she’d ever had sex with.
We flick through some modelling pictures of when she was thin. When she talks about her old life she seems to slip back into it, as if hypnotised. “I see someone who has nothing inside, who is unfeeling, incapable of understanding what is happening to them. I think that is a picture of someone who looks like they are dying. That is me facing death at a really young age. I was all bones.” She pauses. “My face looks weirdly bloated. My lips don’t match the rest of my face – it looks as if I’d had lip injections. My back would stick out more than my front. I am just a straight line. At the time, that is what I thought I needed to be.” She suspects the picture would have been retouched – to make her look bigger.
Unpicking why Renn spent three years of her life starving is not easy. We could start with the day a modelling scout picked her out at school in Clinton, Mississippi, when she was 14 and a healthy, dessert-eating size 12. Renn says she never looked at any glossy magazines and had no concept of whether she was beautiful or not. “He got up from his chair and said: ‘You are going to be a star. You can live in New York. Travel the world.’” Then came the deal-breaker. “He brought out a tape measure. ‘Let me measure your hips,’” he said. They measured 109 centimetres. The number, says Renn, meant nothing to her. The scout told her she had to lose 25cm.
That evening, she ate her last carefree, calorific meal: a fried cheesecake. Over the following months, the scout came back twice to check on her progress. By the time her hip measurement had shrunk to 84cm, she’d lost 40 per cent of her body weight.
Or we could go further back. Back to when Renn was a baby. When Renn was three months old, she was dropped off at her grandmother’s house in Miami by her mother – and left there. She was premature, underweight and clearly neglected. In her memoir, “Lana” is what Renn calls her mother. Lana was 17 and had run away from home five years earlier. For months, Lana did not return, and when she did she’d sleep on the living room settee for a few nights before disappearing again. “She was the strange lady who came round once in a while,” Renn says. “In home videos you can see her trying to talk to me and me moving away from her. You can see the discomfort in my body language. Or I’d blatantly ignore her. I didn’t trust her.”
Renn was brought up by her grandmother and, until she died when Renn was seven, her great-grandmother – both of whom she adored and who adored her in return. The likable, loquacious, inquisitive person who sits in front of me plainly has something to do with these two women. “I could have been in a very, very bad place otherwise. Living somewhere on drugs, maybe drinking, maybe not even here. I could have been conditioned to think suicide was an option.” Yet however distrustful she was of her mother, she was also drawn to her. “I had all these questions in my mind to do with what she had done to me. Why did my half-sisters live with her? Was I unwanted? Was I unworthy? I thought it was my fault."
By the time Renn was 12, Lana seemed to have found some stability in her life, and so Renn persuaded her grandmother that they should move to Mississippi and live together − one big happy family. Like many abandoned children, she had a bottomless ability to forgive Lana and a fantasy in her head of how this new life would be. So they swapped the cosmopolitan, multicultural Miami for Clinton, the kind of place where, according to Renn, “you get married at 17, have children, go to church, get a job. People don’t even have passports because nowhere outside the town exists.” A peaceful home was exchanged for chaos and, at times, violence.
Renn describes it as “a war zone”. Renn and her mother rarely see one another and she has no idea if her mother will read the book or not. She speaks about her obliquely, in riddles almost. Reading between the lines, something pretty catastrophic happened to her mother that, to some extent, explains the way she would lash out. She was a victim, too. What Renn does say is this: “My mother ran away when she was 13. She had no education after sixth grade. She lives in a world of her own. Take
someone like that, put them on the street … She got addicted to many things. She is traumatised forever in a way that I don’t think will ever be fixed.”
She was mentally unpredictable? “She could not cope with me being there. It set her off. When you feel such extreme guilt and you cannot make sense of the trauma then you have to blame it on someone. She blamed me.”
By the time the scout came along, Renn was, I imagine, in a high state of anxiety without even realising the extent of it. She and her grandmother had fled Lana’s house six months earlier after a final showdown. Losing 25cm around her hips must have seemed a doddle: getting thin enough to become a model was a way to gain some control over her life. It was also a way to disappear, to internalise everything, to hide. I suggest to her that, having been rejected as a baby, the perfect model shape meant acceptance. She denies this. “I was very secure with my grandmother.” However, she does agree that the anorexia was her “ticket” out of Clinton, Mississippi. “When somebody says you can lose this amount of weight and escape everything that is currently happening to you – that is the moment that caused the eating disorder. To be a model – that was my ticket.”
Renn writes: “The stereotype of models is that we’re brain dead, but some of us are just starving.” Between the ages of 14 and 17, getting thin and staying thin was Renn’s obsession. The day she looked at her legs in the mirror and saw a gap between her thighs was a day of celebration. In 2001, the scout’s agency signed her up and she left school and moved to New York.
To be fair to her agency, they told her not to lose any more weight – they lied on her modelling card and said she was heavier than she was – but on the other hand, there was constant pressure to stay thin. She had all the signs of
someone with an eating disorder, but no one took her to one side. In photographs she is pasty, gaunt. She looks as though she has a near-fatal illness – which she did have.
There was some income through modelling, but not much. It doesn’t sound like she was very good at it. She was too obsessed with her diet. “Now the problem was how to maintain what I had accomplished. That is very hard when your body doesn’t want to be 43kg. When it is naturally more like 80kg.” She barely ate, she took diuretics, she joined two gyms so that she could exercise for eight hours a day without being questioned. Her shoe size shrank. This horrifies me more than anything, more than the palpitations, the pain in her throat, the nights when she would get out of bed, cram a spoonful of peanut butter into her mouth, swish it about and then spit it out. “Even feet have padding,” she says, sounding astonished that I had never thought of it.
The strange thing is it all stopped as abruptly as it began. Renn’s body began to reject the extreme regimen, and she put on weight. The agency noticed and called her in for a meeting. “I knew what was happening,” she writes in the book. “They were going to take Polaroids and rub the truth in my face, like a dog trainer pushing a dog’s nose in its excrement.”
“You need to go on a diet,” the head of the agency said. “I have a $40,000 job for you in two weeks. It could make you. But you have to get the thighs down.”
She refused. A week later she signed on with Ford, an agency which has always had a reputation for supporting the careers of plus-size models, and she started to eat again. “Pizza, peanut butter, chocolate mud cakes. I ate a lot of those.” She describes how she would sit on the sofa watching daytime television, eating cheesecake every day. “Those first few months, it was absolutely amazing. It was heaven.” I wonder if it was as easy as this – what must it have really been like to lie in the bath and look at her body and see new folds of flesh when for all that time she’d been as straight and rigid as a clothes peg? She says: “Each pound was a discovery. I liked it. I felt myself becoming more who I am. I had a cleavage suddenly. I started wearing heels, short dresses, colour. I was becoming the weight I naturally am. It felt like I was a woman, finally.”
The recent brouhaha around the photograph of naked plus-size model Lizzie Miller in US Glamour magazine goes to show just how passionate people get about weight and body image. Miller’s photograph, replete with modest pouch of belly fat, became a news story despite the fact that this is how the majority of women look when they take off their clothes (if they’re lucky). It’s the same with Renn. Everyone has a view on how she should look. Stylists have complained about “having to do the fat girl” when she turns up for shoots. She’s turned up for jobs only to find that the clothes don’t fit. On websites, people write “barf” underneath her pictures. On the other side of the debate, some photographers have deliberately made her look fatter than she is. She happily admits to having cellulite, but there have been shoots that have been lit to accentuate it. Then bloggers complain that she is not fat enough. “Everyone expects me to be this huge woman,” she says.
The irony, of course, is that Crystal Renn is really not fat. She’s not even chubby. She’s 175cm tall. Her vital statistics are 97-79-107cm. The idea that she’s plus-size seems daft, I suggest. But she resents the idea that everyone has an opinion on the breadth of her thighs. “If they judge me for not being big enough, is that not the same as judging me for not being thin enough? When do we stop? My size shouldn’t matter,” she says. “Let’s get rid of straight-size and plus-size. It’s bullshit. Just say model. Full stop.”
This is a bit like having her cake and eating it (which I suppose is what she is doing, both literally and within the industry). She’s in a business that is predicated on judgement values. Part of her success is because she’s known as the plus-size model. Indeed, read the book and she sounds like a spokesperson on behalf of overweight Americans who she thinks are in danger of becoming marginalised and demonised. At the same time, she rails against the trend away from the Amazonian supermodels we were used to in the ’80s. She argues for an end to sample sizes and underage models, both of which perpetuate the notion that size 0 is normal.
Ultimately, Renn has no answers. She doesn’t have the solution to the increasing rates of girls with anorexia. But she speaks a great deal of sense and you can’t help but wish her well. She’s a much better body role model for teenage girls than someone like Victoria Beckham or the Olsen twins. “I’m a curvy girl. You can’t erase it … Women should be able to look at me and think: ‘She’s beautiful.’ But also: ‘I could look like that.’”
Thankyou.
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing how aesthetically, women are effectively more beautiful when they are "healthy"- and yet, emaciation is socially perceived to be beautiful.
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