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Tag: Brooke Shields

  • Brooke Shields on Style, the New “Sex Sells,” and Returning to the Calvin Klein Fold

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    To her point, when designers take on legacy brands like this one, they can feel an urge to start fresh. “But they’re not broken, so they don’t really need to be fixed,” Shields says. “They need to be enhanced and nurtured and preserved. I think it’s a strong designer who can incorporate the initial sort of essence or DNA [of a brand], and modernize it and put their stamp on it, I feel like that’s true design.”

    It’s not just advertising that has changed, but fashion, too. So much of what’s shown on the runways today appears to be a desperate call for attention—from the internet, from the audience at the show, from someone. “In this day and age, there’s shock value and all these different ways to get people’s attention, and that’s not what this brand ever was,” Shields says.

    Sure, the advertisements of the ‘80s and ‘90s were sparked conversations, and they still do, but those were for the underwear or jeans, not for the collections shown on the runway. At Calvin Klein, that’s been historically a space for a concise, and essential, point of view on dressing. “Even when I was a part of it, you know, 100 years ago, there was a newness to it while maintaining what it was,” she says.

    Photo: Niamh Murphy / Courtesy of Calvin Klein

    What stands out the most to Shields about Leoni’s Calvin Klein is a quality she finds in the designer herself: “I met her for the first time, and she has this beautiful mane of hair in this great silver color, and there’s a strength to her, and yet she’s so feminine and sexy,” Shields says. “That’s not something that you can fake or pretend,” she says.

    So what, according to Brooke Shields, is the new “sex sells”? “It’s about drawing you in rather than bombarding you,” she says, “they way [Veronica] is, the way her collection is, you want to get closer to it, you want to be a part of it, but not because it’s slapping you in the face, but because it’s silently strong and beautiful and sexy.”

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    José Criales-Unzueta

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  • Brooke Shields Says Mother Was ‘In Love’ With Her And Wanted Her ‘Cut Off’ From Sexuality

    Brooke Shields Says Mother Was ‘In Love’ With Her And Wanted Her ‘Cut Off’ From Sexuality

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    Brooke Shields and Drew Barrymore are commiserating about their overbearing mothers.

    The former child actors emotionally chronicled their youths in the limelight during Tuesday’s episode of “The Drew Barrymore Show,” where the host revealed her mother “wanted to be with the people I was with” — and asked if Shields’ mother, Teri Shields, did the same to her.

    “No, because she was in love with me,” Shields told Barrymore during the interview. “I was her main focus. And both of us were gonna be cut off from our sexuality. I was gonna stay a virgin. She was going to be just Teri Terrific.”

    Barrymore, who shot to worldwide fame after starring in Steven Spielberg’s 1982 classic “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” claimed her own mother, Jaid Barrymore, “was so enamored” with her famous daughter that she wanted to date Barrymore’s Hollywood flings herself.

    “I don’t get it, but I get it,” Shields commiserated. “It’s so layered and it’s so needy. And it’s so sad and broken.”

    Shields has been on a press run for “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields,” a Hulu documentary named after a 1978 film in which she played a 12-year-old sex worker, and recently reflected on posing for infamously suggestive Calvin Klein ads in her youth and participating in exploitative interviews.

    Barrymore and Shields have known each other for decades and had similar childhoods.

    Kevin Mazur via Getty Images

    “We all were aspiring to get approval from our mommies and daddies,” Shields told Barrymore during their conversation.

    “You either spend your life running away from, running towards, trying to not be like, trying to be like, your mother,” she continued. “And it’s primal. And you gotta go through the process of it. And it’s just a lot of work.”

    Shields told Barrymore that her mother sat in during every interview she gave as a child star. Shields, who revealed last month that she was sexually assaulted in her 20s by a powerful Hollywood executive, said her mom was adamant.

    “‘No one’s going to get you,’” Shields said of her mother’s mission. “‘I’m going to be there. I’m there first. You’re mine. I’m not going to give you to somebody.’ Under the guise of protection, but it was more ownership and fear, I think.”

    “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields” is available on Hulu.

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  • Brooke Shields on Why Now Was The Right Time To Tell Her Story In ‘Brutally Honest’ New Doc (Exclusive)

    Brooke Shields on Why Now Was The Right Time To Tell Her Story In ‘Brutally Honest’ New Doc (Exclusive)

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    By Zach Seemayer, Brent Furdyk.

    Brooke Shields is telling her truth and her story.

    The actress walked the carpet at the premiere of her new Netflix documentary, “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields”, in New York City, where she spoke with ET’s Rachel Smith about her candid and emotionally powerful film, and why it was the right time to open up about her experiences and trauma.

    “It was time because of the team, because my children’s age, and because of all the work that I have done to really find belief and confidence in my own self,” shared Shields, who found herself wiping away “happy tears” when she hit the carpet, as she was overwhelmed by the magnitude of the evening.

    “At my age, this is a different time, it’s a different era, and I was ready to share [my story] and ready to be brutally honest,” Shields said. “Otherwise, it wouldn’t have been authentic and I would have been a hypocrite.

    In the documentary — which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January and is coming to Hulu — the 57-year-old actress recalls a harrowing experience she says happened during a period when she was struggling to find work in Hollywood and was sexually attacked by an “industry insider” after graduating from Princeton.

    Reflecting on the journey she went on to get to a place where she felt she could discuss the painful encounter, Shields told ET, “It was about processing it all… and coming to terms with it, and owning it.”

    “It was important to tell the story, and was also important so that we don’t have to feel alone,” she continued.

    As for what message she might give her younger self — back when she was a child actress — Shields explained that she’d simply say, “Give yourself a break.”

    The documentary, directed by Lana Wilson, takes on the same title as the controversial 1978 film Shields appeared in when she was 12 years old, in which she played a young girl in 1917 who grew up in a New Orleans brothel and faced sexual exploitation.

    The documentary is set to explore Shields’ other high-profile and somewhat controversial roles in “The Blue Lagoon” and “Endless Love”, as well as taking the world by storm as a model for Calvin Klein jeans.

    “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields” debuts on Apr. 3.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Brooke Shields Recalls Blaming Herself After Suffering Sexual Assault

    Brooke Shields Says She Spent Her Life ‘Doing Whatever’ People Wanted

    Brooke Shields Details Rape After Graduating From Princeton: ‘I Froze’

    Brooke Shields Gives Daughter Rowan Advice About Entering the Industry

    Brooke Shields Gives Update on Her Recovery After Shattering Her Femur

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    Brent Furdyk

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  • Postpartum Depression Sparks Controversy in New Book

    Postpartum Depression Sparks Controversy in New Book

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    Award-winning and Amazon bestselling author, Whitney Dineen, is baffled by the backlash from her new novel, Mimi Plus Two. Fans are outraged that her heroine suffers from postpartum depression (PPD) and they claim it ruined the book. Dineen, a two-time sufferer of PPD is shocked by the lack of support and compassion for this very real nightmare so many women experience. She states, “One would think in 2016, this issue would not still be such a taboo.”

    Press Release


    Jun 21, 2016

    ​​Romantic comedy author, Whitney Dineen did not expect the backlash she’s getting from her recent release, Mimi Plus Two. Mimi Plus Two is the second installment in the Mimi Chronicles, which was preceded by The Reinvention of Mimi Finnegan, currently a finalist in the prestigious 2016 RONE Awards.

    Dineen expected some drop-off in ratings, citing, “You can only fall in love with a character for the first time, once.” The Reinvention of Mimi Finnegan has an impressive 190-Amazon reviews and a 4.6 star rating. Dineen concedes that The Reinvention was light in subject matter and heavy in humor, dealing with topics like falling in love, weight loss and identity crisis. While still very much a humor novel, Mimi Plus Two, delves into some deeper subject matter, like postpartum depression.

    “My sister had PPD and you’ve made a joke out of what she went through. I’m offended on her behalf and hope no one buys your stupid book!”

    Dineen’s audience, however, was not ready for the new direction Mimi’s life took once she had a child and became the victim of postpartum depression. Dineen is completely taken aback by the number of emails she’s received stating her audience’s displeasure with the PPD angle.

    Having suffered PPD twice, with both of her children’s births, Dineen wanted to share the journey with her audience. “Ninety-five percent of my readers are women, and I’m guessing the majority of them are in or near their childbearing years. I expected to find support and encouragement for the character they loved so much in The Reinvention. I did not expect so many angry communications and threats to never read any of my future books. It boggles the mind.”

    According to the Center for Disease Control, postpartum depression affects 1 in 10 women. Symptoms range from unbearable sadness to panic disorders to OCD tendencies.

    Both of Dineen’s bouts with the disorder lasted a full year, impacting every member of her household. She states, “I was ashamed and afraid of what was happening to me. I wanted to shed some light in this book about PPD to hopefully let other women, who suffer from it, know they’re not alone.”

    Dineen remembers Brooke Shields’s highly publicized depression following the birth of her children and admits she had no way of understanding what the actress/former model was experiencing. “I guess I figured, what could she possibly be depressed about? Her life is perfect!” Following her own struggles, Dineen confesses, “I feel like I owe Ms. Shields a letter of apology for my dismissive attitude. I am in awe of her strength coming forth and sharing her story. I wanted to do the same through Mimi.”

    “As women,” Dineen states, “we have to have each other’s backs. We have to provide a supportive and safe haven for one another when life throws us a curve ball like postpartum depression.”

    Dineen recently released a video on Youtube confronting her reader’s anger in hopes it will not only lend insight into her book, but also diffuse some of the heated response to a very real issue so many are forced to deal with.  

    Select Critical Reviews

    “Explain to me how post partum depression turns into full blown paranoid schizophrenia.” –Amazon review

    “As someone who never experienced postpartum depression, I don’t know if what Mimi was going through was realistic. But what she specifically felt seemed very strange.” –Amazon review

    “The book was completely ruined after Mimi has the baby…–Amazon review

    “It started out well enough but the ending was disturbing as well as disappointing.” –Amazon review

    “I’ve never had PPD but I’m pretty sure it’s nothing like you wrote about. You’ve ruined Mimi for me and I’ll never read another of your books.” –Email sent to author

    “My sister had PPD and you’ve made a joke out of what she went through. I’m offended on her behalf and hope no one buys your stupid book.” –Email sent to author

    “I don’t think you have any idea what postpartum depression is like. I think you’ve made a mockery of it in order to try to be entertaining. You failed. I’m so disappointed in this book, I will not read another.” –Email sent to author

    Select Editorial Reviews

    “…a fun book, written in an entertaining way and with lively characters, especially Mimi… A charming tale of marriage, motherhood, and extending family, and a royal one.” –​Kirkus Review

    “Mimi Plus Two is hilarious, entertaining and insightful–will keep fans of women’s fiction and chick lit engaged to the end.” –​Reader’s Favorite

    “Chick lit lovers will be entertained by Mimi and her foray into marriage and motherhood. Whitney Dineen delivers a warm and big hearted romantic comedy that makes for a delightful read!” –​MarilynBrant, NYT bestselling author of You Give Love a Bad Name

    “Utterly adorable! Whitney Dineen delivers a funny and heartwarming romantic comedy about having a wedding, having a baby, and having it all.” –​Brenda Janowitz, author of The Dinner Party

    Source: Whitney Dineen

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