Known as:: Cindy Crawford
Full Name: Cynthia Ann Crawford
Birthday: February 20, 1966
Birth Place: De Kalb, Illinois, USA
Zodiac Sign: Pisces
Height: 177cm
Body Measurement: 86cm 66cm 89cm
Shoes Size: 10(US), 41 (EU)
Occupation: Supermodel, Actress
One sticky summer day near De Kalb, Illinois, a sixteen-year-old
lass named Cindy Crawford was earning her summer wages
by detasselling corn, when along came a photographer
from a local newspaper who snapped her picture. The
photograph portrayed a girl of exceptional, all-American
beauty, and it generated enough positive feedback to
convince its comely subject to quit her farm-labor gig
and spend the summer modeling. Young Crawford's good-fortune
story did not end there. This former maiden of the cornfield
would go on to parlay her charismatic beauty into a
career as a multimillion-dollar commercial pitchwoman,
tv personality, fitness-video vixen, and attempted movie
star.
Her wallet bloated from two summers' worth of paychecks
from the Chicago office of the Elite modeling agency,
Crawford enrolled at Northwestern University to study
chemical engineering on an academic scholarship. You
see, the all-American girl is more than just a pretty
face; she's smart too, and scored straight A's all through
high school. It only took Crawford less than one quarter
to determine that modeling was potentially a far more
lucrative (and fabulous) career than engineering, and
she ditched college to model full-time for Chicago photographer
Victor Skrebneski. In 1986, having made it big in Chicago,
Crawford moved to New York to make it really big.
Within two years of arriving to the Big Apple, Crawford
had become a genuine supermodel, sashaying down top
runways, gracing top magazine covers, attending top
parties, and earning top dollars. In 1988, she made
a gutsy decision to become the first modern supermodel
to pose for Play.boy. Among those impressed by the layout
were executives at MTV, who subsequently hired Crawford
to host the network's fashion program, House of Style;
she held this job for six successful years. Crawford
again proved to be an entrepreneurial risk-taker by
launching a best-selling series of swimsuit calendars
when her shots for a Sports Illustrated's Swimsuit Issue
got cut from the final spread. She jeopardized her commercial
contracts by posing suggestively on a 1993 cover of
Vanity Fair with openly gay chanteuse k.d. lang. When
fellow mannequins Naomi Campbell, Elle Macpherson, and
Claudia Schiffer invested in the Fashion Cafe enterprise,
a savvy Crawford opted instead to buy a piece of Planet
Hollywood.
In the usually fickle world of high fashion, Crawford
remained the hottest of properties for an unprecedented
ten years after beginning her modelling career. By 1995,
Forbes calculated that she was the planet's highest-paid
model, with annual earnings in the neighborhood of $6.5
million (Schiffer ranked second at $5.3 million). The
business magazine attributed Crawford's continued financial
success to her gender-crossing appeal and her ability
to sell her name and face for commercial endorsements
on a scale similar to that of professional athletes.
Her company, Crawdaddy Inc., was raking in the bulk
of its fees from Pepsi, Kay Jewelers, and Revlon, which
signed Crawford to a multiyear, seven-figure contract.
Before passing her thirtieth birthday, Crawford had
begun to reposition herself for a post-modeling career.
She stepped down from House of Style, pulled up stakes
in Manhattan, and moved her base to Los Angeles, where
she signed up for her first feature film, the box-office
bomb Fair Game, in which she co-starred with Billy Baldwin.
Undaunted by the movie's critical and financial failure,
Crawford is currently investigating other film projects
and other business opportunities (she will likely launch
her own line of cosmetics), including plugging her new
how-to book entitled Cindy Crawford's Basic Face: A
Makeup Workbook. Though she is a shrewd operator in
a bitchy business, Crawford has, by most accounts, retained
her Midwestern values of courtesy and kindness. For
example, Crawford, the middle daughter of a blue-collar
family, donated the proceeds from her calendar sales
to leukemia charities in the name of her brother Jeff,
who succumbed to the disease at age three. "No
one in the fashion world is perfect, but Cindy represents
the absolute best that modelling has to offer,"
says journalist Michael Gross, who wrote the modelling
expose Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women.
Crawford's charm extends into her personal life: she
attracted the eye of actor Richard Gere, seventeen years
her senior, and after dating for four years, they married
in December 1991. Their quickie Las Vegas ceremony,
which featured wedding rings made of tinfoil cemented
what appeared to be a perfect union, if not to all observers,
then at least to People Magazine, which dubbed the duo
the Sexiest Couple Alive. Three years later, and mere
months after Crawford and Gere took out a $30,000, full-page
ad in the London Times that declared their love to be
true and of the heterosexual variety, Crawford filed
for divorce. After wining and dining a string of high-profile
escorts, including actors Robert De Niro and Val Kilmer,
Crawford married nightclub owner Rande Gerber in 1998.