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Get Close ... with Doutzen Kroes

Get Close ... with Doutzen Kroes

by Renata Certo-Ware 

Doutzen Kroes has been ranked the worldโ€™s fifth-highest-paid supermodel, but this Victoriaโ€™s Secret Angel understands that success in the fashion industry can come at a cost. In April, she joined media mogul Arianna Huffington, Vogue Italia editor-in-chief Franca Sozzani, and model/actress Amber Valletta of Revenge for โ€œHealth Is Beauty: Defining Ourselves,โ€ the Harris Center at Mass General Hospitalโ€™s 15th-annual forum on body image and the media. But first, the Dutch beauty spoke candidly with STUFF.

I canโ€™t stand when models say โ€œOh, I eat whatever I want โ€” fried chicken for breakfast, dessert with every meal.โ€ Is that reality? I work really hard for it [my body] because itโ€™s my job! I have to be in the gym every day. I have to be really healthy. I have to give up things for it. Nobodyโ€™s going to win the world Olympics without practicing. At some point, I had to tell my agent, โ€œI canโ€™t not eat, because I get hungry!โ€

Has anyone close to you dealt with an eating disorder or body dysmorphia? I think every woman has doubts and insecurities about her body. Iโ€™ve never had struggles with anorexia or anything like that, but Iโ€™ve dealt with the fact that I always had to watch my weight and Iโ€™ve been told so often to lose weight. Sometimes itโ€™s a struggle to keep up with my own photos, where the lighting is perfect, the makeup is done, and the images have been retouched. Thatโ€™s not what I see when I look in the mirror! I felt really empowered when I said, โ€œOkay, this is my body, the best that I can be. Deal with it.โ€ I was able to do that because I had a nice life and great family back in Holland. Having a safe, solid background that I could always fall back on made me feel very empowered. There are a lot of girls from poor countries who enter the modeling industry and feel that they canโ€™t say no when an agent or director tells them to lose weight or to do something that they arenโ€™t comfortable with, because they have nothing to fall back on and nowhere to go. Their biggest fear is to go back to their old lives. I want to be a role model to help other models to feel strong and beautiful in their own way.

With awareness of body-image issues increasing, have you noticed changes within the industry? Since the CFDA [Council of Fashion Designers of America] and Anna Wintour started this health initiative in 2007, a handful of designers have really begun to move away from the unhealthy industry standards. Prada recently had a show with all curvy women, and Michael Kors always shows with different kinds of models, not the ones we saw on TV that were so shocking. I definitely see a change. Itโ€™s more interesting and more fun for people to see an athletic girl or a curvy girl on the runway. . . . Weโ€™re all individuals and beautiful in our own way. Everyone is different. If all models looked the same, I donโ€™t think women could relate at all.

What do you think of the modeling industry now? Right now, models donโ€™t bring any character to the runways โ€” no personality. Itโ€™s not like with Cindy and Linda and Naomi, who owned the runways! Todayโ€™s models have become interchangeable and disposable. They are scared of doing something wrong and losing a job, so they are afraid to show personality! Fashion Week used to be so exciting because it was like a reunion for all us models to see each other again, but now thereโ€™s a constant rotation of new people every season. Itโ€™s not as fun now!

How accurately do reality shows like Americaโ€™s Next Top Modelportray the industry? These shows are entertainment. They always add a bit more drama. I saw a modeling show in Holland, and the contestants had to pose naked on a horse. I never had to do that! It attracted lots of viewers, but itโ€™s still TV โ€” not reality! I do think itโ€™s good that shows likeANTM donโ€™t show the misconception that the industry is always glamorous, because itโ€™s not! We have to work really hard. Iโ€™ve been doing this for 10 years, and now Iโ€™m getting some of the glamorous side. But in the beginning, itโ€™s taking the subway to go to castings, running around. . . . Itโ€™s really hard work! In the beginning, you donโ€™t get to fly home and visit family whenever you want because you donโ€™t have the money, and you canโ€™t miss a moment because the next opportunity could be waiting.

Get Close... with Franca Sozzani, editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia

Get Close... with Franca Sozzani, editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia

Get Close ... with Designer Michael Bastian

Get Close ... with Designer Michael Bastian

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