Fashion photographer Patrick Demarchelier, who died of cancer on St. Barthelemey last week at age 78, was one of the most popular and belovedmembers of his profession from the late 1970s into the next century. He appears in both my books Model, on modeling, and Focus, which focuses on post-war fashion photography. For an unexpurgated capsule history of his life and work, see those books. For the moment, here, from the opening pages of Model, is a fly-on-the-wall look at Demarchelier at work with Cindy Crawford for British Vogue in 1989:
Cindy Crawford taps her foot and tsk-tsks impatiently. She’s clocked into photographer Patrick Demarchelier’s studio twenty minutes earlier—a mere six minutes late for a 9:00 A.M. modeling job. Crawford is prompt and expects as much from those she works with in fashion’s photo factories. But Demarchelier isn’t in sight. Nor are the day’s editors from British Vogue . Nor hair and makeup artists. Finally Demarchelier, a bearish fellow, drifts in, but after saying hello, he drops into a chair with the Times . A woman enters and gets on the phone. She’s an editor, looking for several stray bathing suits, which, she announces, will be the focus of the day’s shoot. Crawford is under the impression she’s been booked for a cover, and she isn’t pleased. Besides the loss of the prestigious cover, there’s the fact she has been booked under false pretenses. And bathing suit photos require … certain preparations.
“Somebody should have told me,” Cindy mutters. “I didn’t shave.”
Just then the rest of the crew, including Mary Greenwell (makeup) and Sam McKnight (hair) arrives. Crawford eyes her watch; it’s nine-forty.
What time were we supposed to be here?” Greenwell asks innocently.
“Nine,” Crawford says. A pause. “I’m ready whenever you want to start.”
At last the studio stirs. Demarchelier rises and begins hulking around, muttering in incomprehensible French-accented English. The phones—and the British editors—chirp. Crawford settles at a makeup table under a wall of blown-up old Vogue covers. They look down as Greenwell, barefoot, circles Cindy, smearing foundation on her face. Sarajane Hoare, Vogue’s fashion editor, approaches. “I’m so glad I got you,” she says with a sigh.
It is ten-twenty, and Cindy Crawford has been transformed into what Sarajane Hoare calls a Cindy doll. Blemishes are banished. Eyelids are a dusky gray. For the finishing touch, Greenwell picks up a pot of bloodred Chanel lip gloss. She is supposed to use only Revlon products, but Crawford doesn’t seem to notice. Still, though she’s already appeared on two hundred magazine covers (“and counting,” said her agent Monique Pillard), Crawford is hardly blasé. She eyes herself in the mirror. “It looks like I have no top lip,” she says. “And I think the cheeks are a bit too much.”
“Cindy Crawford, shut up your mouth,” Greenwell says. Then she does what Crawford wants.
“I look sort of like a tart,” Crawford says when she’s satisfied.
“You can write that down,” Greenwell tells me.
Crawford quickly agrees. “Sultry Cindy,” she says. “Vixen.”
Finally, around noon, the missing swimsuit surfaces. Cindy is ready to dive into work. “ Uh, Patreek?” she says to Demarchelier in a broad French accent. “ Uh , maybe we should work today?”
Finally the team piles into a location van and heads for SoHo. “Where is he going?” Crawford demands of the driver. “You’re way out of your way. Take a right at Houston.” To herself she adds, “This isn’t my job.” But at last it is time for her job. McKnight removes her rollers, and she sits at a mirror as he combs her hair into masses of Cindy doll curls. Crawford studies the mirror again. “I did my hair like this every day in high school,” she says dreamily.
As he exits, Demarchelier leaves the van’s door open. “We’ve got fans,” Cindy warns as three young girls approach. She signs autographs. They giggle. As they leave, one cries out, “I saw her mole!”
“They’re not very organized,” Crawford complains when, at 1:00 P.M., the British Vogue shoot still hasn’t started. She buries herself in Italo Calvino’s The Baron in the Trees until finally Hoare is ready to dress her. A few minutes later she emerges in a silver lamé bikini, matching fringed jacket, cowboy hat and boots, and a holster and a pair of mirrored sunglasses. “I hope I don’t run into any neighbors,” she says.
Instead she attracts a crowd as she clambers onto a wrought-iron fence, spreads her legs, and pulls her guns. When she disappears into the van to change, the bystanders stay glued to the spot. Drivers park their cars. A deliveryman deposits his boxes on the curb. “It’s the lunch crowd.” Crawford laughs.
For the third setup Demarchelier wants Crawford, who is wearing a suit sprinkled with silver sequins, mesh wrist cuffs, and a pair of red stiletto heels, to push a baby carriage up Wooster Street. As she walks there, Demarchelier drapes her shoulders with his jacket. Eyeing the crowd that trails behind her, she tells him, “I’d rather cover my ass.” Crossing West Broadway, she causes actor Wallace Shawn to do a triple take. Then, turning onto Wooster Street, she stops work on a building site. Hard hats pour into the street. “How come my wife didn’t look like that after she had a baby?” one of the workers mutters. Cindy stares into her pram. “I’m still looking for a baby,” she says.
“I’m sure any of these guys will help you,” an assistant comments.
Several rolls of film later, “My shoe’s falling off,” Crawford complains. “My suit’s up my ass.” Just then a garishly customized motorcycle roars by. Greenwall yells for the driver to stop, and Cindy mounts the bike, first behind the driver on his vinyl, chrome, and fur seat. Then she clambers around in front of him and arches her back to pose with his face inches from her assets. Tammi Terrell and Marvin Gaye sing “Heaven Must Have Sent You” on the bike’s radio. The Voguettes are elated.
“From mother to biker chick in five seconds,” Cindy says. “And I thought we were just doing a regular old studio shot!”
The photo of Demarchelier is by Mike Reinhardt and appeared in Focus.
The excerpt is from Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women: Copyright © 1995 by Idee Fixe Ltd. All rights reserved. Courtesy of HarperCollins.