Model Linda Evangelista Almost Quit Industry After Being Asked To Strip At 16

The Disturbing Reason Linda Evangelista Almost Quit Modeling

Long before she was gracing Vogue covers, fronting Chanel campaigns and only waking up for $10,000 a day, Linda Evangelista was a teenage novice looking to break into the industry.

Like many of her peers, Evangelista's supermodel ascension wasn't as seamless as it looked. The 48-year-old described her cringe-worthy early days to Interview magazine for the September issue, and she didn't spare the gory details:

"I took a modeling course in my hometown, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada. It was sort of a scam. In order to work as a model, you had to pay for the classes. My mom paid for me. They sent me there at 16, and I was chosen by a Japanese agency to go over to Japan for the summer to work. My parents were strict Italians who didn't let me go out past 10 o'clock, and I had to choose between going out Friday or Saturday night and was not allowed to have a boyfriend. But they said okay. I got there and it was a catastrophe. They wanted me to take my clothes off and shoot me naked. It was a nightmare and I panicked and basically the Canadian Embassy helped me out. I was there about two days and went home, saying, 'I don't want anything to do with this ever again.'"

Thankfully, Evangelista eventually found a more comfortable spot in the industry and went on to dominate the modeling world. But her story certainly highlights a deep-rooted problem for many young models. Kate Moss recently described her early struggles in Vanity Fair, saying she had a "nervous breakdown" after being asked to straddle Mark Wahlberg topless when she was just a teenager for those iconic Calvin Klein ads. Similarly, Coco Rocha was pressured into doing a semi-nude shoot when she was only 14 years old.

Sexualization of young models seemed to hit a peak in 2011 with 10-year-old Thylane Blondeau. Featured in the pages of Vogue Paris, the French child's photoshoot was criticized by public figures and parenting groups for being "physically disturbing." The fashion world has responded to recent controversies by enacting regulations to protect young models, including the Vogue Health Initiative and the Equity Model Code Of Conduct.

These strides, however helpful, haven't fully rectified the problem, though. So while Evangelista was able to rise above her unfortunate experience and carve out a career she was comfortable with, her cautionary tale is one that aspiring models should still heed.

Look how far they've all come...

Linda Evangelista THEN

Classic Supermodels: Then & Now

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