Before too long, the young Aussie became a
mainstay at Elle magazine, the pages of which she graced monthly for six
years. Macpherson consolidated her staying power at the
publication by marrying the magazine's creative director, Gilles Bensimon,
twenty years her senior, at the age of twenty-one. Three consecutive years
fronting the cover of
Sports Illustrated's swimsuit issue and producing a series of exercise
videos for the publication proved that Macpherson was equally appealing
to the male magazine-buying demographic. Eventually, Macpherson earned
the illustrious title of "supermodel," entering the then-elite pantheon
of universally familiar models Christie Brinkley, Paulina Porizkova, and
Cindy Crawford.
All the hoopla surrounding her gangbuster modeling
career attracted the attention of the ever-vigilant Australian tourism
commission. Recognizing in the supermodel a lucrative, and far more fetching,
companion emblem of life Down Under to Paul "Crocodile Dundee" Hogan, the
commission offered Macpherson a position as an unofficial ambassador.
Like countless women who have made a name for
themselves by posing for cameras and strutting down runways, Macpherson
inevitably turned her attention to acting. Woody Allen handpicked the neophyte
actress to walk past the camera in a less-than-challenging party scene
in his 1990 film Alice. The fleeting fly-by led to a relatively more substantial
role--one that required Macpherson to emote as well as look beautiful for
the cameras--in 1994's Sirens. In preparation for her appearance in the
pre-World War II drama, Macpherson claims that she gained more than twenty
pounds to give her character--a scantily clad, beach-dwelling muse of a
freethinking artist--an era-appropriate roundness. Her fattening-up was
rewarded with moderate critical notice.
Macpherson has since managed to evade typecasting
as merely a shapely and innocuous layabout, by appearing as a spoiled debutante
in Franco Zeffirelli's 1996 remake of the gothic romance Jane Eyre, and
as the object of Ben Stiller's affection in the romantic comedy If Lucy
Fell. She also landed the pivotal, if small, part of the woman who dumps
Jeff Bridges and leaves Barbra Streisand in prime position to pick up the
pieces in The Mirror Has Two Faces. The up-and-coming big-screen star,
who was quoted post-Alice as saying, "I think that acting doesn't always
follow modeling, and it's a mistake a lot of models make" has since amended
her former position, and recently declared, "For fifteen years, I've been
playing the same character--which is myself--and I'm bored with 'myself.'
Acting is an enormous release for me creatively and emotionally." In possession
of a "multi-tier"
contract with Miramax that promises plenty of film, television, video,
and publishing opportunities, the newly enthusiastic thespian is poised
to become a familiar face in multiple entertainment formats.
Aware that both modeling and acting gigs for
women tend to diminish rapidly as they age, Macpherson has taken measures
to extend her financial solvency well into the future. The former Victoria's
Secret model is chair of the Australia-based lingerie label Elle Macpherson
Intimates, which she has groomed into a $10 million enterprise. Wading
deeper into the business end of the fashion industry, Macpherson also lent
her name to a line of sportswear and "fun/youth-oriented intimate apparel"
for Montgomery Ward. In between acting classes and physique maintenance,
she further expressed her entrepreneurial bent by founding the burgeoning
Fashion Café chain of concept fantasy eateries, sharing the responsibilities
and rewards of restaurant ownership with fellow models Claudia Schiffer
and Naomi
Campbell. As glamour-starved tourists dine on "Elle's Shrimp on the
Barbe" and "Naomi's Fish and Chips" at the flagship New York location,
new outposts are mushrooming Planet
Hollywood-style throughout Asia and Europe.
Apart from the demands of being a successful
restaurateur, the statuesque actress had roles in two of 1997's bigger-budgeted
cinematic affairs: Joel Schumacher's
Batman & Robin, in which she played Batman's love interest; and
Lee Tamahori's The Edge, in which she played the love interest of both
Anthony Hopkins and Alec Baldwin. Macpherson will soon be adding "mother"
to her list of credits, as her first child did arrive en scène in
February 1998. |