Tyra Banks
Tyra Banks | |
---|---|
Born | December 4 1973 |
Nationality | American |
Occupation(s) | Talk show host, actress, former supermodel, executive producer, Singer |
Height | 5'10.5" (179 cm) |
Website | TyraBanks.com |
Tyra Lynne Banks (born December 4, 1973) is an American supermodel, author, actor, and talk show host. Banks is widely-recognized as one of the most famous models in the world and she is part of a small group of supermodels of African descent. Banks is currently ranked as the fourth highest earning supermodel.
Banks is currently the Most Known/Popular supermodel and
Richest African American Supermodel due to her successful endeavors such as her popular
high-rated sitcom America's Next Top Model,Hit Daytime Talk Show Tyra,
Heavy Endorsment deals,Production team,Outreach/Inflential programs,and upcoming projects. These which has made her full force crossover star and a Hollywood Superstar Supermodel
Early life
Banks was born in Los Angeles, California and raised in Inglewood, California. She attended Immaculate Heart High School, an all-girls, independent Catholic private school in Los Angeles. Growing up, she was very thin and often teased; she was considered to be an "ugly duckling." Banks later said that this was a very difficult time for her and she developed a "very strong self-image problem." Banks has publicly stated that she has an extreme fear of dolphins. [1]
In 1991, Banks was about to begin her freshman year at Claremont McKenna College when Elite gave the 17-year-old her first modeling job. Prior to this entry into the fashion world, Banks had been rejected several times for modeling assignments. In fact, she states that she did not deem her first job to be the start of a long career in fashion: "An agent saw pictures of me and said that I was the only girl she wanted to take back to Paris... I didn't leave thinking I was going to be some big fashion model. I just wanted to make money for college." [2] Consequently, instead of heading to university, Banks went to Paris for fashion shows and other works produced by high-fashion designers such as Versace, Yves Saint-Laurent and Dolce & Gabbana. This is where her work became internationally renowned.
Career
Modeling
Banks' career took off when she made the move from high-fashion to a commercial market. She was the first African-American to be featured on the covers of GQ, Sports Illustrated's swimsuit issue, but is most famous for her work as a Victoria's Secret model. In 1997 she won the prestigious Michael Award for Supermodel of the Year. Banks has done runway shows in Paris, Milan, Tokyo, London and the U.S. She has been featured in a variety of magazines, commercials, and billboards. Her modeling credits include runway and/or print work for CoverGirl, Swatch, Pepsi, Nike, XOXO, LensCrafters, Tommy Hilfiger, Victoria's Secret, Ralph Lauren, McDonald's, Dolce & Gabbana, Yves Saint-Laurent, Chanel, Escada, Anna Sui, Liz Claiborne and Richard Tyler. Banks has graced international fashion magazines, including the covers of Vogue, ELLE, Amica, ELLEgirl, L'Officiel, Harper's Bazaar, Photo, Cosmopolitan and Sports Illustrated.
In a time when waif fashion models were in prominence, Banks stood out with a more voluptuous physique at 5ft 9in tall and reported measurements of 34½-23½-35½. Banks had to work hard to persuade fashion designers that her physique was well-suited to the catwalk and ultimately walked for the best haute couture designers all over the world. Later on in her career, Banks decided that the world of high-fashion was no longer something she wished to pursue and so began seeking work in the commercial side of fashion. She says: "I was proactive [...] I told my agency to call Victoria's Secret, and I told them to call Sports Illustrated [...] I said my body is changing, and seamstresses are calling me grosso in Italian, and I know what the hell that means. And I'm not about to starve." Banks addressed her physique in an interview with The Sun, saying, "I am totally against plastic surgery. A lot of people think I have breast implants because I have the biggest boobs in the business. But I was a 34C when I was 17… They stay up when I wear a push-up bra. But if people could see me when I come home and take off my bra, how could they think these are fake?" [3] She is known for being openly proud of her body, once commenting, "Some models are quite flat-chested so they can run around without bouncing. I can't […] Black women don't have the same body image problems as white women. They are proud of their bodies. Black men love big butts, and they cannot lie."
Despite her phenomenal success as a supermodel, Banks began venturing from modeling to becoming a media personality after 2000. She is the host, head judge, and an executive producer of the hit UPN television show America's Next Top Model. She also receives executive producer credits for all ANTM spinoffs. Banks also enjoyed a brief stint as a recording artist and during season two of America's Next Top Model the contestants danced in her first music video for the single Shake Ya Body ( Music Video) produced by experienced record producer Darkchild. Banks also acts as the patron for TZONE, a leadership program created by Banks for young girls that according to the organization, "reinforces core values of trust and support, challenges teen girls to resist negative social pressures, and enhances self-empowerment—inspiring girls to become confident leaders in their communities." She has also established the Tyra Banks Scholarship, a fund aimed at providing African-American girls the opportunity to attend her alma mater, Immaculate Heart High School.
Television
Banks' television career began on the fourth season of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, in which she played Jackie, Will's friend. She also appeared on Felicity. As well as her role as executive producer, host and head judge of the hit TV show America's Next Top Model, she currently hosts The Tyra Banks Show, a daytime talk show which premiered in the United States on September 12, 2005 and has just been given the greenlight for a second season. The show features stories about everyday people mixed in with celebrity interviews, much like the early format of The Oprah Winfrey Show, to which her show is already being compared. Under the slogan "Every woman has a story," Banks promoted her show using emotional flashbacks to her own childhood and adolescence. She has also starred in an old episode of MADtv.
Music
Banks appeared in Michael Jackson's "Black or White" video in a scene in which Glen Chin morphs into her, and with fellow supermodel Linda Evangelista, in George Michael's "Too Funky" video. In 2004, she recorded her first and only single, Shake Ya Body (Music Video) as it was poorly received. She had a failed pop career, which she commented about in ANTM, "I don't know what I was thinking! ...models don't sing!" She has also had a single with NBA star Kobe Bryant, "K.O.B.E.," and has a single/soundtrack from the Disney movie Life-Size, called "Be A Star". In total, she has recorded three songs. She also starred as a doll called "Eve" in "Life Size."
Film
Banks has had minor roles in many films over the years. Her debut in film came in 1995 when she co-starred in the critically acclaimed drama Higher Learning. She also co-starred with Lindsay Lohan in the Disney movie Life-Size. She co-starred in 1999's Love Stinks, 2000's Coyote Ugly and 2002's Halloween: Resurrection – the eighth film in the Halloween franchise.
Personal
Banks has had a number of high-profile relationships with men, including director John Singleton, investment banker Craig Davis, basketballer Chris Webber, and Seal (who later married model Heidi Klum after Banks ended their relationship).
Banks has expressed her preference for a relationship with a 'normal guy' in order to escape the pressures of being together with another well-known celebrity and the media scrutiny that comes with it. She says she wants a man who "knows how to appreciate natural curves when he sees them."
On May 8 2006, Banks was named as one of the world's 100 most influential people in TIME magazine.
Filmography
- Supermodels in the Rainforest: Costa Rica (1995) as herself
- Higher Learning (1995) as Deja
- A Woman Like That (1997)
- Love Stinks (1999) as Holly Garnett
- Life-Size (2000) as Eve
- Love & Basketball (2000) as Kyra Kessler
- Coyote Ugly (2000) as Zoe
- Halloween: Resurrection (2002) as Nora Winston
- Eight Crazy Nights (2002) (voice) as Victoria's Secret Gown
TV Series/Movies
- Inferno (1992)
- The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1993) "You've Got to Be a Football Hero", "Take My Cousin... Please", "Fresh Prince After Dark", "Blood Is Thicker Than Mud", "Father of the Year", "All Guts, No Glory", "Where There's a Will, There's a Way" as Jackie Ames
- New York Undercover (1997) "Descell", "Hubris", "Outrage" as Natasha Claybourne
- The Hughleys (1999) "Sap and the Star" as Nicole
- The Apartment Complex (1999)
- Mad TV (2000) "Episode #5.25" as Katisha, "Episode #5.17"
- Felicity (2000) "A Good Egg", "Kissing Mr. Covington", "One Ball, Two Strikes" as Jane Scott
- Soul Food (2001) "Ordinary Pain" as Nina Joseph
- America's Next Top Model (2003-present) as Executive Producer, Host
- Marple: The Body in the Library (2004) as Executive Producer
- American Dreams (2004)
- Larceny (2004)
- All of Us (2004) "O Brother, Where Art Thou?" as Roni
- The Tyra Banks Show (2005-present) as Executive Producer, Host''
- The Price Is Right (February 2006) as a guest Barker's Beauty
Quotes
- "Believe it or not, I just really know how to pose well. It took me five years to learn what my best angles are." – Banks on posing.
- "I have an invested interest in all the girls. I take Adrianne's struggles to bed with me at night. Adrianne's problem was that she went to Europe to try to make it and nobody knew who she was there. So it was like starting over. But after a girl leaves the show it's really up to her to be aggressive and try to succeed." – Banks on America's Next Top Model Cycle 1 winner Adrianne Curry's post-show career.
- "She can go from white-lady Tyra to ghetto Tyra in 30 seconds flat. She'll be 'You're very pretty, but girl you need to learn to bring the bah-donka-donk!'" -Comedienne Kathy Griffin on Tyra's behavior.