Naomi Campbell (born May 22, 1970, London, England) is a British fashion model and actress best known as one of the elite “supermodels” who dominated the fashion industry in the 1980s and ’90s. She was the first Black model to appear on the cover of many luxury fashion magazines. She is also known for her high-profile legal entanglements and philanthropy, which included the founding of the charitable organization Fashion for Relief, which is dedicated to supporting those who have been affected by humanitarian crises worldwide.
Naomi Campbell Early life and career
The daughter of Jamaican-born dancer Valerie Morris-Campbell, Campbell studied dance and theatre while growing up in London and Rome. By her early teens she had appeared in videos with musical artists Bob Marley and the Wailers and Culture Club, and she had acted in several children’s television shows in Britain. When she was 15 years old, she was discovered by a modeling scout, and she signed with the Synchro modeling agency. The following year she landed her first major modeling gig for the British edition of Elle magazine. Within the next few years, she became the first Black model to be featured on the cover of many prominent Western magazines, including the British and French editions of Vogue (December 1987 and August 1988, respectively) and Time (September 1991).
Personal life and later career
Naomi Campbell
Naomi CampbellNaomi Campbell walking the runway at a Fashion for Relief show on September 16, 2005, in New York City.
By the end of the 1980s, Campbell had become well known as one of a select group of models, called supermodels, who earned multimillion-dollar incomes and were famous beyond the fashion world. She has appeared on the cover of more than 500 magazines and modeled on the runway and in advertising campaigns for many of the world’s top fashion designers and brands, including Versace, Ralph Lauren, Vivienne Westwood, Chanel, and Yves Saint Laurent. Despite her success, she was often the only Black model featured alongside other models.
Campbell’s appearance in British singer George Michael’s “Freedom! ’90” music video (1990) with fellow supermodels Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, and Christy Turlington was a defining moment in 1990s pop culture. Campbell also posed in Madonna’s controversial book Sex and her “Erotica” music video, both released in 1992. Campbell garnered minor roles and guest appearances on the television shows The Cosby Show (1988), The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1990), and Absolutely Fabulous (1995), and she appeared in the films Ready to Wear (1994), Miami Rhapsody (1995), To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar (1995), and Girl 6 (1996).
She was often in the news for various legal troubles in the 2000s. She sued the British tabloid newspaper The Mirror in 2002 for invasion of privacy for publishing photos of her leaving a Narcotics Anonymous meeting. (Narcotics Anonymous offers support to individuals struggling with drug addiction.) She ultimately won the lawsuit in 2004 after several appeals. Other legal issues involved numerous assault charges and verbal abuse claims brought against her by employees. In an “air rage” incident in 2008, she was accused of assaulting two police officers on a flight and was subsequently ordered to perform community service.
Her philanthropy began in earnest in 1998, with the production of a fashion show in South Africa to benefit the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund. Campbell founded Fashion for Relief, a charity that raises money for victims of global disasters and life-threatening diseases, in 2005. Later, she formed the Diversity Coalition with model Iman and modeling agent Bethann Hardison in 2013 to raise awareness about racism in the fashion industry and demand more diverse representation in runway modeling.
Campbell continued to act throughout her career, with recurring roles in the television shows American Horror Story (2015), Empire (2015–16), and Star (2017–18). She developed a modeling competition reality show, The Face, in 2013. Additionally, she was named a contributing editor for the British edition of Vogue in 2017. She received a Fashion Icon Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America in 2018 as well as from the British Fashion Council in 2019. Her other notable projects include an album of pop and rhythm and blues songs called babywoman (1994) and the novel Swan (1994), which was largely ghostwritten. She also released a line of perfumes for women in 1999 and launched the lifestyle brand and event planning company NC Connect in 2002.