Rita Ora has a plan. The fashion (Roberto Cavalli) and beauty (Rimmel London) endorsements, clothing line with Adidas Originals, campaign with Coca-Cola, performing a song (Grateful) at the Oscars, and appearing as a judge on this year’s X Factor, are all testimony that the plan is working. ‘Oh, it is in full effect. We’re these conniving Kosovan hungry bitches,’ Ora (born Sahatçiu) says of herself and her older sister, Elena Sahatçiu, who is also her manager. ‘I knew I was going to do things my way.’
The London-based 24-year-old insists the plan is a secret, but that it has been nearly ten years in the making. There was admission to the Sylvia Young Theatre School in Marylebone by improvising an ‘uncomfortably sexual’ dance to Britney Spears’ I’m A Slave 4 U as an 11-year-old (before realising she hated musical theatre while attending school for musical theatre). There was singing torch songs by Janis Joplin, Carole King and Destiny’s Child in her father’s pub, the Queens Arms, when she was 14. There was recording her first song at the local youth centre on a council estate in Landbroke Grove. There was sneaking out to warehouse raves in east London, playing the house diva behind the turntables while her parents thought she was at a sleepover. ‘I would rip my T-shirts and be really punk and not clean. And I would have blonde hair, really dark eyebrows, red lipstick and lots of fake rings that made my fingers go green. I wouldn’t be smelling that great,’ Ora says. ‘I feel like I lived a lot when I shouldn’t have.’ She found her voice in those clubs and at her dad’s pub, the soulful alto, the easy glissando that makes Auto-Tuning superfluous.
Denne historien er fra October 2015-utgaven av Marie Claire - UK.
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Denne historien er fra October 2015-utgaven av Marie Claire - UK.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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