Four decades ago, Josie Borain's androgynous beauty catapulted her from suburbia to international fame.
On billboards, she strode across Times Square and towered above Piccadilly Circus. Last year, she celebrated her 60th birthday, a year after launching her third act by quitting Cape Town for life in a rural hamlet. Vermaaklikheid is 300 km from Cape Town and light years from the stratosphere Josie once occupied when she was one of the most photographed and highly paid women in the world.
One of the first things you intuit about her is that she's cleareyed about what really matters in life. Blinding glamour aside, she's a woman who has had her portion of heartache and anxiety. Married and widowed by 25; remarried and divorced in her 40s; parent to three children; being financially selfreliant... It can't all have been one perfectly lit bokeh close-up. But she's far too polite to publicly bewail her struggles or, for that matter, to brandish her significant triumphs.
Being spotted by an agent at 18 was a springboard, but her achievements have been the result of her own talent, work ethic and good financial hygiene.
At 17, after leaving school in Johannesburg without matric, Josie followed her boyfriend to Cape Town, where she took up modelling to pay the bills while hoping to land a job in fashion. That never happened, because by 21 she was Calvin Klein's muse at a time when the designer's star dominated the galaxy. With Josie headlining a new androgynous look, the brand's famous billboard campaigns featured smouldering imagery that scandalised authorities and electrified audiences. Even in today's digital era, scoring a CK billboard can supersize a model's career. In the 1980s that power was hypersonic.
This story is from the March/April 2024 edition of Fairlady.
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This story is from the March/April 2024 edition of Fairlady.
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