Monday, November 30, 2009

Playing favorites

Whether we care to admit it or not, it is nearly impossible not to play favorites in life. Teachers have their favorite students, mothers have their favorite children (right, mom?) and even dogs have their favorite toy. It’s just a fact of life. As for me, I have a lot of favorite things, places and people. Here’s where I grossly lack impartiality:





• Favorite drink: coffee. At home: Starbucks Breakfast Blend. On the go: Tim Horton’s Hazelnut coffee.







• Favorite candy: candy corn. It’s the only candy I eat really, but the fact that I completely gorge myself each year makes up for that very fact. It’s a good thing I can readily access this sugar and food coloring bonanza just once a year, otherwise I fear my skin might turn orange.





• Favorite day: Saturday. On no uncertain terms am I a morning person, but I really, really love Saturday mornings. My personal heaven: wearing pajamas, drinking coffee, snuggling with the dog and reading the newspaper.

• Favorite store: Target. I love the prices, the atmosphere and the general awesomeness of this mega retailer. I also love that I walk past hotdogs, popcorn and Slush Puppies on my way to the clothing section.









• Favorite artistic masterpiece: “The Singing Butler” by Jack Vettriano. If you’ve never seen it, you must. It’s beautiful and breathtaking and I have the perfect spot for it in on a blank wall in my home. Several years ago, I found an oversized reproduction of this painting at a Kirkland’s outlet store for a mere $50 and passed it up. I’ve rued that day ever since.








• Favorite flower: Blue hydrangeas. See my oversized wedding bouquet: ‘nuff said.










• Favorite wine: Blue Nun QUALITÄTSWEIN. No, I do not have any idea how to pronounce that. You’ll find it in the “German” section of the wine store in a lovely blue bottle with a nun holding a basket on the front. No, that’s not a joke. It’s sweet, refreshing and costs roughly $7.



Wednesday, November 25, 2009

A sucker is born...

Living "out in the country" as we do, you tend to have limited options when it comes to television and Internet access. As for our family, we're stuck with my favorite outdoor decoration, a satellite dish. Make that two satellite dishes, to be exact. Don't get me wrong, I love the modern invention and those hardworking men and women who make sure something is orbiting the earth at all times, but sometimes it drives me crazy.
I'm willing to bet that those satellite people at {Company name edited for fear of removal of services and lack of clear picture} love us. I mean, we shell out some serious dough to be contributing members of modern society. Then, we have our uncontrollable obsessions with shows like Curb Your Enthusiasm that appear only on networks that cost $15 extra each month.

Last month, my better half and I bit the bullet and ordered this premium channel, shelling out a mere (additional) $15 a month to watch the Seinfeld reunion on said beloved show. It was beautiful, it was hilarious and now it's over. 

Show's over? Well, then we don't need HBO anymore. It's all automated (I didn't even have to talk to a real person to sign up for HBO!) so I'll just give that crazy machine with the lady voice that makes me want to scream and tell her to cancel it. Right? Wrong.

Crazy machine with the lady voice: "Please tell me what you'd like to do today."
Me: "CANCEL HBO!!" (that's me screaming so she can understand me)
Crazy: "I'm sorry, I didn't understand you. Did you say you want to cancel HBO."
Me: "I did."
Crazy: "I'm sorry I didn't understand you. Please use commands like, 'Yes' and 'No' "
Me: "YES YES YES YES YES YES"
Crazy: "I understand. You want to cancel HBO. I'll transfer you to a helpful associate."
Me: "ARG."

After explaining to another lady (this one not a robot with a lady voice) that I want to cancel HBO, she reacted as though I told her my dog was just hit by a car. "OH NO! Awww, is something wrong?" said said like we were childhood pals.

Sorry, but that's misuse of the term "AWWWW" when I tell you I don't want HBO anymore, sister. She then wanted to be sure, for good measure, that I realized how many exciting boxing matches and award-winning documentaries were on HBO.

Wait, what? What am I doing? Boxing AND documentaries--I like those things. Sweaty men and informational programs are the height of my intellectual development. Then, as if she was reading from a script, she followed it up with "What can I do to make you change your mind?" I said, "Give me free HBO." That, I'm afraid was on her script and after stuttering a bit she said, "How does $5 off a month sound?"

That my dear, does not sound like free HBO. After that, her script ran out and she gave into my will. Good thing I don't fall for marketing ploys and faux sympathy.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Leaving your mark


I've posted on this topic before, but it never fails to intrigue me: scars. There's just something beautiful about the marks left on our body from truly living and experiencing life. Scars are proof that we've lived and survived, and that's something amazing. I was again reminded of this topic after reading the article below by Padma Lakshmi, host of Bravo's Top Chef and a former model. She has a very noticeable, sizeable scar running down her right arm and does not cover or hide it from the world, which is quite amazing. See her article from the April, 2001 issue of Vogue below and prepare to be amazed.

Almost flawless


by Padma Lakshmi

Can a terrible scar suddenly become a thing of beauty?

It depends, discovers Padma Lakshmi, on who's looking at it.

The accident happened on a Sunday afternoon filled with sunshine. I was fourteen years old and on my way back with my parents from a Hindu temple in Malibu. The traffic was quite heavy for a Sunday. I remember thinking how strange that was. Then there was a loud bang, and I looked out the windshield and saw nothing but the prettiest blue sky. I thought I was dreaming because I'd been nodding off, but then I realized we were part of that blue sky. Our red Ford Mercury sedan was airborne. Flying in a car felt like an exhilarating hallucination, an unbelievable ride that oddly remains one of the most beautiful images in my memory.

We were in the air for what seemed like a very long time, flying off the freeway and 40 feet down an embankment. We hit a tree dead-on and it stopped our fall. Blood, glass, dirt, and leaves were everywhere. We seemed to have been buried alive. The tree trunk had fallen directly on top of our car. I remained conscious, covered in glass, for the 40 minutes it took for the paramedics and firelighters to get through the traffic. They used the "jaws of life"—giant metal upfront cutters—to open the car roof like a sardine can. A helicopter landed in the middle of the highway to take my parents away. An ambulance carried me to the hospital. I finally passed out. When Iwoke up hours later, I had tubes coming out of several places in my body. My right arm had been shattered and my right hip had been fractured. After surgery, I regained the use of both of them but was left with a long scar on my arm. It was half an inch wide and seven inches long. I wished I’d had a conversation with the doctor and asked him to cut on the underside of the arm instead, where the scar would have been hidden. Now it was too late. But my parents and I had been fortunate. We all survived.

When I first got the scar, I was self-conscious about it. I perfected a casual pose that hid it under my left hand and thumb when my arms were crossed. But I also knew my scar was a symbol of my survival. The surgery that put it there had saved my arm. After nearly a year of physical therapy in the mornings before high school, I could once again stir pasta, dance, embrace others, throw a Frisbee or football and, in countless other ways, be a normal American teenager.

Two months before the accident, my mother and I had met a photographer who begged her to allow him to take photos of me for his book. Grudgingly, my mother had held the light reflector for him under the Santa Monica pier. But she disapproved of what was going on. After all, I was only fourteen. The photographer promised my mother not to show the pictures to any modeling agency unless she agreed. A year after the accident, we stumbled on the pictures in a drawer. Now that I had a caterpillar of scarred skin crawling down my arm, it seemed ridiculous to imagine that any agency would be interested in such an imperfect specimen. My mother, I felt, was secretly relieved.

I went to college on the East Coast. I had always stood out for my height, my skin color, my very long hair. But now, all people noticed was the scar. "It's such a shame," they would say. "She's so pretty, she could have modeled." It angered me that people saw me as a ruined beauty. Inside, I felt I was pretty. But while I loved fashion—I knew about everything from Elsa Schiaparelli and Chanel to Halston andJohn Galliano—I never thought I was pretty enough to model, even without my scar. The closest I had come to seeing someone like myself in a magazine was Yasmeen Ghauri on a Cosmopolitan cover in a pink satin dress. Still, I envied those women and kept a secret list of photographers I dreamed of working with: Steven Meisel, Irving Penn, Peter Lindbergh, and, of course, Annie Leibovitz, all the while pretending the scar didn't matter. I was concentrating on higher things.

Then I was cast in a college play. The director worried that my scar might be distracting, so someone in the theater department who was good with makeup offered to help. Night after night, she covered the scar with pancake makeup and powder. Onstage, I was liberated. I felt like another person: not just in character but as another me, who didn't have a scar. By the end of the run, I had learned to put the makeup on myself.

In the last semester of my senior year, I went to study in Spain and was "discovered." An agent spotted me in a Madrid bar (I was wearing a long-sleeved white shirt) and asked if I'd ever thought of modeling. "No," I said, "I'm in college." As if that made me superior. "We have many college girls who model part-time," he answered. The next day my friend Santiago, who was determined to meet models through me, tricked me into going into the model agency under the pretext of saying hello to a friend. At the agency, they insisted on measuring, weighing, poking, and prodding me until I couldn't stand it anymore." I have a scar," I announced. No one was listening. "A very big scar," I boomed. I pulled up the sleeve of my turtleneck and revealed my secret. Then there was an interminable silence. Then Josette, the owner of the agency, said, “Have you seen a doctor about that?”

I felt awful and hated Santiago for taking me there. The phone rang. Josette answered it, then asked Santiago something in Spanish. "We're going to Elle magazine!” he cried out. After that, I did jobs where I wore winter clothes or used makeup on my arm. In one case the client even sprang for retouching. By the end of the summer, an Italian agent paid for my ticket to Milan. My first year in Italy, I got modest work as a fitting model for Gianfranco Ferre, Prada, and a catalog or two, but nothing more. Then I went to see Helmut Newton's agent, who took Polaroids of me in my undergarments. I had been modeling for a year and was immune to the humiliation of being photographed in my underwear. But I hated such appointments because I was very sensitive about my scar, which had become a professional problem. I knew I would get only so far with this aesthetic handicap. (Also, the waif phenomenon was in full swing—and I was a voluptuous 34C-24-34.) As I undressed behind a partition, I told the agent about the scar. "Don't worry, Helmut likes scars," he said. Soon afterward, my booker told me Newton wanted me for a privately commissioned photo, but that it involved full nudity. I agreed, but a few days before the shoot I began feeling more and more anxious. I had never posed completely nude, and two days before the appointment I did something I've never done since. I canceled the job. Needless to say, my agent was furious.

That week I made an appointment to undergo chemical dermabrasion to take some of the dark pigment out of the scar. I was frightened. A doctor in Los Angeles had once stuck a six-inch needle under the surface of the scar and shot it with cortisone. This made the scar flat but left me terrorized. In Milan, another doctor treated it, inch by inch. As anyone who has had dermabrasion will tell you, it's excruciatingly painful. I had never known such agony, even in the car accident itself. But it actually worked. The scar peeled to a neutral color quite close to the rest of my arm. This would be much easier to cover.

Then a miraculous thing happened. Helmut wanted to book me again, for a Lavaz-za calendar (with only partial nudity). I said yes. When I arrived at the shoot, I found that one of my closest friends, Antonio Gazzola, had been booked as the makeup artist. His presence was a good omen. In those early days, he was somehow always there at the right moment. Backstage, he used to whisper to me in Italian that I was just as beautiful as all the other models and that my scar made me special. He knew how anxious I was about the scar and would tell stylists they didn't have to check the sleeves on my rack, because he would make it disappear. Of course they always gave me the clothes with long sleeves.

When Antonio was done, Helmut came to say hello. He treated me calmly and comfortably, as a grandfather might. I began to feel at ease in my own skin; but when he caught a glimpse of my arm, he shrieked, "What have you done?" "Didn't they tell you about my scar?" I began to panic. "Yes, yes," he answered, "but why have you erased a part of it? You've ruined the beauty of it. Antonio, get your paints out and restore that mark to what it was."

I couldn't believe it. I felt like a queen. I can still remember Antonio smiling with a brush between his teeth as he touched up the scar, adding wine-colored lipstick to the lightened areas. "Crazy business," he murmured under his breath. He knew what I didn't: When the designers found out I had shot with Helmut because of my scar, not in spite of it, they would all want to use me. Already models with tattoos and piercings were showing up in American ads for Calvin Klein, and Europe often followed America's lead. Helmut would give everyone in Milan and Paris the courage to use me without camouflaging my scar, Antonio said.

He was right. I was soon booked for an eighteen-page shoot for Italian Elle. Then I shot a campaign with Aldo Fallai and was booked for many shows in Paris, from Ungaro to Sonia Rykiel. At the shows they still checked my sleeves—but now they were checking to make sure the sleeves were short, so that everyone would know who I was under all that makeup. Because I spoke Italian, I was a favorite of the news crews that covered the shows for the style-conscious Italian media. Eventually, RAI television asked me to join the cast of Domenica In, the biggest show on Italian television. I asked the director about showing my scar on TV. "Everyone knows that Padma has a scar," he said. "Don't cover it up."

In my career as an actress, the scar is no longer an issue. I cover it when necessary, but I prefer not to, especially in my private life. I love my scar. It is so much a part of me. I’m not sure I would remove it even if a doctor could wave a magic wand and delete it from my arm. The scar has singled me out and made me who I am. “Everyone knows that Padma has a scar." Now I know what Antonio whispered to me is true. The scar does make me special. I've started seeing my body as a map of my life. I can tell a story about every imprint life has made on my skin: the mosquito bites on my back from when I slept under the Sardinian sun the summer I first fell in love, the scrapes on my leg from the rocks in the Cuban sea during the filming of my first movie. In her introduction to Women, by Annie Leibovitz, Susan Sontag asks, "A photograph is not an opinion. Or is it?" I believe it most certainly is. A photograph can change the way you look at yourself, though it's more complicated than that. Perhaps it was under the right light, or the right lens, that I really saw myself for the first time. I have Helmut Newton to thank for that. People have told me that my scar makes me seem more approachable, more vulnerable; that it inspires a certain tenderness. Ironically, the greatest gift fashion has given me is the courage to expose what is most vulnerable, to be proud of my body. Including my scar.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

I forgive you

“Not forgiving someone is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.” –Anonymous


I’ve been angry, upset and feeling quite defeated lately. Some days, it feels like I’m insanely running in circles and hoping that on my next pass things will be completely different. I don’t know why I’m angry and I don’t know who I’m angry at, that’s what makes it so crazy. I spend my days feeling like I just lost an important fight and all that’s left for me to do is fold into a ball and give up.

I haven’t always felt like this. No, this feeling just crept up; quietly consumed me and I became its host, like some terrible parasite. “Those people” I tell myself, they are the ones to blame. They’re the ones who refuse to support us, who assume we’re liars and pray each night for us to fail. It’s them I am so angry at; they’re the ones who are ruining my existence. It’s they who are responsible for all the zits on my face and every canker sore in my mouth. THEY did this to ME.

It’s a horrible thing, blaming your misery on someone else; someone whose name you don’t even know, whose face you couldn’t pick out of a crowd. The fact is, they have nothing to do with how I feel. The question I fret over now is, when did I let them in? What day was it when I decided that I was going to let them hurt me? Was it a warm, sunny Tuesday or a cold, miserable Friday? Maybe they crept upon me while I was sleeping, defenseless and calm, silently laughing as they invaded my head. When did I become so weak?

On an incredibly long (and today, painful) run yesterday, it dawned on me: it’s not about me. These people, the ones that hate me; it’s not me they hate. It’s them—I’m just an easier target. I knew what I had to do, I knew there was only one way that I was going to stop being so damn angry; I was going to forgive them. I was going to tell them that I forgive their ignorance, their hatred, their lacking ability to see the future and I was going to stop letting them make my wonderful life completely miserable. They aren't sorry, but I forgive them.

Of all the things in this world I fear, losing someone I love to a tragedy is the most severe I can imagine. Whether it be a drunk driver or a home invasion, my greatest fear, my most severe horror, would be to suddenly lose a loved one. I can’t imagine the pain, fear and anger those left behind feel when something like that happens. How could they not hate the person who ripped a hole in their still-beating heart, those poor people who are left behind to pick up the pieces? Nothing is more amazing to me than when those who survived, those who are left with the pain of losing someone they love, forgive the person who did this to them. They look them in the eye, forgive them and only then can they move on with their lives.

If I don’t do this one thing for myself, I realized, I would spend the rest of my life being no better than those I once hated. For that, I think I owe myself an apology.

What I know for sure

Ellen DeGeneres was on Oprah yesterday and I was touched by how honest, self-depreciating and hilarious she truly is. It's refreshing to see someone who is so wildly successful be so very humble and down to earth. In the December issue of O magazine, she wrote Oprah's "What I know for sure" column, it's both touching and quite funny:

What Ellen DeGeneres Knows for Sure


(She Thinks)

1. My home address. But I'm not printing it here. Nice try, Oprah.

2. I know that "personality can open doors, but only character can keep them open." And I know that for sure because I read it on the sign at the dry cleaner's.

3. I forgot what number 3 is.

4. Sometimes I forget things.

5. I'm sure I'm good at making lists.

By the way, I should point out that there are things I know for sure and things I don't know for sure. Also, there are things I wish I never knew. Like did you ever see that Primetime report about hotel rooms and what's on the bedspreads? Exactly.

Actually, there's nothing I know for sure because I know for sure that things change.

For a long time I thought I knew for sure who I was. I grew up in New Orleans and became a comedian. And there was everything that came along with that. The nightclubs. The smoking. The drinking. Then I turned 13.

While I was doing stand-up, I thought I knew for sure that success meant getting everyone to like me. So I became whoever I thought people wanted me to be. I'd say yes when I wanted to say no, and I even wore a few dresses. And it worked. I got my own sitcom.

The show was very successful. I had everything I'd hoped for, but I wasn't being myself. So I decided to be honest about who I was. It was strange: The people who loved me for being funny suddenly didn't like me for being…me.

I had a really tough time for a few years. My show was gone. My phone wasn't ringing. There wasn't one job offer. And at that point, I thought I knew for sure that I wouldn't work in Hollywood again.

Eventually, I decided to go back to how I started my career, and I wrote an HBO special. Then I got my talk show. And look at me now…I'm on the cover of O. And that's the highest honor we give in this country.

I know for sure I would never change any of the hard times I went through in my life. Because it was in those times that I grew the most and gained the most perspective.

It's our challenges and obstacles that give us layers of depth and make us interesting. Are they fun when they happen? No. But they are what make us unique. And that's what I know for sure…I think.