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This is a tribute to the beautiful Gia Carangi.
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~ I just want to say a massive thank you to all the Gia fans out there that have posted comments, pictures and sent messages to me. Your kind words have been very much appreciated and i'm so glad you like the page. Thank you xx ~
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Gia Marie Carangi (29 January 1960 – 18 November 1986) was a fashion model during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Carangi, who was of Italian, Welsh and Irish ancestry, was a prototype of the Cindy Crawford "Supermodel" era, who also appeared on the covers of several fashion publications of her time.
Fashion magazines featuring covers of Carangi included Vogue, April 1, 1979; Vogue Paris, April 1979; American Vogue, August 1980; Vogue Paris, August 1980; Italian Vogue, January 1981; and several issues of Cosmopolitan between 1979 and 1982.
After becoming addicted to drugs, Carangi's modeling career rapidly declined. She later became infected with HIV and died in Philadelphia. Her death was not widely published and few people in the fashion industry knew of it. Carangi is thought to be one of the first famous women to die of AIDS
THE RISE OF GIA:
Gia, as she was known in modeling circles, moved from Philadelphia to New York City at the age of 18, and quickly rose to prominence. Carangi was the favorite model of many eminent fashion photographers, including Francesco Scavullo, Arthur Elgort, Richard Avedon, and Chris von Wangenheim, and she posed for photos in many countries. Her sexual orientation has been disputed: while some think she was completely lesbian, others point to the fact she had many relationships with men and call her bisexual.
Carangi was swept right into the fashion world. Considered a "rare gem", she never experienced the frequent rejection that most models face. Visually striking, she was a hit with prominent photographers.
“There’s only been maybe 3 girls in my whole career that have walked into my studio and I went ‘wow’. Gia was the last who came in here and I said ‘wow.’” (Francesco Scavullo)
By the end of 1978, at age eighteen, Carangi had already rocked the fashion world. However, she was extremely lonely and still looking for stability in her life.
Carangi was a regular at Studio 54 and the Mudd Club. "We loved it," fellow model Janice Dickinson would later recall. "It was a place for us. A place where we could be with the beautiful, do drugs, be out of our minds and it all seemed normal."
Carangi began to develop a heroin addiction. Kelly LeBrock, a top model at the time, remembered the time she spent with her: “Gia, when I was working with her, was still sort of in the beginning, still very fresh and lovely, I think drowning a little bit in her own success, but not any more screwed up than anybody else was in the set.”
In October 1978, Carangi did her first major shoot with top fashion photographer Chris von Wangenheim. Wangenheim had her pose nude behind a chain-link fence, with makeup assistant Sandy Linter. She immediately became infatuated with Linter. "She sent flowers to me, and she really sort of courted me, which I thought was adorable. Eventually I did go out with her. She’s the type of person at that time, and anyone who knew her at the time can tell you, if she showed up on your doorsteps and you opened the door and she got in your apartment she was there, that’s it.”
THE FALL:
On March 1 1980, Carangi's agent, Wilhelmina Cooper, died of lung cancer. Devastated, Carangi quickly turned to drugs to escape the harsh reality. Scavullo recalled a fashion shoot in the Caribbean when "She was crying, she couldn't find her drugs. I literally had to lay her down on her bed until she fell asleep."
By 1980, Carangi began having violent temper tantrums, walking out of photo shoots, and even falling asleep in front of the camera. In the November 1980 issue of Vogue, Carangi's track marks from heroin can be easily seen. For three weeks, she was signed with Eileen Ford, who soon dropped her because she had little tolerance for the young model's behavior.
In 1981, Carangi enrolled in a 21-day detox program, and started dating a college student, Elyssa Golden. The Carangi family and Gia's mother had suspected that Golden had a drug problem. With Golden by her side, Carangi's recovery failed. In 1981, she moved out of her mother's house and in with some friends, once again entering a detox program.
Her attempt to quit drugs was shattered when news that good friend and fashion photographer Chris von Wangenheim had died in a car accident. It is said that Carangi locked herself in a bathroom for hours, shooting heroin. In the fall of 1981, she looked far different from the top model she once had been. However, she was still determined to make a comeback in the fashion industry. She contacted Monique Pillard (who was largely responsible for Janice Dickinson's career), who was hesitant to sign her. “She was sitting in my chair and I said, ‘Gia, I want to represent you so badly and everything, but I hear a lot of negative stories about you.’ And I remember I asked her ‘well, why are you wearing such a long shirt? Can I see your arms?’ And she said ‘No!’ And she held on to her shirt and she said to me, ‘Do you want to represent me or not?’” (Monique Pillard for Gia's E! True Hollywood Story).
For her second time, Carangi received the harsh treatment she skipped last time. Nobody would book her. Desperate, she turned to her good friend Scavullo. She landed a Cosmopolitan cover, a gift from Scavullo. At that time, however, he also knew that the days of her modeling career were numbered. “It made me very sad, I had a tough time that day because I really wanted it to be her best cover and it wasn’t; it just couldn’t be. No matter how hard I tried it just couldn’t happen. That wonderful spirit she had was gone,” says Scavullo. Many believe that Carangi's arms were placed behind her back because of all the track marks, but Scavullo has denied the rumors. Shot in the winter of 1982, it would be her last cover.
In West Germany, a budding fashion industry was being created. Although seen as tacky by the designers from New York, Paris and Milan, the Germans were willing to pay 10,000 marks a week to shoot Carangi abroad. However, no one in the States would book her. In the spring of 1983, she was caught with drugs in a shoot in Africa. Her career was over.
After pressure from her family she entered a drug-rehabilitation program again at Eagleville Hospital. After six months, she was released from the program and moved back to Philadelphia, where she seemed to be getting her life back on track. She started taking classes in photography and cinematography. But, three months later, she had vanished once again, and had returned to Atlantic City, and started shooting heroin again. She slept with men for money and was raped on several occasions. She soon became sick with pneumonia, and her mother came and checked her into a hospital in Norristown, PA.

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Gia's Death

Gia was diagnosed with AIDS, then only a newly recognized disease. As her condition worsened, she was transferred to Philadelphia's Hahnemann University Hospital. Her mother stayed with her day and night, allowing virtually no visitors. By this time, AIDS had taken a toll on her once beautiful face. "She wanted to get the hell out of there, but I kept having to tell her, that even if we made it as far as the elevator, she would be dead," her mother recalled. "And that's when I knew. I knew she'd never be able to come home."
On November 18, 1986 at 10 a.m., 26-year-old Gia Carangi died.
Her funeral was held on November 21 at a small funeral home in Philadelphia. Some of her old friends from Philadelphia chose not to attend, most because of their anger at her mother for not allowing anyone to see her. Nobody from the fashion world attended. However, weeks later, Francesco Scavullo sent a Mass card when he heard the news. "We were hysterically crying in the studio when we heard," he recalled. "I loved her. I could cry now, just talking about her."

Aftermath

In April 1988, Kathleen Carangi appeared on the morning show AM Philadelphia, after they aired a segment about AIDS.

It was a move that shocked the family. Gia's father called Rochelle to let her know about the show.

"I had run into him in the casino before that," she recalled. "He just gave me a big hug and a kiss and he started crying.

He knew Kathleen. He knew she'd do anything to get on TV. She wanted to be the model, the superstar. Now she was doing it through Gia's death."
In 1986, Cindy Crawford was brought to New York by Monique Pillard. She was a sensation, but she knew little about the people who had paved the way for her exotic looks.

Had she never received the nickname Baby Gia, Crawford would have had no idea about either Dickinson or Carangi, who paved the way for exotic-looking models.

"But [I'm] more wholesome" Crawford pointed out, "She was wild. Completely opposite me. She'd leave a booking in the clothes to buy cigarettes and not come back for hours." After a long pause, Crawford stated, "She's not living anymore."
A 1993 biography by Stephen Fried and a biographical film, Gia, which debuted on HBO in 1998, brought her back to the public's attention. Angelina Jolie played Carangi in the movie.
In 1996, actress-screenwriter Zoë Tamerlis (a.k.a. Zoë Lund, Bad Lieutenant), herself a heroin addict who would die of drug-related causes in 1999, was commissioned to write a screenplay based upon Carangi's life.

This version of Gia was not produced, but after Tamerlis' death, footage of her discussing Carangi's life was incorporated into a documentary entitled The Self-Destruction of Gia.
Gia Carangi Interview

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~ Gia in the unusual role of femme fatale ~
~ Some of Gia's magazine adverts ~
An article from Philadelphia Magazine January 1980 by Maury Z. Levy
Two years ago, 17 year old Gia Carangi was pushing hoagies in South Philly. Today, she could pull a half million a year as New York's hottest fashion model. The stereo is screaming in constant concert with the sirens that scour the streets for sinners up where the midnight cowboys ride high, down where the pavements are broken with beggars' dreams, right at the low end of town, where Park Avenue splits into the neon lights of Broadway and the high rent low rises of positively Fourth Avenue. Gia Carangi, a very vulnerable woman of 19, is upstairs in one of those semi fancy apartment buildings slurping a can of Colt .45 malt liquor and talking about her new career, one that will make her one of the most famous faces in the world ...
Right now, except for the music, the apartment is nearly naked. The album is the latest by Blondie, an old New Wave group. The music screeches and the words bounce off the bare walls:
Die young and stay pretty, Deteriorate in your own time Leave only the best behind, You gotta live fast Cause it won't last ...
[Gia] is very pale, and in the dark light of the apartment, all you can see on her face is some bright red lipstick and some dark black eyeliner. Her skin is soft and very smooth, almost perfect like a 10 year old's. Her dark brown hair is a mane of coarse cuts and waves, shorter on the top and falling long over her shoulders. Her eyes glow. They are liquid brown. When she gets up off the tiger striped sofa, she is 5'8", but not overpowering. Underneath the tight stretch top with the leather piping, the one she bought at the thrift store on Eighth Street, it's hard to picture the sultry curves of that Lolita like body, the one that got so much response when it appeared on the cover of Cosmo in a bathing suit that didn't cover much of it. "It's all," Gia says, taking a deep breath and pushing the stretch top out far beyond where it had been, "it's all in the lungs. And I have very big lungs." She giggles and puts her long thin fingers over her mouth to keep from laughing.
In March, she will have been working in New York for two years. She had modeled just a couple times while she was still living full time in Philly. She had done a shooting or two for Gimbels. She had been discovered, at age 17, dancing one night at the DCA club, a mostly gay disco. She worked the small jobs at first, until about three months into her career when she met Arthur Elgort, who photographs for Bloomingdale's. She did a job for him and he turned her onto the Vogue people and the Cosmo people and to Scavullo and Avedon, and that was the beginning. "My mother was all for it," [Gia] says. "When she was younger, she always wanted to do it herself. My dad, though, I never got the right vibes from him. Maybe he didn't like the idea that they wanted me to give up my last name. But my mom, she was behind me from the start, even though she knew what a rough life it can be at first."
When she was on top, Whilhelmina [who is handling Gia's career] was making $100,000 a year. A top model can make four or five times that now. ... Of course, not everybody makes it that big. Less than 1% of all listed models rocket to stardom. ... What makes Gia so different, so special, so rich? First of all, she's a beautiful brunette in a world of blondes, Willy, a brunette herself, likes that. But mostly, she's got a fantastically pliable face. "She can be really sophisticated in one shooting," Willy says, "and be a real Lolita type in another. And this will give her a long life span."
The Hollywood Board [where Willy places her top models] is buzzing with calls for Gia as Gia bounces in to check her bookings. "You've really got us going," they tell her pointing to the piles of sheets full of prospective shootings. Gia will have to look at each one of those scrawls and okay it before anything's confirmed. She might cancel out because the shooing doesn't suit her or because she's just not in the mood. That happens. It's a very fickle business, and Gia can be a very fickle girl. Just last month, she canceled two whole weeks worth of bookings because she didn't like the way her hair was cut.
[Regarding the modeling, the actual work itself, Gia explains] "I do as little as I can in the apartment, just get washed and shave my arms and make sure that I have white underwear on." The rest is done at the studio. Gia just sits as other people pamper her. "All you really need, "Gia says, "is a good face and a good mind. And the mind might be the most important part. You gotta get into it. You gotta feel the guy who's shooting and know what he wants. And you've got to concentrate. If you don't, it's just not going to work. And that shows up in the pictures."
At the end of a long day's shooting, Gia usually tries to forget everything and just go home and flop out in bed. She realized early on that she wasn't a disco person. When she goes out at all, it's mainly to the Mudd Club. But sometimes it just doesn't pay to go out. So she'll just pop another top off a Colt .45, lay back on the tiger striped sofa and turn the stereo all way up. Gia smiles and shakes her shoulders as the last cut [from Blondie] blares its final refrain:
Every day you've got to wake up
And disappear behind your makeup,
Hey, I'm livin' in a magazine, Page to page in my teenage dream,
Cause I'm not livin' in the real world. No I'm not livin' in the real world
No more.
~ A Selection Of Gia's Christian Dior Adverts ~
~ Studio 54 September 1979 ~
~ Armani ~
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~From Gia's Last Cosmo Cover Appearance April 1982 by Lisa Interollo~
"A model has to create moods," says twenty two year old, Philadelphia born Gia, whose strikingly successful four year career already qualifies her as an expert on the subject. "You have to be careful not to get stuck in a mood - emotions have trends just like fashion."

With a wry half smile playing on her lips, Gia goes on to confess that getting into the spirit of a shoot hasn't always been easy. "How am I supposed to feel beautiful if they give me an ugly dress, plastic jewelry and an atrocious hairdo that's so tight it could cause brain damage?" she demands, her dark eyes flashing mischievously. "You have to be a magician and make it work," Gia continues. "Sometimes I've felt like running out of a shoot - I had to contain myself - but the pictures turned out nice. Often the idea that you don't look good is all in your head."
Imagining Gia not looking good is virtually impossible - her natural attractiveness awes: even in jeans, she turns almost as many heads as a presidential motorcade.

What beauty tips does this heavenly creature have for us mortals? To maintain her weight at 120 lbs., 5'11"

Gia eats mostly fruits and nuts - and fasts occasionally on juices. "Stay away from TV," she cautions. "It has non stop junk food ads and everything looks great."
After a shoot, Gia uses Diane von Furstenberg makeup remover, than dabs astringent to close pores. Not surprisingly being on magazine covers throughout the world brings problems as well as pleasures.

"Old friends look at you differently," Gia muses. "They don't see you as their sixth grade chum, they see you as an ideal of fashion." She pauses, lights a cigarette, then proceeds in a lower voice.

"It's hard to live up to that image. When I get out of work, I throw on a T shirt, jeans and my sneaks just to get back down to earth."

When not posing in front of the camera, she ponders life after modeling. "I want a job where I can be out of the limelight making things happen, possibly cinematography," Gia says. "Modeling is a short gig - unless you want to be jumping out of washing machines when you're thirty!"
Some rare Gia footage & interviews with friends & family
~ A fan video for Gia contains rare photo's ~
~ Versace & Stember ~

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A fan video for Gia

I found this video on Youtube, it actually contains quite a few pictures i've never seen before so i thought you might like it!  (provided by Jasbinder86)...
Posted by x A Tribute To Gia x on Fri, 25 May 2007 11:14:00 PST

~ Blondie Atomic ~ Can you spot Gia?

Blondie Atomic...
Posted by x A Tribute To Gia x on Sat, 21 Apr 2007 02:12:00 PST