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"It was debated when I hit the headlines and I always came out and said that I was very healthy, which I was, and always ate, which I do. I love my food. I just come from a lineage. My dad was very slim, so it's kind of in the genes really," she said. In today's crowded model marketplace, where competition is far more fierce than when Twiggy came up, girls have died as a result of starvation. She thinks the publishers of fashion magazines, booking agents, modeling agencies and designers all share responsibility. "They ask for these girls. It's gotta stop. I don't know how you go about it, so the debate goes on," she said. "The agencies have to protect these girls." Twiggy's interest in fashion design was stronger than modeling ever was. "I didn't plan to be a model. I thought the world had gone stark raving mad," she said. "I was used to being teased at school for being so skinny and I thought I was really funny looking, but I was obsessed with clothes." She retired from modeling in 1970 after four years, joking at the time: "You can't be a clothes hanger for your entire life." She moved on to stage, films, TV and singing, earning two Golden Globes and a Tony nomination. The ultra-skinny look remains dominant in fashion. "Twiggy will be an icon until her dying day and beyond," film director and writer Ken Russell, who cast her as Polly Browne in a musical adaptation of "The Boy Friend," told The Biography Channel in 2007. Twiggy spent four seasons as a judge on "America's Next Top Model." There was also a memoir, a book on looking good at 40 and a return to modeling in 2005 for the British department store chain Marks & Spencer. And there was her daughter, now 31-year-old Carly, a textile designer for Stella McCartney who made a scarf in a repeated hummingbird motif for her mother's HSN line that launches April 3. Twiggy cites teen innocence and solid supervision for not succumbing to the more destructive aspects of the era that made her famous. "My dad was always a very strong presence in my life. He instilled a kind of being down to earth, being sensible, especially when this whole thing happened to me," she said. How does she see it now, looking back over the last 44 years? "It was just so weird," she said. "I was this funny little kid from working-class London. It could have gone horribly wrong."
[Associated
Press;
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