Daily Dispatch

Paris ponders motherhood

Reality TV queen cum entreprene­ur set for ‘next step’

- By CELIA WALDEN

“CAN you imagine how crazy things would have been if social media had existed back then,” muses Paris Hilton.

By “back then” she means the early Noughties, when her wardrobe organiser was a young nobody named Kim Kardashian.

Arguably the godmother of reality television, Hilton soared to fame off the back of her family name, a cult TV show, her in-yourface sexuality and her own formidable powers of self-promotion. If it sounds familiar, that’s because it has become so in her wake.

Kim, who has since turned personal branding into an art-form, clearly learnt from the best.

For before Keeping Up With the Kardashian­s , the reality TV show that debuted in 2007 and became a cultural phenomenon, there was The Simple Life, the reality show starring Hilton and her friend, Nicole Richie, which ran from 2003 to 2007.

There was also an infamous sex tape that leaked online around the time The Simple Life began (which Paris has lamented she will forever be judged by). By a strange coincidenc­e, a sex tape of Kardashian was made public in 2007, not long before her reality show started.

The difference in their routes to fame, as Hilton, 36, points out, is that: “I did it all on my own” – without the aid of Instagram, Twitter or any other of the social media that has since become so key when turning yourself into a brand.

The great-granddaugh­ter of hotelier Conrad Hilton is speaking to me on the phone from Ibiza, where she is doing a summer residency as a DJ at Amnesia nightclub for the fifth year running.

“I [also] had no manager, publicist or stylist,” she says.

“Now all kids need to sell themselves is a phone. But I do like that it gives people coming from obscurity a chance to make a name for themselves.

“And although I’ve seen a lot of people come and go, there are some I know will always stick around.”

I’m guessing Hilton counts herself as one of those. And she should. Kardashian may have gone on to dwarf her mentor in Instagram and Twitter followers (54.6 million to Hilton’s 15.7 million), but while we were all laughing at the socialite’s caricature of rich-kid laziness and excess, Hilton was busy building an insanely profitable brand, encompassi­ng property (there are now three Paris Hilton apartment complexes and 44 Paris Hilton stores worldwide), fragrances (she has just released her 23rd perfume, Rosé Rush, and makes more than $10-million a year in product sales), and event-hosting. (Hilton is one of the highestpai­d celebrity DJs in the world). She’s also about to release a single, Summer Reign, and has a new TV project in the works.

“I’m not allowed to say much about it yet, but it’s a very innovative idea – and not a reality TV show,” she insists.

“I haven’t watched any reality shows since Here Comes Honey Boo Boo [an American series that ran from 2012 to 2014], because it’s all so scripted and fake now, which isn’t interestin­g to me.”

It’s easy to see this as a dig at the Kardashian­s, but Hilton seems genuinely pleased about her old friend’s success. She also shrugs off any part she played in the making of one of the most famous women in the world.

“Kim never asked me for advice: our friendship wasn’t like that. We were always together experienci­ng life, and anyway that whole family are geniuses when it comes to building a brand. They never needed any advice; they know exactly what they’re doing.”

Having struggled with “the haters” early on in her career – “at this point, I can’t think of anything you could say that would really hurt me any more” – Hilton is in awe of how childhood friend Ivanka Trump is dealing with the hostility she gets as the daughter of US President Donald Trump.

“She must be going through such a lot right now. I can’t even imagine the pressure. But she’s doing so well and she’s such a savvy businesswo­man and a great mother.”

Hilton recently offered a public apology for suggesting last year that the women who have made sexual harassment allegation­s against President Trump were just courting attention and fame.

She admires Kardashian’s defiance, too. “I love how she deals with all those trolls. Kim’s a brilliant woman. She’s super-confident and she doesn’t worry about what anyone says about her, which I think is empowering to other women.”

Both work on the basis that being underestim­ated is quite helpful. “I honestly love it when people underestim­ate me,” Hilton says, “because then you get to prove them wrong. And you can learn a lot from somebody when they think you don’t know what’s going on. So I love playing that ditzy character, because while people are thinking I have no clue, I’m actually figuring out everything about them.”

When I tell Hilton how funny it is to see her in this matriarcha­l role – for so long she seemed to epitomise carefree youth, and she still looks about 20 – she grows serious.

“I can’t wait to start a family. I’m so excited about it. I’ve had so much fun in my life but now that I’ve built this incredible business and I’m really in love, I’m ready for the next step.”

The man with whom she wants to take that step is her boyfriend, Chris Zylka, a 32-year-old actor who stars in US TV drama series The Leftovers.

“We’ve only been together nine months but it feels like 10 lifetimes. He’s really changed my life,” she says.

“I’m going to be a very hands-on, very strict mum. My parents [socialite Kathy Hilton and businessma­n Richard Hilton] were never very strict, but when I see the way young girls go out [and party] nowadays, it makes me really scared. I don’t want my kids doing that.” — The Daily Telegraph

 ??  ?? ON MY OWN: Paris Hilton is proving her ‘ditzy blonde’ critics wrong
ON MY OWN: Paris Hilton is proving her ‘ditzy blonde’ critics wrong

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa