Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

COMING OUT OF THE SHADOWS

Linda Evangelist­a left the spotlight after a cosmetic procedure. Now she says she’s done hiding

- MARÍA LUISA PAÚL

HER name was synonymous with ’90s glamour. Her face – likened to Sophia Loren’s – splashed across magazines. Her tall and lithe silhouette featured on every catwalk. But supermodel Linda Evangelist­a’s life took a turn in 2015, almost vanishing completely from the spotlight.

Last September, Evangelist­a explained the reason for her retreat through a statement on Instagram, saying a cosmetic treatment had left her “permanentl­y deformed” and “brutally disfigured”.

After years in the shadows, the Canadian model – known for walking the runways for the likes of Gianni Versace and Thierry Mugler – sat down with People magazine for her first public photo shoot since the procedure.

Now 56, she said she was done hiding her body.

“I loved being up on the catwalk. Now I dread running into someone I know,” she told the magazine in the interview published on Wednesday. “I can’t live like this anymore, in hiding and shame. I just couldn’t live in this pain any longer.”

Back in 2015, Evangelist­a tried Zeltiq’s CoolSculpt­ing – a Food and Drug Administra­tion-approved non-invasive procedure that shrinks fat cells by freezing them. According to a lawsuit she filed in September against Zeltiq Aesthetics, Evangelist­a went to seven sessions – targeting her chin, thighs, back and bra area – from August 2015 to February 2016.

After a few months, the model realised that not only was the procedure not working, but it “did the opposite of what it promised. It increased, not decreased, my fat cells and left me permanentl­y deformed even after undergoing two painful, unsuccessf­ul, corrective surgeries”, Evangelist­a said.

Evangelist­a told People that she began noticing protrusion­s in the areas she was treating. Eventually they grew, hardened and then turned numb.

Desperate to solve the problem, the model turned to dieting and exercising – to no avail.

“I tried to fix it myself, thinking I was doing something wrong,” she said. “I got to where I wasn’t eating at all. I thought I was losing my mind.”

Her doctor told her she had developed paradoxica­l adipose hyperplasi­a, or PAH – a rare side effect in which the body produces new fat cells to replace cells that are frozen by CoolSculpt­ing.

According to a July study published in the Aesthetic Surgery Journal, the risk of PAH in those undergoing the treatment is about 1 in 2 000 treatment cycles. In 2014, the first study written about the condition found that it affected 1 in 20 000 patients.

“The disparity between incidence rates found within the literature indicates that PAH is likely being under-reported and misdiagnos­ed,” the researcher­s wrote.

According to Evangelist­a, the doctor who diagnosed her with PAH contacted Zeltiq, which offered to pay for liposuctio­n treatment. However, she alleges that the company offered the corrective surgery free of charge but on the condition that she signed a confidenti­ality agreement.

Declining to do so, she said she paid for the two liposuctio­n rounds herself – procedures she deemed “painful” and “unsuccessf­ul” in her September Instagram post.

Now Evangelist­a is seeking compensato­ry damages of $50 million (about R751m).

Medical technology company Allergan Aesthetics, which acquired Zeltiq in 2017, referred The Washington Post’s request for comment to CoolSculpt­ing’s safety informatio­n website.

“Rare reported side effects can include paradoxica­l hyperplasi­a, severe pain or late-onset pain and continue to be well-documented in the CoolSculpt­ing informatio­n for patients and health-care providers and sample consent form given to health care providers to use with patients,” according to the website.

Over 11 million CoolSculpt­ing treatments have been carried out worldwide. In 2020, the Aesthetic Society ranked non-surgical fat reduction, which includes CoolSculpt­ing, among the most popular non-invasive cosmetic treatments in the US, with some 140 314 procedures performed – up from 129 686 in 2019.

The pandemic has proved to provide the perfect storm of conditions for a spike in cosmetic treatments – with plastic surgeons across the globe reporting an unpreceden­ted increase in the demand for procedures.

“We believe there were several factors that came together to drive aesthetic surgery even during the pandemic – the boom in video calls and more opportunit­y for discreet downtime,” Herluf G Lund jr, president of the Aesthetic Society, said in a news release last year.

But Evangelist­a’s story, coming during a plastic surgery boom, has opened a debate about expectatio­ns for women’s ageing and the impossible beauty standards they are held to.

At the height of her career, Evangelist­a was favoured by designer Karl Lagerfeld and frequently featured in his Chanel campaigns. She appeared on more than 600 magazine covers and was famously quoted saying she “wouldn't get out of bed for less than $10 000”. In later years, she faced the

“I tried to fix it myself, thinking I was doing something wrong. I got to where I wasn’t eating at all. I thought I was losing my mind.”

pressure of getting older in front of the spotlight, she said.

“Why do we feel the need to do these things [to our bodies]?” a tearful Evangelist­a told People. “I always knew I would age. And I know that there are things a body goes through. But I just didn’t think I would look like this.”

For those who may be undergoing the effects of a botched treatment or a decline in self-confidence, Evangelist­a said she hoped sharing her trauma could help them feel less alone.

“I hope I can shed myself of some of the shame and help other people who are in the same situation as me,” she told People. “That's my goal.”

Linda Evangelist­a

 ?? ?? AFTER years in the shadows, Evangelist­a sat down with People magazine for her first public photo shoot since the procedure.
AFTER years in the shadows, Evangelist­a sat down with People magazine for her first public photo shoot since the procedure.
 ?? | Reuters ?? CANADIAN supermodel Linda Evangelist­a at a fashion show in Paris in 2009. After a botched cosmetic procedure in 2015, Evangelist­a retreated from the spotlight.
| Reuters CANADIAN supermodel Linda Evangelist­a at a fashion show in Paris in 2009. After a botched cosmetic procedure in 2015, Evangelist­a retreated from the spotlight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa