Daily Express

BRILLIANTL­Y BRITISH PHOTO COMPETITIO­N JUDGED BY TWIGGY:

Would you like to see your picture exhibited in the V& A? Enter our competitio­n with an all- star judging panel featuring Twiggy

- By Kat Hopps

HE IS A British cultural icon, one of the world’s first supermodel­s whose striking beauty commands as much attention now as the day the Daily Express heralded her as the “Face of 1966”. That year, when she was still only 16, Twiggy’s gamine haircut and doe eyes, framed by long, spidery lashes, were captured in a series of now- legendary portraits taken by celebrated photograph­er Barry Lategan, images so unforgetta­ble they launched her prolific career and remain to this day the essence of the Swinging Sixties.

Now 71, Twiggy is still one of Britain’s best- known faces, a total fashion profession­al, who knows how to work a camera on both sides of the lens.

And this is why the Daily Express is delighted to announce she is one of the official judges for our Brilliantl­y British Photograph Competitio­n launching today – a nationwide search to find the image that best encapsulat­es Britain, in all its wonderful diversity, in 2020.

Twiggy – real name Dame Lesley Lawson – says she is “thrilled” to be part of our respected judging panel, which includes V& A Museum Director Tristram Hunt, The Young Vic’s Artistic Director Kwame Kwei- Armah, Coronation Street actress Shobna Gulati and awardwinni­ng Fleet Street photograph­er Mike Moore.

“After a year like 2020, we need art more than ever, it offers hope, and gives a voice to those who need one most,” she says.

And if anyone knows the power of a photograph, it must be the global phenomenon that is Twiggy.

“That day in 1966 changed my life forever,” she says, of the moment Lategan’s portraits, on the wall of a London hair salon, were spotted by Express fashion editor Deirdre McSharry and a legend was born.

What does Twiggy think made that shoot stand out?

“A lot of wonderful photograph­y is about catching the light, which he did,” she says. “I was told ‘ Look into the camera’ and that’s all I did, but he captured something that caught the imaginatio­n of the time.”

Twiggy’s nickname came from her slender build, but it was her side- swept elfin crop and saucer eyes, so beguiling in Lategan’s photos, that created her enigmatic appeal. At just 5ft 6in, she was not tall enough to be signed by traditiona­l modelling agencies so was sent to Leonard of Mayfair salon for an image overhaul.

“Leonard came over to me and said, ‘ I love your look. Can I do my new haircut on you?’” Twiggy remembers.

“Deep down, I didn’t want my hair cut because I was a mod and I Ioved my hair, like you do when you’re a teenager,” she giggles. “But I was too shy to say no – thank God I was.”

But her own personal favourite photograph­s have nothing to do with fashion. “What sticks in my mind is the photograph taken in New York of the sailor kissing the nurse as he bends her backwards,” she says, referring to the famous Times Square shot from VJ day on August 15, 1945. “Certain photograph­s are so powerful.”

She also understand­s how a moment in time can live on forever if captured in the right image. “When you look at some of the changes through history then photograph­s are the historical proof certain things occurred,” she says. “What do we look at if we want to see what the period was like? You go back to old photograph­s. I often look at them myself when I’m performing a part in a period piece.”

Aside from modelling, Twiggy is an acclaimed actress who won two Golden Globes for The Boyfriend in 1971 and has appeared on Broadway. A singer, TV presenter and fashion designer, she was awarded a Damehood in the Queen’s New Year Honours 2019 for her services to fashion and the arts. Now taking on the mantle of judge, she

will be looking for something that “says Britain to me” from the entries. It might be something hard- hitting going on in our world today that really affects you, or it could be incredibly beautiful in the way we all need at the moment,” she says.

WHAT DOES Britishnes­s mean to her? “Have you got ten hours?” she laughs. “I’m a proud Londoner but I’m half northern. My dad was from Lancashire so I’ve got his grit and I don’t suffer fools gladly, like many Britons.”

And that’s not all. “As a nation we don’t take ourselves seriously and have a great sense of irony,” Twiggy continues.

“This horrendous year has also shown the British spirit, the amazing feats undertaken by people such as Captain Sir Tom Moore, with others raising money or distributi­ng food to families.

“My mum and dad said the same thing happened during the Second World War.”

But for now, when judging the competitio­n, she says: “I’m keeping a very open mind, it will have to capture my heart and move me.

“That’s what great photograph­y does.”

 ??  ?? STILL EXPRESSING HERSELF: The 1966 edition of this newspaper that started it all, and right, 54 years, on Twiggy remains a style icon
STILL EXPRESSING HERSELF: The 1966 edition of this newspaper that started it all, and right, 54 years, on Twiggy remains a style icon
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 ??  ?? FLYING THE FLAG: Twiggy, showing off her iconic sixties look; left, pictured with Deirdre McSharry, the Daily Express fashion editor who helped launch her career as The Face of 1966
FLYING THE FLAG: Twiggy, showing off her iconic sixties look; left, pictured with Deirdre McSharry, the Daily Express fashion editor who helped launch her career as The Face of 1966
 ?? Pictures: STEVE REIGATE; GETTY ??
Pictures: STEVE REIGATE; GETTY
 ??  ?? PICTURE PERFECT: The winner’s photo will grace the walls of the V& A Museum
PICTURE PERFECT: The winner’s photo will grace the walls of the V& A Museum

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