Remember the girl who lived under a tree? The human chess piece who wears an incredible dress and has her movements controlled by a robotic voice that commands her to move onto the next position? Remember the ghostly vision of Kate Moss floating away magically, wrapped in hundreds and hundreds of layers of soft rippling fabric and fading away into a bullet of light?
It was just the age when everyone wanted to be a model. I mean isn’t that really every high school girl’s dream? Before the documentary all you ever heard was success stories. A friend of a friend or someone’s neighbor or cousin; they had all made it and were now the target of our jealousy.
Uriel doesn’t consider himself as a sexy man, he probably leaves this adjective to the bunch of women who faint to prove the opposite. This charming, smiling dark haired man admits he keeps himself fit “Doing exercise and eating Mexican tacos and chocolates”, and confesses that when he was a child he used to play the kitchen skillets as a drum kit.
Designers have been dressing celebrities for as long as their existence. From Hubert de Givenchy ingeniously outfitting Audrey Hepburn to Armani finding the meaning of extra brand value with Richard Gere, designers have never been shy to exploit what linking fashion to Hollywood could bring them.





