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Dorian Leigh, an early supermodel who made Revlon's 1950s "Fire and Ice" line famous, has died, at 91. Leigh died Monday, July 7, 2008, at a nursing home in Falls Church, Va., according to her eldest son, T.L. Hawkins of McLean, Va.
Dorian Leigh, an early supermodel who made Revlon’s 1950s “Fire and Ice” line famous, has died, at 91. Leigh died Monday, July 7, 2008, at a nursing home in Falls Church, Va., according to her eldest son, T.L. Hawkins of McLean, Va.
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WASHINGTON — Dorian Leigh, one of the world’s first supermodels whose signature work for Revlon’s “Fire and Ice” advertisements remains legendary on Madison Avenue, died Monday in Falls Church, Va. She was 91.

Leigh, whose stunning appearance was matched by a fierce intelligence and entrepreneurial talent, dominated magazine covers and fashion advertisements in the 1940s and ’50s.

Projecting an elegant, sophisticated air and a sizzling sexuality, the 5-foot-5, 95-pound beauty with Persian-blue eyes and beguiling zigzag eyebrows mesmerized photographer Richard Avedon and many other well-known men.

“Dorian had . . . this tiny waistline and these tiny ankles and high-heeled shoes,” model Carmen Dell’Orefice told Vanity Fair two years ago, “and she would walk in — I tell you she had so much estrogen, like some men are full of testosterone. Dorian was just so sexy without saying a word.”

Leigh founded a successful modeling agency in Paris and ran it for eight years before opening a restaurant in France in the mid-1960s.

She later cooked for domestic diva Martha Stewart, ran her own catering business in New York and Washington and wrote several well-received cookbooks and an autobiography.

Until Leigh rocketed to fame with Revlon’s “Fire and Ice” and “Cherries in the Snow” campaigns in the early 1950s, it was unusual for models to be known by name. She claimed to be making $300,000 a year.

Truman Capote, a friend and admirer, dubbed her “Happy Go Lucky,” and Leigh believed that she was the inspiration for the Holly Golightly character in Capote’s “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”

Many other women claimed to be the inspiration for the fictional heroine as well, including Leigh’s sister Suzy.

Born Dorian Elizabeth Leigh Parker in San Antonio, the oldest of four daughters, she attended Randolph-Macon Woman’s College (now Randolph College) in Lynchburg, Va., but left when she married for the first time.

She eventually had five children, by three of her husbands and one of her many lovers.

As she told Look magazine in 1953: “I’d rather have a baby than a mink coat.”

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