07 May 2010

Brooke Shields Wallpaper and Photos

Brooke Shields Wallpaper and Photos





































Brooke Shields Bio

Brooke Christa Camille Shields was born on May 31, 1965. Brooke is an American actress, author and model. Some of her better-known movies include Pretty Baby and The Blue Lagoon, as well as TV shows such as Suddenly Susan, That 70's Show and Lipstick Jungle.

Shields was born in New York City into a well-known American society family with links to Italian and French nobility. Her grandmother was the Italian princess Donna Marina Torlonia. Her father, Frank Shields, was a businessman, and her mother, Teri Shields, managed her career. During her early years, Shields lived at 73 W. 59th St. in Manhattan.

When Brooke was only five-days-old, her mother decided she was going to have a show business career. According to her mother, "....She was the most beautiful child," and she was going to help her with her career. At eight-years-old, Brooke Shields posed nude; and, at age 10, she was paid $45 to appear in, Playboy.

Shields adopted her middle name, "Camille," for her Confirmation at age 10. Shields' parents divorced when she was a child. She has three half-sisters and two step-siblings. She attended the all-girl Lenox School and graduated from the Dwight-Englewood School in Englewood, New Jersey, in 1983. Into the mid-1980s, Shields was a resident of Haworth, New Jersey.

At age 12, Shields played a 12-year-old child prostitute. At age 16, she had already worked for 16 years and had made more money than the President of the United States. Eileen Ford, founder of the Ford Modeling Agency, said of Brooke Shields: "....She is a professional child and unique. She looks like an adult and thinks like one."

Shields began her career as a model in 1966, at the age of 11 months. Her first job was for Ivory Soap, shot by Francesco Scavullo. She continued as a successful child model with model agent Eileen Ford, who, in her Lifetime Network biography, stated that she started her children's division just for Shields. In early 1980 (at age 14), Shields was the youngest fashion model ever to appear on the cover of the top fashion publication Vogue magazine. Later that same year, Shields appeared in controversial print and TV ads for Calvin Klein jeans. The TV ad included her saying the famous tagline, "You want to know what comes between me and my Calvins? Nothing." Brooke Shields ads would help catapult Klein's career to super-designer status.

From 1981 to 1983, Brooke Shields, her mother, photographer Gary Gross, Playboy Press and the New York City Courts were involved in litigation over the rights to some photographs her mother had signed away to the photographer (when dealing with models who are also minors, a parent or legal guardian must sign such a release form while other agreements are subject to negotiation) which were originally intended to appear in a book titled Sugar and Spice to be published by Playboy Press. The courts ruled in favor of the photographer but due to a strange twist in New York law, it would have been otherwise had Brooke Shields been considered a child "performer" rather than a model.

By the age of 16, Shields had become one of the most recognizable faces in the world, because of her dual career as a provocative fashion model and controversial child actress. TIME magazine reported, in its February 9, 1981 cover story, that her day rate as a model was $10,000. In 1983, Shields appeared on the cover of the September issue of Paris Vogue, the October and November issues of American Vogue and the December edition of Italian Vogue. During that period Shields became a regular at New York City's nightclub Studio 54.

In 2009, a naked picture of Brooke Shields, taken when she was 10, and included in a work by Richard Prince, Spiritual America, created a row. It was removed from an exhibition at the Tate Modern after a warning from the police.