Which former Hollywood It girl recently visited a South American country “surrounded by security to keep people away”? Funny thing was, “nobody seemed to care, she was never recognized”…
I saw this on bg yesterday and most people said Ellen page was down there for carnival with tons of security guards saying keep them away. I don't follow Lil Ellen but apparently she was filming something for a LGBT documentary. I don't remember when she was an it girl but the obvious Paris Hilton would want everyone to notice her and go crazy so not Paris.
Although there is absolutely no way I see her as an "it" girl. Twiggy was an "it" girl Cindy Crawford was an "it" girl Jennifer Lawrence is/was an "it" girl. Kind of hard to be an "it" girl when a large number of the public has no idea who you are IMO.
Origin of the term: nickname given to the sex symbol Clara Bow, subject of the 1927 novel and movie It, written by Elinor Glyn, who popularized the concept of it in the slang sense of ‘sex appeal’
Mischa
ReplyDeleteI saw this on bg yesterday and most people said Ellen page was down there for carnival with tons of security guards saying keep them away. I don't follow Lil Ellen but apparently she was filming something for a LGBT documentary.
ReplyDeleteI don't remember when she was an it girl but the obvious Paris Hilton would want everyone to notice her and go crazy so not Paris.
@Sugarbread Thanks for reminding me! Paris just went to Cuba!! Totes Paris
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteWay to go, Detective Sugartits!!!
ReplyDeleteI think this is Ellen. I don't think Cuba is considered part of South America.
Ellen Page in Brazil.
ReplyDeleteAlthough there is absolutely no way I see her as an "it" girl. Twiggy was an "it" girl Cindy Crawford was an "it" girl Jennifer Lawrence is/was an "it" girl. Kind of hard to be an "it" girl when a large number of the public has no idea who you are IMO.
Origin of the term: nickname given to the sex symbol Clara Bow, subject of the 1927 novel and movie It, written by Elinor Glyn, who popularized the concept of it in the slang sense of ‘sex appeal’
Delete