Beverly Johnson reflects on the industry pressure and unhealthy lifestyle she once maintained to keep an extremely thin physique. Before the era of body positivity and inclusivity, supermodels were ...
Anna Wintour was cold as ice to Vogue magazine’s first-ever African American cover model, Beverly Johnson, according to the supermodel’s former publicist James Hester. Hester told Page Six he had to ...
Beverly Johnson, the first Black supermodel to appear on the cover of Vogue, wrote a powerful op-ed about racism in the fashion industry earlier this week Style + Beauty Assistant, PEOPLE Beverly ...
Brian Maillian and Beverly Johnson on their wedding day. Beverly Johnson is detailing her wedding day look. In an exclusive conversation with PEOPLE, the supermodel, 71, opens up about how she styled ...
Supermodel Beverly Johnson rose to fame when she became the first Black American model to appear on the cover of American Vogue in August 1974. Johnson admits that when she embarked on a modeling ...
Legendary supermodel Beverly Johnson and her longtime boo Brian Maillian are married. During a Jan. 12 appearance on Sirius XM’s Sway in the Morning, the 71-year-old catwalk icon mistakenly revealed ...
Beverly Johnson spoke out about being attacked by Bill Cosby and an unnamed fashion photographer, while presenting the Positive Social Influence Award to Model Alliance at the 2021 CFDA Awards. “Good ...
Beverly Johnson walked the runway for Sergio Hudson during New York Fashion Week on Sunday.Getty Images for NYFW: The Shows When Beverly Johnson made her triumphant return to the New York Fashion Week ...
The supermodel is pushing the industry to implement "The Beverly Johnson" rule. In 1974, supermodel Beverly Johnson made history as the first black model to ever appear on the cover of Vogue magazine.
PEOPLE's Voices from the Fight Against Racism will amplify Black perspectives on the push for equality and justice Supermodel Beverly Johnson made history when she appeared on the cover of Vogue in ...
Before the era of body positivity and inclusivity, supermodels were held to a rigid standard of waif-like physical proportions, reinforcing unattainable beauty standards. In a recent interview with ...