I found it quite interesting...
 
Helena Christensen: A model opportunity 
 Catwalk queen Helena Christensen tells Kaleem Aftab why she can no longer  resist the lure of the big screen 
 Published: 25 August 2006 
  The most feared acronym in entertainment is MTA - model-turned-actress. There  are countless examples of directors shooting themselves in the foot when opting  for a leggy mannequin rather than a trained artiste. But that hasn't deterred  supermodel Helena Christensen from trying her hand at acting. 
 The Dane makes her feature film debut in fellow countryman Christoffer Boe's  Allegro. She plays Andrea, a beautiful woman whose decision to split from her  boyfriend precipitates his dementia. With her primary task to look good on  screen, it's not exactly the most taxing of roles to start off her career.  Director Boe freely admits that in looking for someone to play the alluring,  unobtainable woman who is a constant plague on the protagonist's mind, he  typecast the supermodel. But it's a perception of her that Christensen believes  has some basis in truth. "Christoffer, because he didn't know me before the  movie, all he could judge me on are the images that he sees and so he thought  that I looked mysterious, melancholic, whatever. There is definitely some truth  to that image. I don't walk around cracking up all the time, and in the  photographs taken of me modelling, there is a tendency for me to look more  sombre than jolly and maybe that is the feeling that you have before you get to  know me."
 Now 37, Christensen has lost none of the looks that have made her one of the  most sought after faces on the catwalk. Aptly, as it turned out, she was named  after Helen of Troy. But the good looks that precipitated her fame are not  always a benefit, complains Christensen, most notably because men are fearful of  flirting with her, and within minutes of chatting to her it's easy to see why  men are struck dumb. It's unnerving enough to be in the presence of such a  famous and beautiful woman, but when she speaks, Christensen seems to stare at  you without ever blinking.
 What makes her the most interesting model to have tried her hand at acting  since Isabella Rossellini is that she's already managed to carve out a  successful career away from the catwalk. She's worked for a number of years as a  photographer, was a creative director overseeing the launch of the American  style magazine Nylon and last year opened a fashion store in New York called  Butik. The common link between all these jobs is the importance of image. She  has carefully cultivated her own image as the thinking man's supermodel and  dismisses the risk in adding the MTA label to the notches on her belt.
 She says: "It never really seemed so strange to me that some models moved  into acting. Recently, there has been even more of a crossover between movies,  music and fashion; it's all become one big blend. When you are in the fashion  business, you're inspired by the things around you. For so many years, you're  being directed by a photographer, and it's almost like being in a silent movie,  constantly acting out emotions with your face, body, expressions - the only  thing that separates this from acting is that you don't speak."
 Christensen claims that she never had ambitions to act. Previously she turned  down overtures from Francis Ford Coppola to appear on the silver screen. That,  though, was when she was in constant demand as a supermodel. Now modelling is  something she does when there is a campaign that seems like it will be fun to  do, such as the Dom Perignon adverts with Karl Lagerfeld involving three days in  the sun drinking free champagne, or there is a photographer that she has not had  the chance to work with. She says: "Modelling is now more fun to do than when it  was a job."
 Boe's offer of a part in Allegro came at the right time, with Christensen  wanting to do things that are different and fun: "I think of all the career  challenges that I've made, acting has been the biggest surprise. I never thought  that I was going to do it. At first I did it to prove to myself that I had the  courage to do it. That was the most important thing about making the movie,  actually taking the step and saying yes to test for it. That, normally, would  have given me many sleepless nights thinking about the process. It's a big  difference from when I was a teenager and completely insecure about  everything."
 Her insecurities arose despite starting a modelling career at the age of nine  and being crowned Miss Denmark in 1986. She signed to a modelling agency in  Paris and a 1989 spread in French Elle led to a cover shoot for British Vogue.  Her vaulting into the elite club of supermodels arose after her appearance in  the music video for Chris Isaak's "Wicked Game" in 1991. Depicted as Isaak's  lover, she is topless for most of the video. MTV later named the music clip as  the "sexiest video of all time". The late designer Gianni Versace proclaimed  that she has the most beautiful body in fashion. John Galliano said "she fills  clothes with life and fire".
 The enormous public exposure at a young age has always left Christensen  feeling that her life is out of her own hands. She says: "My life has always  been a little odd. I can't really stop and think about why the things that are  happening in my life are happening. I feel that destiny is shaping my life in a  very interesting and somehow odd, decadent way. I don't know, I sort of just  come to accept that it is not a completely normal life that I'm living, and I  only see that as a great gift. I'm very thrilled by anything that happens and  it's also bad things too, it's not just good sh*t, the thing is that there has  to be a good balance."
 The bad things usually arise in her private life. She parted ways with her  first high-profile partner, INXS lead singer Michael Hutchence, after pictures  of him in the arms of Paula Yates surfaced. There were rumours linking her with  Leonardo DiCaprio and Billy Corgan before she began a relationship with the  model Norman Reedus. In 1999 they had a son together, but by 2003 this  relationship had run its course.
 When talking about her private life, Christensen says: "With relationships,  the thing is, I definitely feel sometimes, that I maybe close myself in. Either  I'm really into something fully or I'm not and there are definitely certain  things that I need to work on. The older you get, the more you learn to love and  accept your own weaknesses and I think these aspects are part of your  personality and sometimes I take pleasure in being a complete idiot and being  stubborn. I'm sure that you have a little good angel and a little bad angel and  it's as important to listen to the bad angel as much as the good one."
 She is definitely headstrong. When the publicity officer arrives to tell us  our scheduled time had run its course, she simply carries on talking and ignores  him. She passes on her e-mail to me, despite his desire to act as a go-between.  There are things she hasn't had the chance to speak about, such as her store  Butik: "I opened a shop in New York. I'm just doing things that I feel that I  can really pour 100 per cent of attention, love and commitment into, it's not  like I just do it to do it. I thought for around five years about opening a shop  with a friend of mine [floral designer Leif Sigersen] and we worked really hard  on it and now we're doing it."
 Her son goes to school in New York, which is where Christensen is usually  based. Second and third homes in Monaco and the south of France attest to the  success that she's had as a model. With so many demands on her time, there are  no plans as yet to make another movie, and in fact she says further involvement  in the business of the moving image is as likely to be from behind the camera as  in front.
 
'Allegro' opens on 15 September