Hilary Rhoda

US Harpers Bazaar December 2014
What's The Next
Fashion Editor: Tom Van Dorpe
Photographer: Nathaniel Goldberg
Hair: Rudi Lewis
Makeup: Francelle
Manicure: Gina Edwards for Chanel Le Vernis





Digital Version Captures
by me
 

Hilary Rhoda stands barefoot in the middle of her kitchen in downtown New York City, long and lean in gray skinnies and a cozy green sweater. There's a small smile on her lips as she opens her refrigerator door and reveals a distinctly non-modelesque trove of peanut butter M&M's, Kit Kats and fudge-covered cookies. "So unhealthy, I know," she says. "I do have a really big sweet tooth. But I balance it out."

Rhoda can certainly afford a sweet treat or two. Nearly 10 years after she burst on to the scene as the fresh-faced teen with those eyebrows, it's her ultra-toned body, arguably the fittest on the high-fashion runways, that's put the 27-year-old back in the spotlight and at the forefront of a new vanguard of athletic, clean-*living models. "I didn't start working out to change the way models are viewed or to change the industry," she says. "I did it for me."

Whatever her reasons, Rhoda's transformation from waif to wonder woman—an evolution five years in the making—hasn't gone unnoticed by industry insiders. "The way people used to know Hilary was for her face. Now she's got the beauty and she's got the physicality," says Kohle Yohannan, co-curator of the Model as Muse exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC. Yohannan places Rhoda among an elite group of super fit supermodels—like Gisele, a yoga enthusiast, and Doutzen Kroes, a former speed skater—who are forging change in the industry. "The whole idea of a model type is dissolving and expanding," says Yohannan. "It's about time."

In person, Rhoda's sculpted form is impressive, as are her luminous skin and bright blue eyes. It's no wonder she's frequently asked what she does to look so amazing. The answer: a lot. Aside from her daily sweet fix, Rhoda sticks to a diet chock-full of vegetables and protein, rarely drinks alcohol, downs 4 liters of water daily and gets plenty of sleep. Bedtime is 9 p.m., 10 if she doesn't have an early call time the next day.

Then there are the workouts: two-hour daily sweat sessions at the Tracy Anderson Method studio (for which Rhoda wakes at 5 a.m., weekends included), plus frequent trips to SoulCycle for Spin classes, often after a long day at a photo shoot. "It's crazy, I know. But going to the gym is my outlet," she says. "It's the best place for me to clear my head and recharge. And it makes me feel better if I'm not having a good day." Rhoda also walks and rides her bike everywhere she can in the city and in the Hamptons, where she and her fiancé, Sean Avery, a former NHL player, recently completed a renovation on their weekend house. It's an impressive routine for anyone, let alone an in-demand model with a hectic travel schedule and about a million balls in the air.

But you could say that being active and breathlessly busy are second nature to Rhoda, who grew up in Chevy Chase, Maryland, dancing ballet and playing a bevy of sports, among them soccer, basketball, swimming, lacrosse and field hockey. She was determined to keep pace with her brother Spencer, older by just 19 months and now a Manhattan-based real estate agent. "I wanted to be like him and hang out with his friends all the time," she says. "So I got into sports."

Still, Rhoda had ambitions beyond playing varsity. As a child, she dreamed of landing a role on All That, a children's comedy-sketch show that aired on Nickelodeon. "I'd be like, 'Mom, when are you going to call them?' I would do little performances at home," she says. It wasn't until high school that Rhoda started thinking that maybe all those strangers who stopped her in public to tell her she should be a model were on to something. "They'd say, 'Oh, she looks like Brooke Shields.' And I didn't know who Brooke Shields was!" she says.

At 15, Rhoda attended an open call to meet with modeling scouts in Washington, D.C. Within months she had signed with a New York City agency and was shooting her first campaign for Hollister with Bruce Weber. More jobs followed, which Rhoda scheduled around school vacations until she graduated from high school and, deferring college, moved to New York.

This time around, success wasn't quite so immediate. Going to New York Fashion Week castings, she didn't get a single job. The same happened in Milan. "Coming into this industry and getting rejected can hurt your feelings if you don't understand," she says. But Rhoda soldiered on to Paris, where she was handpicked by Nicolas Ghesquière to walk in the Balenciaga show, effectively anointing her the new It Girl on the block. After that, "I did every major show in Paris," she says, beaming at the memory.
self.com
 
Up at 5am for 2 hours of exercise every day? It sounds obsessive to me. She's treating her body as if she's a professional athlete. I mean it's not like she's an Olympian or something. But - hey - who am I to judge? She's in a whole helluva lot better shape than I am. lol. And she's clearly very happy and confident in her own skin, so good for her!
 
That's too bad she didn't make it again after walking for two years in a row. She looked beautiful from that brief glimpse lol. You win some you lose some. I saw Caroline and Maryna too both as far as I'm concerned they all 3 should have been casted.
 
She's looking breathtaking for HB US so glad she's scoring big editorials, and also a HUGE magazine cover like SELF is great for Hilary. :heart: She's perfect for it because she is self made and works hard for her body. She's an inspiration for me. She's a great role model. :crush:
 
Fantastic for Bloomies :crush: she's looking so fresh these latest works. I love it too that she's been in US Glamour, Use Harper's Bazaar and now the cover of SELF! Keep working it Hilz! :heart:
 
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WWD.com
 
:woot: Excited!
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Thank you my Dear Hillary @hilaryhrhoda for the beautiful rosesemoji️:heart::heart:i️We Love you #beauty#special friend#special project#coming soon
instagram.com/luigimurenu
 



Working Out With… Hilary Rhoda
Two SELF Editors take on December cover star Hilary Rhoda's Tracy Anderson challenge.
We know that supermodel Hilary Rhoda is in great shape—after all, it's part of her job description. We wanted to see what went into part of her regular workout routine, so we sent two SELF staffers—Fashion Director Melissa Ventosa Martin and Entertainment and Bookings Director Rebecca Sinn Kelly—to take on the SELF December cover star's fitness challenge at one of her favorite sweat spots, Tracy Anderson Method in downtown Manhattan. Here, Rhoda explains how fitness plays a role in her routine and how she stays fit no matter where her job takes her.
"I needed a change in my workout because I wasn't feeling motivated. I found SoulCycle and Tracy Anderson and then that's when it started to be exciting and fun and something that I looked forward to."

"[My fiancé] took me to my first SoulCycle class, and I was initially afraid to go by myself. Once I did, I realized it's fun and I can bring friends who have never been. It's more of a social thing."
"I was traveling for work recently, so to work out I had to go down to the hotel gym. I would just try to do that leg series (from Tracy Anderson), do the treadmill and whatever else I can, but it's definitely harder by yourself."
"I feel so good after class, I have more energy, I feel clearer. "
"To me, my workout clothes are more functional than fashionable. I like to be stylish and have nice new stuff, but I'm more about the technology like the Dri-Fit because when I sweat, I can't have drapey tops and stuff that looks cute but isn't functional. I really like the thinnest possible shirts and tights that get the sweat off me."
self.com
 

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