Sali Hughes meets three of the original supermodels - and learns the secret to their enduring success. 
 
       Tatjana Patitz
German-born Tatjana, 44,  has appeared on over 130 magazine covers and continues to front major  ad campaigns. She lives in California with her seven-year-old son,  Jonah.
Did you always want to be a model?
No!  I was taller than everyone else and, as a child, you want to blend in. I  was sort of geeky, not popular with the boys. So it came as a surprise  to me at 14 when a local photographer entered me into Elite Models’ Look  Of The Year contest. One thing lead to another and I went to Paris and  shot for French Vogue. By the time I was 18, I was in New York and  working all the time.
You were one of the top five models  in the world and appeared in George Michael’s Freedom video. What was  the supermodel heyday like?
It was a fantastic time,  because everyone was unique. If somebody wanted to work with one of us,  they’d wait until that girl became available. George Michael had seen  the supermodel cover of British Vogue (January 1990) and from that the  idea was born – putting us five girls into the video. At the time, it  was hard to comprehend the effect it would have. Then, much later, you  realise it was a huge moment in time.
Was it all fun and fabulousness?
No,  I never liked the catwalk season much. When you’re doing six to eight  shows a day, it’s stressful. You’re up until three in the morning for  fittings, then up again at seven. You’re sleep deprived, and the tension  is really high. My make-up was taken off and put on again so many times  that, by the end of the season, my face would be red raw. I am  sometimes amazed that I still have hair on my head.
You recently made your comeback on the Jean Paul Gaultier catwalk…
He  wanted to bring back the original girls, so he called me for that  season. I felt 500 years old compared with some of the young models! But  you can’t think that way, you just go, 500 years old or not, they  booked me.
Did becoming a mother change how you view your appearance and your body?
Totally.  I was a mum at 36, and while I had my son at the perfect time, it’s not  as if my body was going to snap back like a rubber band – I had to work  at it. I’ve always been pretty healthy, I don’t eat junk. But the thing  about ageing is that you have no choice but to be okay with it. When  you see fine wrinkles around your eyes and start freaking out, you have  to think ‘they’re maps of my life’, and come to terms with it. Sometimes  though, I see pictures of myself really young and have to remind myself  that as well as looking good, I was riddled with insecurities that I’ve  long since shed. That’s more important.
Has the industry changed for better or worse since those heady days?
When  I look back at pictures from the so-called supermodel era, we were all a  UK size 10, with boobs and bottoms. We looked like women. Nowadays,  sample sizes are a six. It’s crazy when you remember that catwalk models  are almost six-feet tall. I’m never going be that size. I see some of  the newer girls and think, ‘That girl lives on Diet Coke!’ I hope it  changes.
What has being such a famous model taught you about life?
The  biggest lesson? Don’t take things too seriously. Isn’t the most  important thing in life the health and wellbeing of your family? We’re  so lucky to be in a small percentage of the world’s population that has  it good – a roof over our head, clean water. You do become more settled  and at ease with life in your forties. I’m not saying things aren’t  sometimes hard, but I feel much better in my skin as time goes on.