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Geri Halliwell's Daily Mail Interview



After years struggling with the way she looks, former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell is at last happy in her own skin – flaunting her curves in her new high-street swimwear collection. Here she talks to Liz Jones about body image, mellow motherhood, the rich legacy (and A-list fans) of the Spice Girls – and finding love

I've seen remarkably few celebrities naked. But I have seen Geri Halliwell in just her knickers. It was ten years ago, we were on a magazine cover shoot in Los Angeles, and Geri was trying to decide what to put on. I remember she was as small as a ten-year-old. This was during Geri’s super-aerobicised, super-Ashtanga-yogafied period. She had requested only vegetables and brown rice on the shoot. She seemed tense, lonely and, despite the nakedness, terribly unhappy in her own skin.

What a difference a decade makes. I meet Geri again in her lovely home in Highgate, North London. I’m not supposed to tell you about her house, but I can’t resist revealing that it’s all warm wood, huge sofas and perfect roses, everywhere. She is in a long sweater and over-the-knee socks, hair still wet from the shower. Not much make-up, apart from a slick of mascara. ‘I remember that shoot,’ she says, tucking her legs under her on the sofa. ‘I wore minimal make-up and my own T-shirt. And I remember the superstar photographer just sat there snoozing while all his minions set up the shot, then he just pressed a button!’

I ask how the past ten years have treated her. She’s now 38, and has become a mum, for starters. Her daughter Bluebell is four and a half. She laughs.

‘My daughter is the biggest gift; I’ve said it so many times and it sounds like a cliché, but the thing about being a parent is when you think you’ve cracked it, and you’re on top of your game, they change again and you have to catch up and adjust. I feel such a responsibility to instil good values in her, to be polite, to have discipline.’

The biggest transformation is that Geri now seems happy with how she looks. She has just designed a range of swimwear for Next, and modelled the collection for the catalogue. She spreads the bikinis and proofs of the photos on her huge wooden coffee table. ‘I always find it hard to find a bikini that fits me, because I have quite big breasts. There’s intelligence in the structure – there’s an architect involved in making your boobs look good, does that make sense? And the prices are reasonable, too: £38 for a bikini.’

She says that because her weight has always been up and down – ‘I’ve had small boobs, big boobs, curvy bum, skinny bum’ – she knows what works for different body shapes.

‘I’ve got one of those bodies that fluctuates, so I’ve had to really think about the construction. You know when you feel you’ve got a bit of a tummy? On holiday you want to eat well, have that freedom. This range is cut to flatter your body.’ She says she has been very hands-on in the design process, and I tell her that every celebrity always says that. ‘I always loved fashion but I’ve never been a slave to it. I’ve always collected swatches of fabric I like, so I was able to show them exactly what I wanted. Even in the Spice Girls, I would always have input into the costumes. That dress I wore for the Brits was my idea: someone sent me a black Gucci dress so I sewed on a Union Jack tea towel to liven it up a bit.’ Why hasn’t she designed a collection before now? ‘The funny thing is, I was a shop assistant in Next, a Saturday girl. The collaboration just feels right.’

I ask if she went on a diet and exercise binge before the catalogue shoot. She suffered from bulimia when she was younger, and was addicted to exercise. ‘Coming up to it, my natural instinct would have been to sort my body out, embark on a mad regime. But I don’t have time because I’m a mother; all I did was walk Bluebell to school. The thing is, when I feel like I have to lose weight, the opposite happens. I remember stuffing loads of chocolate on the plane to the shoot, and I thought, “Why don’t you have the courage to show up in a body that’s natural, not overly worked out?”’

She tells me the people at Next offered to airbrush the photos. ‘I said, “Don’t airbrush them. I don’t mind a little help but don’t make my body look what it isn’t.” If you go online – this is groundbreaking for where my head is – there’s a mini film of the Next shoot, and I looked at it once and someone with me said, “Do you mind that bit, that imperfection?” and I said, “No, leave it.”

‘I don’t know if that’s a first, but it’s definitely got better. If you’d asked me ten years ago, I would have been so controlling about how I looked. I feel you have to come to a point where you have to let go, and that’s freeing.’

What a turn-up that Geri, who was once such a slave to perfection – remember that photograph of her on an LA beach, performing a headstand? – has designed a collection that is all about allowing women to feel better about themselves. ‘I thought, “Why not start with something that really helps a woman feel good in the most vulnerable place, on the beach on holiday?”’

Was she worried she might pass on her neuroses to her daughter? ‘I obviously want to give a healthy body image to my own daughter. I think having good examples, eating properly, that’s all one can do – and just be really loving around her. I’ve tried to give her confidence in who she is.’ She laughs. ‘I think she’s all right in the confidence department.’

How did Geri overcome her own problems around food and body image? ‘It comes with time and maturity. There is so much more in the world to be thinking about than the way I look. I just wanted to be free of it. Some days are better than others. The power of food is amazing, making someone go “Mmm”. I love cooking a roast with lovely gravy and enjoying it myself. I’m a nicer person to be around, rather than being too controlling. Who wants to be around that? Being forgiving about my own imperfections, allowing messiness.’

You’re not messy, I say, looking at the immaculate house, the tidy terrace, devoid of the litter of toys. She laughs. ‘The desire for perfection is utterly miserable. I still have dreams, I still have goals, I’m still a little vain, but actually I’m just realising my humanness. Sometimes I’m a curvy, messy person who can say the wrong thing, sometimes fail.’

Perfectionists achieve, though. You’re a worker and an achiever. ‘A little bit of drive is good, but I work better when I’m cheerleading my way into doing something rather than being overly obsessed and saying to myself, “You’ve got to do it otherwise you’re rubbish.” It’s more about going, “Come on, you’re lovely regardless.”’

I tell her she looks the best she ever has. ‘Thank you, that’s very nice. I feel comfortable and OK. I’m much more appreciative of how I look and what I’ve been given. I’ve stopped trying to be something I’m not – accepting that this is my shape and I’ve got to make the best of it.’

The biggest difference, though, in the Geri now to the Geri of ten years ago is that she’s in a happy relationship. She gives me a huge beam when I mention his name: Henry Beckwith, the 32-year-old heir to a property empire and cousin of socialite Tamara. They’ve been together nearly two years. ‘My boyfriend flies a helicopter and that’s very nice. It’s really good because I used to have a big fear of flying but it’s actually helped me, watching him flying and he’s sitting next to me. I literally put my life in his hands.’

Where did they go on their first date? ‘Not in a helicopter. I met him on the beach, and I was in a bikini. Swimwear! It does work.’

It must have taken a degree of confidence, to walk up and ask a Spice Girl on a date. ‘He was bright red, but that’s because of his skin tone. He’s going to kill me for saying that! He didn’t actually chat me up, he sent his mate to try and do it. It was quite funny.’ Do they live together? ‘No.’ Are they going to get married, or have children (her recent visit to a church has sparked engagement rumours)? ‘Not at the moment.’ She catches the eye of her assistant. ‘No. No!’ They both laugh.

Geri says her drive, the ‘extra gas in the tank’, that has got her to where she is now came about because her father died when she was 21; she is still very close to her Spanish mother, Ana. ‘His death had a massive impact. I’d found a much more peaceful, loving, balanced relationship with my father and then he died. And at such a young age, it was a shocking realisation that people can love you and then leave you. And also my parents were divorced, so I felt very distrusting of relationships and depending on anybody so I tried to become very self-dependent, which is a bit lonely. And so I was never present or available for relationships, not even one with myself. I was just consistently working all the time, or looking for a father figure.

Is she allowing Henry to look after her?

‘To a degree. It’s part of being a Leo. I really try to allow the man to be the man. We are told as little girls that Prince Charming is going to save us and whisk us off to his palace and there is a part of me that thinks, “Oh, wouldn’t that be nice?” And then someone’s brandishing the words “girl power”, telling us we’ve got to be independent, strong females. I think I’m a bit of both, which is quite confusing.’

How is Henry coping? ‘It takes a hell of a strong man to be with someone like me. I think he has a strong enough sense of self, but what I love about him is that he loves me for me. He doesn’t buy into any of the image. He finds it amusing and fun, but he’s not intoxicated by it.’

A lesser man might be jealous that she gets all the attention. ‘No, he’s very supportive and very encouraging. He’s strong and very kind. He won’t let me push him around. He’s the first alpha male I’ve gone out with and that’s why it’s working. He makes it a little bit challenging sometimes, but I love it that he’s a strong man. I went out with a doormat and he resented me and I ended up resenting him, so I appreciate that Henry is a strong man.’

Is money an issue? ‘Regardless of their background, when you are with that other person, within four walls, that’s what matters. It’s about their character and quality. I have a lot in common with Henry: we’re both fun, active, sporty. I’m very playful, I’m like a tomboy in certain ways. But for me the most important thing is integrity, loyalty and spirit, the kindness of the person. The character of the man. Completely fundamental. They’ve got to be funny and you’ve got to fancy them, too.’

I wonder if she is still close to the other Spice Girls, if she still even thinks much about those days. ‘They’re like family members to me. It’s one of those things that I don’t see them all the time but when I do, it feels like yesterday and we go back to our original roles. It’s quite funny.’ They’ve all turned out pretty well. ‘None of us has shaved our heads and ended up in rehab.’

I wonder too why she bothers to do things like be a judge on The X Factor, or design and model clothes for Next. She has enough money to never work again. ‘I am naturally, authentically, a creative person. I love painting with my daughter – we have creative sessions! That’s just who I am. In the band, I’d be in the studio writing lyrics, Victoria would be out shopping for Prada shoes. She’s always loved high-end fashion. I’m incredibly proud of her.’ Will she make another record? ‘Maybe! I’m passionate about music and I’ll always be involved in the business – I’m managing a band that you’ll see at some point. It’s very exciting. I’m a mummy, I like to nurture…’

I remind her of the documentary she made as she left the Spice Girls. That shot of her sitting on the stairs of her mansion in the country, looking afraid and alone, apart from the presence of Harry, her shih-tzu. ‘God, yes, I remember that. No, I don’t have that house any more. It’s quite hard to be objective about that time, but I’m definitely in a different place to where I was. Actually, I think I feel in certain ways I’m doing full circle. I went to see Lady Gaga in concert, and we saw each other backstage and it was really nice because there wasn’t anybody else around, and she said, “You know, Geri, you really inspired me, I really tuned in to what you stood for.” I am that girl again, the girl I was at the beginning.’

Does she ever wish all this had never happened, the fame?

‘No, not at all. I completely appreciate that I’m in a very unique, privileged position. What a safari my life has been. I just think, wow! I feel very, very lucky.’

Source : Daily Mail

Victoria has Marmalade Cravings



Victoria Beckham has reportedly developed a pregnancy craving for marmalade.

The former Spice Girl announced that she and husband David are to become parents for the fourth time earlier this month. The 36-year-old, believed to be around four months pregnant, is expected to give birth in the US.

"Victoria's having a lot of tea and toast with lashings of marmalade," a source told The Sun. "She can't get enough of the stuff. Mostly she's been having it on toast, accompanied by lots of cups of tea."

They added: "And although she looked a little peaky last week, she's not having morning sickness like she has done before."

Source : Digital Spy

Spice Girls 2012 Olympic Bid



Geri Halliwell's Olympic bid for a Spice Girls performance at the event faces a major hurdle – Victoria Beckham aka Posh Spice.

Mrs. Beckham is just not that keen on a 2012 gig even though Melanie Chisholm, Melanie Brown and Emma Lee Bunton are on board.

But Geri tells me she’s working on it. “It would be an amazing privilege to represent our country in 2012. So we’ll discuss it with Victoria and see what she thinks,” she said at her Next swimwear range launch.

Source : Mirror UK

Halliwell: 'I'm realising my Humanness'



Geri Halliwell at a press launch for Next, at The Savoy Hotel. Geri Halliwell has revealed that she is finally able to accept the way she looks.

The Spice Girl, who recently launched a swimwear collection for Next, admitted that after years of body image issues, including bulimia, she no longer craves "perfection".

"There is so much more in the world to be thinking about than the way I look," she told The Mail On Sunday. "I just wanted to be free of it. I'm a nicer person to be around, rather than being too controlling. Being forgiving about my own imperfections, allowing messiness.

"The desire for perfection is utterly miserable. I still have dreams, I still have goals, I'm still a little vain, but actually I'm just realising my humanness. Sometimes I'm a curvy, messy person who can say the wrong thing, sometimes fail.

"A little bit of drive is good, but I work better when I'm cheerleading my way into doing something rather than being overly obsessed and saying to myself, 'You've got to do it otherwise you're rubbish'. It's more about going, 'Come on, you're lovely regardless'."

The singer added that an important moment in her realisation process came when she refused to be airbrushed in her Next campaign.

Source : Digital Spy

Mini Interview with Melanie C



Last night I attended the InStyle and Lancome pre-BAFTA's party at Shoreditch House and caught up with Mel C, who looked gorgeous in a black ASOS jumpsuit and some classic black peeptoe shoes. She told me and FabUK she wasn't staying too late because she's in the studio at the moment, but she had time for a quick chat with us and shared her excitement over the latest Spice baby and engagement news as well as chatting about the Brit girls she finds inspiring:

You must be so happy for Emma Bunton on her engagement and baby news, and Victoria too!

Emma's engaged, she's having a baby, Victoria's having a baby again, it's a really exciting time for all of us girls. We saw Victoria in December and she kept it really quiet, I didn't have a clue! I think it's really nice — Emma and Victoria being pregnant together, when one of your friends is pregnant it's really nice to share the experience together.

Does it make you broody again?

You know what, I would like to have more children, but you have to do it when it's the right time for you don't you? My little girl is so fantastic, I'm just really enjoying her at the moment.

What are you working on at the moment?

The new album! It's going really well, I'm really excited. I'm working mostly in London, we're doing some writing in Germany and Sweden as well. I'm here with Jodie Harsh tonight, we're doing some dance stuff together. I've worked with Andy Burrows, we did some stuff together. I'm working with lots of people I've worked with in the past and a lot of new people as well, I'm doing a lot of experimenting and seeing what comes of it all.

What have you been inspired by lately?

You know what I find inspiring? There are so many great young women in British music, I think it's a great time for girls. And these girls who've got credibility - they're great role models, they make great music, good performers, with great voices. People like Adele, Ellie Goulding, Marina and the Diamonds, and that inspires me to continue and fly the flag for girl power!

And you guys no doubt inspired them too!

Yeah! I know Marina was a fan, so it's really nice when now you hear people saying "I love the Spice Girls".

How's the Spice Girls musical coming along?

We've sat down and read the storyline and seen the songs that are going to be used, it's all very early stages. First drafts at the moment. It's exciting for us to hopefully have our music being performed night after night in the theatre.

It was lovely to catch up with Mel at the party, and I'm looking forward to checking out her new album — she hopes to release it in the Autumn.

Source : PopSugar UK

Geri launches new Swimwear Range



Back in her Spice Girl days Ginger Spice wasn’t afraid to flash a bit of flesh donning provocative and skimpy outfits as the loudest member of the girl group.

But how times have changed and instead of using the opportunity to showcase her healthy figure Geri Halliwell left the bikini demonstration to the models.

The 38-year-old launched her Geri by Next swimwear range at the Savoy hotel in London earlier today but chose not to model her designs herself.

Standing next to two stunning models, the petite singer posed for photos wearing a plunging and short navy playsuit, but didn’t fancy stripping down fully to show off her new range.

The pretty singer was sporting sun-kissed tresses and was literally glowing showing off a deep and rather unnatural-looking tan.

One model, who was wearing a pretty pink two-piece bikini and flat sandals, dwarfed Geri despite the fact the singer was wearing sky-high nude wedges.

Dressed in a leopard-print monokini, another model also stood tall over the 5ft 2inch singer.



Talking about the collection, Geri told MailOnline: 'It's about inspiring confidence with great looking swimwear for all body shapes.'

The range which includes a number of beach dresses and playsuits has been designed by Geri ‘for real women of all shapes and sizes.’

The singer added: ‘This is a collection that makes you look good and feel fabulous.’

While Geri didn’t showcase her new range on her own body she has posed for pictures for Next wearing her swimwear and showing off her toned and slim figure.

Geri she has come a long way since 2001 when shocking pictures of her looking scarily thin performing yoga surfaced.

Showing off her fabulous figure the mother-of-one was looking happy and healthy at the launch of her reasonably priced range.

Whereas her fellow Spice Girl, Victoria Beckham’s pieces can cost hundreds and even thousands of pounds, Geri’s range is for the average women.

Geri’s bikinis are around £18 and prices rise up to £50 for more expensive items in the range such as her white crochet maxi-dress.

Source : Daily Mail