British
photographer David Bailey earned his fame with shots of top model Jean
Shrimpton who has claimed that he made a lot of money out of her and paid
her nothing in return
As the “Daily
Telegraph” noted Bailey once said of his cover girl that she was magic.and
in addition the cheapest model in the world.
Jean
Shrimpton has now voiced that she never saw a penny from Bailey whom she accused of
having made a lot of money out of her without paying nothing in return.
Bailey,
who reputedly launched Shrimpton's career as a supermodel, dismissed the
accusation as "silly" in an interview with the “Sunday Times
Magazine published on September 17, 2011.
“I'm not
going to say nasty things about Jean, because I love her. But, you know, some
women get a bid odd as they get older," he told the newspaper.
Bailey,
now 73, also captured the most powerful icons of the 1960s, including Jean
Shrimpton who appeared in “Vogue magazine “ countless times and was
reported to have been paid the then-extravagant sum of $67 per hour.
The two met at a photo session for a cornflakes advert
and although he is often said to be responsible for much of her success, she in
turn helped his career to blossom, signalled “The Daily Telegraph”.
Their close relationship soon led to an explosive love
affair, and Bailey left his wife for the supermodel when she was just 18.
Bailey and Shrimpton parted ways three years later and
the latter, now 68, went on to marry photographer Michael Cox with whom she had
her son Thaddeus. The couple have been running the Abbey Hotel in Penzance,
Cornwall since she left the fashion industry 30 years ago.
Bailey,
who now makes most of his money from art prints, admitted in the interview
being consumed by thoughts of money: "I'm commercial … I want money!
I've got enough lifetime achievement awards but I can't pay for what I do,
because I spend all my money on doing books, and they lose money."