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Celebrity
Paris Hilton stirs love, hate & pity
From Belinda Goldsmith
NEW
YORK—Some love her. Others hate her. Paris Hilton’s latest biographer,
who spent more than a year studying the world’s most famous “celebutante,”
says he just feels sorry for her.
Hilton, whose great-grandfather, Conrad, started the global Hilton Hotel
empire, was catapulted to international fame in 2003 when a home video
of her having sex with a former boyfriend was plastered all over the
Internet.
Coupled with a popular reality television show called “The Simple Life,”
Hilton used the publicity to build a multimillion-dollar celebrity
juggernaut. The wannabe star’s outrageous behaviour and skimpy clothing
scored her headlines and magazine covers around the world.
Biographer Jerry Oppenheimer, author of “House of Hilton - From Conrad
to Paris: A Drama of Wealth, Power, and Privilege,” said Hilton, 25, has
made herself into the IT girl of this decade, attracting scores of
copycat fans.
But he said her partying and rich-girl antics — including a recent
arrest for drunken driving — have irritated many others. Dislike of her
is so strong that she recently topped a survey as the female star most
people would like to see slain in a horror film.
She also reportedly has won a place in the 2007 Guinness World Records
as “the most overrated celebrity,” and helped personify a new word, “celebutante,”
a blend of “celebrity” and “debutante” meaning an attention seeker
better known for misbehaving than for talent.
Loved or hated, Paris Hilton is here to stay for a while, Oppenheimer
said.
“Her brilliance is getting the attention — the exhibitionism, canoodling
with guys in clubs and getting on the covers of celebrity magazines
around the world,” he said.
CHILDHOOD PRESSURE
Oppenheimer said he ended up feeling sorry for Hilton as he came to
believe that her mother and maternal grandmother pushed her into using
the family name and an exhibitionist streak to become a celebrity.
“Her mother, Kathy, put her in make-up and allowed her (into) nightclubs
from a very young age,” Oppenheimer, a biographer of Martha Stewart and
Rock Hudson, said in a telephone interview.
“I feel sorry for her because in a way she had no chance to do anything
else but live the dreams that her grandmother and her mother had for
themselves.”
Legal warnings from Hilton’s mother failed to stop the book and prompted
family and friends to come out of the woodwork with their stories,
Oppenheimer said.
He said he was surprised to find that Hilton’s maternal grandmother was
the “stage mother from hell,” pushing her daughter into a modelling and
acting career that never really took off.
Since Hilton hit the spotlight, her mother has appeared as the host on
the reality television show “I Want To Be A Hilton” in an attempt to
cash in on the fame of the oldest of her four children. But the show was
criticized and had a limited run.
“It is a bizarre family,” said Oppenheimer. “Behind the scenes her
parents were not opposed to (the sex video) because that totally
launched her.”
Oppenheimer said it was hard to tell if Hilton was real or the invention
of a clever marketing team that was aware her “heiress tag” is untrue.
She stands to inherit little from the Hilton empire and needs to work
for a living.
“Paris will say whatever comes into her head. She tends to make up
stories and scenarios. I do wonder if she doesn’t live in a fantasy
world herself,” Oppenheimer said. |