dancing queen - Brooke Hauser
Transcription
dancing queen - Brooke Hauser
She’s a singer, a dancer, an actress, and a designer—Fergie gives new meaning to the term “mover and shaker.” By Brooke Hauser 134 photographed by michael thompson gutter credit Dancing Queen gutter credit “Something inside of me said, ‘I need an evolution.’” Makeup colors: Color Design Eye Shadow in Fashion Forward and Color Fever Lasting Radiance Lipcolor in Rose Defile by Lancôme. Nylon Lycra swimsuit by OMO Norma Kamali. Brass earrings by Van der Straeten. Metal cuff by Krizia. Patent-leather shoes by Christian Louboutin. These pages: Hair, Kevin Ryan; makeup, Brigitte Reiss-Andersen; manicure, April Foreman. Fashion editor: Paul Cavaco. Details, see Credits page. 135 i t’s after dark at the Record Plant, a legendary recording compound in Hollywood, and inside the studio, Fergie is dancing to her own beat. Her new album with the Black Eyed Peas, entitled The E.N.D., features a mash-up of sounds— electro, rock, dub reggae—and with each new track that she plays for me, Fergie morphs into a different character. There is the funky robot, which she simulates with jerky movements of her arms at 90-degree angles. There is the low-riding chola, harking back to her high-school days, when she was a suburban California girl seeking to emulate the tough style of the MexicanAmericans who lived nearby. Over time, she has perfected the art of the lean-back, a slow grind with one hand driving an invisible steering wheel, which she demonstrates tonight. Finally, there is Stacy Ferguson herself—barely recognizable as a brunette, surprisingly petite, and completely in the moment, jumping up and down and ripping air-guitar chords on the thighs of her skinny black jeans. As for Ferguson’s flirtatious alter ego, she is nowhere in sight. The Dutchess isn’t dead; she’s just been reincarnated. Gone are the messy blonde locks. Ferguson recently unveiled her new do—a sheet of sleek, almost-black hair that’s more Queen of the Nile. Gone are the teeny-weeny kilts, knee-high socks, and tiaras, which have been traded in for a look that’s more futuristic than fetishistic. Or, as Ferguson describes it: “I’m kind of on this Judy Jetson vibe, but it’s more like Judy Jetson after she’s traveled the world and become a gypsy.” This evening, Fergie is outfitted in a punk-rock ensemble, complete with a leather-and-chain harness that fits snugly over her thin blue T-shirt just below the breasts, and black Doc Martens that, to her embarrassment, look brand-new. The image makeover is just one part of Ferguson’s new persona, which has been as expertly engineered as the album itself; indeed, the two go hand in hand. As a reminder of their vision, on top of the studio soundboard, the Peas keep a glass helix of neon light that is similar to a lava lamp and bears a masking-tape label that reads “Energy Never Dies.” In addition to being the full name of the new album—a reference to the first 136 law of thermodynamics, which says that neither energy nor matter can be created or destroyed—it could be Ferguson’s personal motto. She has survived drug addiction, heartbreak, and haters. (Her father said “London Bridge” was “the worst song that he’d ever heard in his life,” Ferguson recalls with a smirk. “I said, ‘Dad, I respect that, but I hope you’re wrong, because it’s my first single.’”) Nevertheless, she has proven herself to be a constant in the business, a kinetic presence who never fails to channel her energy into new directions. At 34, she is married to the ridiculously handsome actor Josh Duhamel, tion on Nine, director Rob Marshall’s big-screen adaptation of the musical based on Fellini’s film 8½. As part of an ensemble that includes Daniel Day-Lewis, Nicole Kidman, and Penélope Cruz, to name a few, Ferguson plays Saraghina, an old-world prostitute who introduces young boys to the joys of sex. “She’s almost animalistic. She’s not the sharpest tool in the shed, but she’s very physical, just very intense,” the singer says, purring for effect. “Saraghina is all woman.” At the request of the director, Ferguson put on weight for the role—17 pounds, to be exact. Gaining the weight was the “I’m not afraid to show my flaws, and I’m not going to try to be perfect.” whom she met in 2004 while shooting an episode of his last TV show, Las Vegas, and she’s thinking about starting a family someday. But just because Fergie-Ferg is settled down doesn’t mean that she’s not still shaking things up. “Change is just exciting for me,” she says. “When I do something for too long, I burn out. I need something to light my fire. I sound like Jim Morrison: ‘Come on baby, light my fire,’” she sings. With her biggest tour ever with the Black Eyed Peas kicking off this spring, Ferguson decided to listen to the voice in her head. “Something inside of me said, ‘I need an evolution.’ I’m in a new phase of life. I’m married; I have a new album. It felt time.” Arching her right eyebrow, which is conspicuously devoid of a piercing, she adds, “I’m not just going to be the booty-shake girl.” Ferguson isn’t about to retire the booty shake completely—she works too hard on those glutes. She’d just rather be remembered by other names. Grammy winner, perhaps: She has won three. Trendsetter: This spring, she debuted her new stiletto and sneaker collections with Brown Shoe Co. And now, movie star: Ferguson recently finished produc- fun part. While on location in London, Ferguson and Cruz, who also needed to be curvier for the film, ordered “everything fried and full of fat and salty,” the singer says. “We were eating our brains out.” But living with the extra poundage proved to be a difficult adjustment for Ferguson, an exercise fanatic whose body is a recurring theme in her lyrics, whether she’s singing about her “lady lumps” in “My Humps” or about her workout routine in “Fergalicious.” (Sample lyric: “My body stay vicious/ I be up in the gym just working on my fitness.”) Back in Los Angeles, where she and Duhamel live in the ritzy neighborhood of Brentwood (which she calls “Brent Hood”), Ferguson was frustrated that she couldn’t squeeze her various new lumps into her skinny jeans. The pregnancy rumors started when the paparazzi took pictures of her belly where once there were abs of steel. “If I don’t do sit-ups, my stomach sticks out,” says Ferguson, adding that her arms are also a difficult area for her. “Legs are easy for me. That’s my lucky spot.” Instead of galvanizing her to exercise, her weight gain at first had the opposite effect. “It was a very gradual thing, gutter credit Ferguson in an homage to the iconic 1964 William Claxton photograph of model Peggy Moffit wearing a topless bathing suit by designer Rudi Gernreich. Nylon Lycra swimsuit by Yigal Azrouël. 137 her green eyes flickering like a traffic light stuck between “go” and “slow down.” It’s a go: “The spelling is different because I didn’t want people who didn’t know how to say it to call it ‘the Doucheess,’” Ferguson explains. “I thought, ‘Let me dumb-ify it a little bit.’ Sometimes you smarten things up and get more clever with words. It’s fun to go the other way, and it’s always nice for people to not expect as much from me.” She smiles coyly. “I’ve always enjoyed being the underdog.” I point out that she’s not really an underdog anymore, but that seems to be one reputation she’s not ready to give up. For all her royal posturing, Ferguson is no prima donna, a claim that she makes in her hit song “Glamorous.” “I’m not clean, I’m not pristine/ I’m no queen, I’m no machine,” Fergie raps. “I still go to Taco Bell/ Drive-through, raw as hell.” So what about that time she compared herself to the People’s Princess in an interview, crowning herself the People’s Artist? Ferguson visibly cringes. “I wasn’t trying to put myself up there with Princess Di!” she squeaks. “I meant that there’s a realness about my personality that I’m not afraid to show. I’m not 2001 1994 With actor David Faustino On Married With Children “Oooh, this is so funny. I was just one of the girls who gueststarred and had a little flirt session with Bud Bundy.” 2008 With Renee Sandstrom and Stefanie Ridel of Wild Orchid in West Hollywood “I’ve always been into costumey looks. The tan is a bit much with the hair, but I understand what I was going for. We didn’t have stylists, obviously.” With Josh Duhamel at the Grammy Awards, Los Angeles [In baby voice] “There’s my husband and me! Josh and I didn’t know we were being photographed. But that’s a cute moment of how we are when we’re together.” 2003 At the Billboard Music Awards, Las Vegas “This dress has the curvy pinup-girl vibe. I’m doing the whole attitude, as you can see. Little ponytail, little rockabilly. This was one of the first award shows that I went to with the Black Eyed Peas, and I think we won.” 2008 Performing with Ann and Nancy Wilson on American Idol’ s “Idol Gives Back,” Hollywood “This was a dream for me. I’m so excited that I could throw up the devil horns—the rock and roll sign—with Heart at my side.” afraid to show my flaws, and I’m not going to try to be perfect.” i f anything, Ferguson goes out of her way to point out her flaws, as if to beat everyone else to the punch. Compliment her new hair, and she’ll toss it to one side to show you the extensions. Ask about her disappeared eyebrow ring, and she’ll close her eyes and lean her head back, saying, “I have a hole in my face—you can see it.” (The hole doesn’t bother her; she’s just happy that the hair is growing in again after a long period of “psycho plucking” that began when she was 18.) Those silver-and-black-striped fingernails? Stickers. “It’s a new thing that’s going on,” she says. And while we’re here, let’s discuss those fingers: “I’m a little bit rough, and I’m always grabbing things or mosh-pitting onstage. My hands aren’t really dainty,” Ferguson sighs, splaying her left hand and gazing admiringly at the four-carat diamond that rests in a chunky, cufflike H. Stern ring. “It’s fine. I’ve come to terms with that.” But that’s just the physical inventory. It’s not every pop star who will own up Performing with James Brown at the Avalon, Hollywood “I went to Seattle, and a lot of girls were wearing little French braids, and I thought, What if I could do French braids, and make them really long so onstage they’d move around like snakes?” 2005 Performing on Today, New York City “I’m doing a front walkover. Those are very stretchy pants, so it’s easy. I’m performing ‘Barracuda’; I’m not going to perform that song half-assed. I don’t care if it’s seven in the morning.” At the MTV European Music Awards in Lisbon, Portugal “This was the bang era, or “fringe” in Europe. The clip-on bangs were a huge deal, and there was always drama about the bangs being lost. They would travel with us, and one of the bags would get lost, and it’d have the bangs in there.” 2008 2005 2009 2008 With Kiefer Sutherland at the ESPY Awards, Los Angeles “I’m a huge fan of 24. On show days, I’ll watch downloaded TV shows: Lost, Gossip Girl. I won’t be that social, because I’m saving my charisma for the stage.” for photographers’ credits, see credits page. getting back into it and finally letting a trainer train me,” she says. “I didn’t want to be told what to do, and I wasn’t mentally ready to crack the whip.” She eventually hired Duhamel’s trainer to work with her several times a week at home. Each session lasts two hours, but for the first half-hour, the trainer is there simply to knock on her door and help get her out of bed. “I’m a procrastinator,” says Ferguson, who mixes up the routine with weight lifting, outdoor hikes, and jumping rope, an activity that, she jokes, requires three sports bras. “I’ll be happy with whatever body that brings me.” A slammin’ one, in fact, and just in time for the big tour, which she knows will require every last drop of her energy and stamina. Back in the studio, the Peas’ hoodie-wearing sound mixer teases Ferguson, “You better start jogging and rapping at the same time.” Ever since the singer’s first solo album, The Dutchess, debuted in 2006, one question has been bugging me: Why misspell “duchess” with a t? As she eats string cheese while sitting on a couch in one of the studio’s guest lounges, I finally ask the Dutchess herself, and she smirks, to urinating on herself onstage during a concert, or to collecting unemployment while she was living with Mom, or to talking to a laundry hamper during a bad crystal-meth jag. (The drug can cause paranoia and hallucinations.) Thanks to years of soul-searching and the hypnotherapy sessions that she still continues today, Ferguson knows her needs and limits better than most. She works out in hotel gyms when she’s on tour, but show dates are generally reserved for chilling out and watching her favorite TV shows, such as The Office. Other needs are of the spiritual variety. Ferguson might be described as a holistic hip-hop star: A fan of The Secret who talks about vibes and visualization, she has been known to incorporate a little chant into preshow powwows with her dancers and backup band. “I make everyone get out anything that’s frustrating them, so that it’s not brought onstage to mess up the whole flow of the show,” Ferguson explains. “It’s taking all that negative energy and pushing it out there into positive energy. At the end, I say, ‘One, two, three—all your shit,’ “I’m not just going to be the booty-shake girl.” for photographers’ credits, see credits page. 2006 2008 Unveiling her footwear collection in Las Vegas “I’m putting myself out there with shoes that we’ve designed, and now buyers from different stores are seeing them. I’m really proud of them. It feels good right now to have a line that’s recessionfriendly.” In Poseidon “That was a diva dress. I was a singer on the Poseidon. I died in that film, too. Nine was actually the first film that I didn’t die in, because I did die in Grindhouse and Poseidon, and I did a movie when I was younger called Monster in the Closet, and I died.” 2008 With Mariah Carey at Fashion Rocks, New York City “They brought out these T-shirts, and some girls looked disappointed. Such a dream, to perform with Mariah.” sister named Dana, grew up with flowery pink wallpaper and a pool in the backyard. Long before she started touring the world with one of the most successful hip-hop groups of all time, she brought her act to neighborhood malls: At age five, Ferguson got her first gig singing show tunes from Annie and Cabaret with a local ensemble called Karen’s Kids. From a young age, Ferguson landed several television (continued on page 000) “I need structure. I need to get enough sleep. I need to make sure that I’m having regular workouts, and that they put in time for hair and makeup and nails, because I do have to get my nails done,” Ferguson says, affecting a don’t-get-it-twisted look. “I have to get my roots touched up and get facials, because when you’re traveling, the skin doesn’t look as nice.” High-maintenance? Perhaps. But it’s all part of the job description, as 2006 before singing the national anthem at the NASCAR Nextel Cup, Daytona, Florida “That was for NASCAR, so I got into the mood of things. I like jumpers—you can stick out your stomach.” Ferguson sees it, and her mission is clear: “Basically, to be at my best in this business, which is show business.” Ferguson’s early years aren’t exactly the stuff of hip-hop legend. She’s not straight outta Compton, but rather Hacienda Heights, an ethnically mixed suburb about 35 miles away. The daughter of schoolteachers Terri and Pat Ferguson, who divorced when she was a teenager, Ferguson, who has a younger and then everyone joins in, and we say, ‘Take it to the stage!’” She may not fit the mold of the typical diva, but experience has taught Ferguson to be more vocal about her personal needs. “I’m not talking about green M&Ms in the dressing room,” says the singer, who, over the course of our interview, picks from a selection of steamed vegetables, chicken with garlic sauce, fortune cookies, and Skinny Water. With Jennifer Lopez and Kate Hudson at Movies Rock, Los Angeles “Kate and I had a great time filming Nine. We would hang out and gossip and listen to music. She’s similar to me in that she works hard but plays hard, too. Every time I see Jennifer, we talk more and more. She’s amazing.” 2007 2008 With Quentin Tarantino in Las Vegas “We have the same birthday and just had a blast. There was definitely decadence and debauchery.” 2008 2007 Performing in Atlantic City “This is the Dutchess persona. It was a little tonguein-cheek with the tiara and my version of the Scottish kilt, modeled after the tartan based on my family’s last name, Ferguson.” At Project Angel Food, Los Angeles “This is for M.A.C. Viva Glam. I’m their spokesperson. We go to different programs around the world. I see so many superficial things that I love to get to the real stuff, real people and what they’ve been through.” 2009 With Alicia Keys and Whitney Houston at Clive Davis’s preGrammy party, Beverly Hills “I remember listening to Whitney as a girl. I wanted that power in my voice. Alicia is really such a beautiful songbird.” 2008 At the March of Dimes Beauty Ball, New York City “It was fun to come to New York and be a brunette.” ALLURE: “Did people recognize you?” FERGIE: “No! Even my mother will say, ‘I didn’t put it together that that was you!’ ” 2009 139 bed time (Continued from page 115) to six months, so it’s hard to believe copper delivered so passively would affect the skin faster.” WHAT IT IS: Natura World Aloe Dream Mate Pillow, $70, and Aloe Mattress Topper, $190 THE CLAIMS: Aloe’s “natural healing properties promote cell repair” and “cell regeneration.” FEIN’S OPINION: “Aloe helps heal burns and ulcers, so the pillow and mattress topper could have a purpose after peels or laser treatments that caused temporary irritation—but again, it’s not the best delivery system.” WHAT IT IS: Magniflex SeaCell Pillow, $159 THE CLAIMS: Aloe vera “strengthens the outer layers of skin, resulting in a more youthful appearance.” Soy proteins strengthen hair with cystine. FEIN’S OPINION: “It’s debatable whether aloe strengthens healthy skin; it’s certainly not a wrinkle fighter. Cystine produced in your hair makes it strong, but even taking a cystine supplement might not strengthen hair—it would only benefit people who have an amino acid deficiency, which is rare. And soy has actually been shown to reduce hair growth, making it a popular ingredient in hair-minimizing body moisturizers.” WHAT IT IS: Park Place Aloe Therapy mattress, $1,399 to $2,299 THE CLAIMS: Aloe helps moisturize dry skin. It also “stimulates the growth of new skin cells.” FEIN’S OPINION: “Why have a topical delivery device that doesn’t even touch your skin? The mattress is under sheets, you’re wearing pajamas—how much can your skin really benefit?” WHAT IT IS: Magniflex Gold Collection Pillow, $1,000 THE CLAIMS: Its 22-karat-gold fibers are antibacterial, and historians believe “that Cleopatra used pure gold as a tool to maintain youthful skin.” FEIN’S OPINION: “If gold is antibacterial—and I would like to see more data—antibacterial pillows and bedding would be a great idea for hospitals, but you still wouldn’t need them in your beauty regimen. If gold caused a magical anti-aging effect, why couldn’t that be duplicated by wearing gold jewelry? Elemental gold—the kind used in jewelry and this pillow—is poorly absorbed into the skin, which is good; otherwise, exposure to metals is harmful.” 142 big in japan dancing queen (Continued from page 80) shampoo and soap. I almost expected the bathhouse attendant to ask me why, after all this time, I had dared to return. But she just took my money, handed over a dish towel, and went back to reading her book. The neighbors nodded and smiled and then ignored me as I undressed, and it felt good to be ignored. As I showered alongside grandmothers giving each other shoulder rubs and mothers scrubbing their children, I felt lucky to be allowed to participate in this local cooperative ritual, treated just like anyone else. Could it be that I finally fit in? “Ookii,” said an old woman as I got in the crowded tub. My face flushed with embarrassment as everyone stared. Was this possibly the same old woman who had called me huge before? I’d been so focused on myself that I hadn’t really looked at her, or anyone else, the last time I came here. This lady was probably in her 70s, her spine hunched like a parody of mine when I slouched. Her skin was crepey where it had come in contact with the sun but smooth everywhere else, her legs and arms almost girlish. I felt humiliated as my breasts floated to the surface, bobbing in the water. “Ookii,” she repeated, grinning. “You’re right,” I said in Japanese, my defensiveness ebbing as I realized that her comment was merely an observation, a neutral fact that I had colored with my own shame, a relic of the days when I felt like a little girl trapped in a grown woman’s body. Naked in that tub, there was nothing to hide behind, but there was also nothing to hide. “Sekushii,” a teenage girl said. “Sexy?” I echoed, doubting my own translation. “Beautiful,” the old woman said in tentative English, now beaming at the girl. I couldn’t tell who she was talking to, but it didn’t matter. The old woman could have been talking to any or all of us, the grandmothers and mothers and little girls sharing the communal water. We were all beautiful in our nakedness, lumpy and perfect, young and old, big and small, more alike than different. I leaned back, feeling a weight lift that had nothing to do with size. u (Continued from page 139) spots that ranged from a recurring role on the variety show Kids Incorporated to the voice of Sally in Peanuts cartoons and a girl flirting with Bud Bundy on Married…With Children. In 1994, she formed the girl group Wild Orchid, with whom she later hosted a lip-synch TV program called Great Pretenders. Around the same time, Ferguson developed a couple of hard-to-kick habits, both of which situated her squarely in the realm of make-believe. One was her obsession with costumes, which began when she started creating theme outfits to wear on her lip-synch show. The other was her addiction to meth, which spiraled out of control when Wild Orchid broke up in 2001. After cleaning up and joining the Peas in 2002— a friend recommended her to sing backup vocals on the track “Shut Up” on their third album, Elephunk—Ferguson didn’t want to wear anything other than her uniform of a white tank top and Dickies. “By the time that whole period had eaten me up and spit me out, I didn’t feel frilly or girlie,” she says. “I’d been through a hard time, and I just felt harder. It took me a while to come full circle.” Not that it’s a problem anymore. Ferguson loves her costumes, and if you’re wondering, yes, that goes for offstage as well. “Oh, girl, I’ve got a big chest of fun little numbers, ones that I would never wear in public,” she teases. Such as? She won’t elaborate, only saying that, when it comes to sex after marriage, “nothing’s changed in that department. I like to have fun with my costume onstage; why wouldn’t I in the bedroom?” That’s Fergie, all right: giving it up, but not all of it. Her life is a peep show, with the emphasis on “peep”—and every show must end. After this interview, she is heading home to be with her husband and mother-in-law, Bonnie, whom she affectionately calls Bon-Bon. Ferguson is already planning to wake up early tomorrow morning to work out with her sister. But first, here in the studio, she’s cueing up another track. “Looky, looky, looky what I got right here,” Fergie sings along to “Take It Off,” knees knocking and shoulders popping. “Nibble on my cookie if you want to, dear....” And the Dutchess lives. u Allure/July 2009