Tag: Jeans Model Last year was an ugly time for model-turned-actress Sara Standring.
Standring, 28, was to perform her solo show at the Edinburgh Festival but copyright issues
initially prevented her from staging Please Don't Feed the Models, a comedy based on her six
years on the international modelling circuit.She travelled to Edinburgh to perform in two
children's plays and, dressed as an otter, was poised to go on stage when her father phoned
her with the news he was terminally ill. Standring completed the show and flew home to nurse
her dying dad, Phil, who passed away on Christmas Day. She says the experience has made her
"want to grab life by the balls"."When you go through something like this, it makes you want
to get out and make the most of life. You certainly learn not to sweat the small stuff so I
was thinking, 'What have I got to lose?' "Standring performs Please Don't Feed the Models
for three nights in Auckland next week to fundraise for a trip back to the Edinburgh
Festival in August where the show will finally go on.There is talk the Edinburgh gig will be
followed by a tour as English producers, who saw the sell-out play at the 2006 Wellington
Fringe Festival, believe it has international appeal. Centred on a young New Zealand model
entering the cut-throat world of international modelling -where success is quite literally
measured in inches - Standring plays six characters.These include an Irish model with the
face of an angel and a mouth like a sewer, a hard-nosed Japanese agent, a gay American make
-up artist, a stereotypical "dumb" model and a junkie model with a heart of gold.Standring
admits they are all based "with a great deal of creative licence" on people she encountered
during her years on the catwalk.Born and raised in Papakura, she entered the Miss Counties
Manukau pageant when she was 14. Within two years, Standring found herself celebrating her
16th birthday on assignment in Tokyo.She spent six years travelling the world, gracing
covers on magazines such as Vogue and Marie Claire and advertising super-brands such as
American clothing label Abercrombie and Fitch, Levi jeans, Organic Hair Products and
cosmetic giant Clarins.At one stage, her face looked down from a giant billboard on New
York's Times Square.Standring dated Smashing Pumpkins guitarist James Iha and generally
enjoyed fame and fortune.But as time rolled on and she reached her early 20s - retirement
age for an international hair and beauty model - she started to hanker for an acting
career."I know I sound like a walking cliché - and I do worry about that - but I was
starting to do more TV work and acting-style jobs and it was what I really wanted to do."She
returned home, successfully auditioned for NZ Drama School Toi Whakaari and settled down to
a life less glamorous. Standring admits she still finds it difficult to reconcile the little
she gets paid compared with her modelling days."It makes me more determined. I realise as an
actor you can't sit around waiting for it to come to you. You have to be proactive about
devising your own work and constantly finding your own opportunities."Please Don't Feed the
Models was originally devised as Standring's graduation piece after fellow students urged
her to use her modelling days as inspiration for the required 20-minute solo performance."I
think people are fascinated by the modelling world because it is so bizarre and mysterious.
At all times, you are judged on how you look and the comments made to you can be brutal. It
is often a lonely life because you are constantly competing with your peers."

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