John Casablancas, who transformed modeling business, dies at 70

John Casablancas, the brash upstart who transformed the modeling business in the late 1970s when he founded the Elite agency and turned its young beauties – including Linda Evangelista, Gisele Bundchen and Naomi Campbell – into celebrities, died Saturday in Rio de Janeiro. He was 70.

Casablancas, who lived in Miami, had cancer, said his executive assistant, Lorraine Caggiano.

When Casablancas ventured into the modeling business in the early 1970s, the super-agents were Eileen Ford and Wilhemina Cooper, who took an old-school approach that included providing chaperones for their models and tucking them into bed at a reasonable hour.

Casablancas challenged their domination in 1977 when he moved his operation from Europe to New York City with a very different approach to grooming young women for the runway and glossy fashion spreads.

“We gave them huge amounts of money, and we gave them names and personalities. We let them give interviews. Suddenly, they became a dream for the larger public. They became supermodels,” he told the Chicago Sun-Times in 2000.

The main difference between his approach and Ford’s, he told another interviewer, was “Ford was a prude, and I was not.”

Through the 1980s and ’90s, Casablancas’ vision gave Elite a coveted roster of talents who became household names and earned extravagant fees. Evangelista famously quipped that models at her level “don’t wake up for less than $10,000 a day.”

Casablancas later came to regret his role in turning models into superstars. In 2000, when he sold his share of Elite, he lashed out at the “spoilt trouble-makers” he had made famous. “I hate them all,” he said, singling out Bundchen as “a monster of selfishness” and Heidi Klum as “a German sausage without talent.”

“One of my biggest regrets is that I created the supermodel,” he told the Sun-Times. “They can be impossible. Impossible.”

When he left the agency it had 500 models on four continents whose bookings brought in $100 million a year.

Along the way the dashing Casablancas lived the high life he encouraged his models to pursue. He made no secret of his love of beautiful young women, dated many of his much-younger models and partied hard.

Married three times, he had an affair with model Stephanie Seymour in 1983, when she was 16 and he was 41. It ended his second marriage, to Jeanette Christjansen, a former model and Miss Denmark.

His retirement was hastened by a scandal involving the then-president of Elite Europe, Gerald Marie, who had been shown in a 1999 BBC documentary propositioning a young model to have sex with him. Casablancas was not implicated in the scandal, but he left the agency the following year.

Born in New York on Dec. 12, 1942, Casablancas had a cosmopolitan upbringing, which included attending the exclusive Swiss boarding school Le Rosey.

He attended several colleges to study law and economics but did not earn a degree.

“I used to fight with my father. When I fought, I went to work. If I made peace, I went to college.”

At 20 he was hired by the mother of a schoolmate to be a marketing manager for Coca-Cola in Brazil, even though he had no background in the area. At his father’s insistence he married his French girlfriend, Marie Christine, but the union did not last.

After a few years in Brazil, Casablancas moved to Paris, where his relationship with Christjansen bloomed. She suggested he try his hand at starting a modeling agency, so in 1969 he opened Elysees 3, named after his Paris phone number.

“Though it was years before Casablancas made his presence felt on an international level, modeling was never the same,” author Michael Gross wrote in his 1995 book “Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women.”

“With Casablancas,” Gross wrote, “a new generation entered modeling. Raised on the new values of sex, drugs, and rock and roll, they were the children of ‘Blow-Up,’ and their arrival on the scene was explosive.”

In late 1971 the super-agent announced he was opening a separate agency, Elite Model Management, to concentrate on top models.

Gross called the news “the birth announcement of the most important model agency since Ford.”

In 1977 Casablancas moved across the Atlantic to challenge Ford in her own backyard. His foray into New York spurred what came to be known as “the model wars.” The top agencies raided each other for talent, and Ford and Wilhemina sued Elite for infringing on their turf.

Over the next decade Casablancas turned Elite into a global network with a stable that would grow to include Cindy Crawford, Claudia Schiffer, Andie MacDowell, Iman and Paulina Porizkova.

Casablancas is survived by his wife, Aline Wermelinger, and their three children, John Jr., Fernando Augusto and Nina. His other survivors include his children from his first two marriages, Cecile Casablancas and Julian Casablancas, the front man for the band the Strokes; and a brother, Fernando.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

More frequent service coming for Community Transit buses

As part of a regular update to its service hours, the agency will boost the frequencies of its Swift lines and other popular routes.

More than $1 million is available for housing-related programs in Snohomish County, and the Human Services Department is seeking applications. (File photo)
Applicants sought for housing programs in Snohomish County

More than $1 million is available for housing-related programs in… Continue reading

The newly rebuilt section of Index-Galena Road is pictured on Saturday, Nov. 4, 2023, near Index, Washington. (Jordan Hansen / The Herald)
Snohomish County honored nationally for Index-Galena road repair

The county Public Works department coordinated with multiple entities to repair a stretch of road near Index washed out by floods in 2006.

Birch, who was an owner surrender and now currently has an adoption pending, pauses on a walk with volunteer Cody McClellan at PAWS Lynnwood on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Pet surrenders up due to rising cost of living, shelter workers say

Compared to this time last year, dog surrenders are up 37% at the Lynnwood PAWS animal shelter.

Pedestrians cross the intersection of Evergreen Way and Airport Road on Thursday, Aug. 7, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
In Snohomish County, pedestrian fatalities continue a troublesome trend

As Everett and other cities eye new traffic safety measures, crashes involving pedestrians show little signs of decreasing.

The Mountlake Terrace City Council discusses the Flock Safety license plate camera system on Thursday, June 5, 2025 in Mountlake Terrace, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Mountlake Terrace public express ongoing ire with future Flock system

The city council explored installing a new advisory committee for stronger safety camera oversight.

Crane Aerospace & Electronics volunteer Dylan Goss helps move branches into place between poles while assembling an analog beaver dam in North Creek on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Adopt A Stream volunteers build analog beaver dams in North Creek

The human-engineered structures will mimic natural dams in an effort to restore creek health in an increasingly urbanized area.

Ferries pass on a crossing between Mukilteo and Whidbey Island. (Andy Bronson / Herald file)
State commission approves rate hike for ferry trips

Ticket prices are set to rise about 6% over the next two years.

A Community Transit bus drives underneath the Lynnwood Light Rail station on Thursday, April 4, 2024 in Lynnwood, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Children explore stories on a bus during ‘Transit Tales’

The partnership between Community Transit and Sno-Isle Libraries brings kids into a bus to listen to stories, sing and pretend to take the wheel.

Niko Battle (campaign photo)
Everett council frontrunner to face eligibility questions in court

Questions over Niko Battle’s eligibility have escalated to challenges in Snohomish County Superior Court and the county auditor’s office.

Gov. Bob Ferguson in a media availability after signing the budget on Tuesday, May 20, 2025. (Photo by Jacquelyn Jimenez Romero/Washington State Standard)
Ferguson’s top policy adviser on extended leave

It’s the latest turbulence for the Washington governor’s senior staff.

1 person dead, another injured after vehicle crashes into building in Everett

Prior to the crash, two people allegedly fled from Washington State Patrol who was investigating a DUI

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.