Wendy Ide 

Twiggy review – Sadie Frost’s slick portrait of the world’s first supermodel

The swinging 60s London star’s sunny personality illuminates this conventional documentary
  
  

Twiggy, wearing a plaid shift minidress, swings around a black and white striped post in the street, smiling
The ‘immensely likable’ Twiggy in 1966. Photograph: Alamy

The story of the gamine teenager from Neasden, London, born Lesley Hornby, who in a matter of weeks became the mononymous face of the 60s, is remarkable enough in itself. But this slick documentary from actor turned director Sadie Frost (it’s her second portrait of a fashion icon, following 2021’s Quant) digs into a mercurial career that thrived on reinvention.

Twiggy’s work as a model was followed by movie acting, Broadway song-and-dance pizzazz and a stint as a TV variety show host, then came full circle back to fashion, with ventures as a designer and veteran model. The familiar machinery of the fashion doc is well oiled by celebrity talking heads, but the main draw of this very conventional film is its sunny, immensely likable subject.

  • In UK and Irish cinemas

Watch a trailer for Twiggy.
 

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