找回密码
 加入慢享
猜你喜欢
旅行常客论坛

39岁帕丽斯·希尔顿纪录片上线!揭秘芭比背后心酸,童年曾遭虐待…(附视频&摘要稿)

[复制链接]
发表于 2020-9-24 18:29:00 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式





说起美国第一名媛,国内大多数粉丝脑海里绝对跳出来的是帕丽斯·希尔顿(Paris Hilton)大小姐,一头金色的长发加上芭比的娇容,走到哪里都是媒体的焦点。据英国《镜像》于7月25日透露,希尔顿大小姐近期宣布将于今年9月上线个人纪录片《这是帕丽斯》,影片内将首次公开自己的“童年阴影”,让粉丝们直呼期待!

据报道称,纪录片将在帕丽斯的个人视频平台发布,该节目还有她的闺蜜—美国真人秀明星金·卡戴珊(Kim Kardashian)加盟客串,想当年金姐刚进娱乐圈的时候可是帕丽斯身边的小跟班,如今两人都已经39岁了还保持着密切联系,不得不感慨帕丽斯和金姐的关系真的是非同一般!

在帕丽斯发布的纪录片预告片段中,她说到“我紧张得浑身都在发抖,甚至连吃饭都很困难,全是翻江倒胃的感觉,”帕丽斯还称“这是一件很私人的事,我不喜欢公开谈论,没有任何人真正知道我是谁,我小时候发生的一些事从来没有跟任何人说过,为此我还经常在睡梦中被吓醒。”

帕丽斯表示,该纪录片将于9月14日首映,该纪录片大纲还透露了她“童年遭受的虐待和暴力,并且从来没有在媒体上曝光过。”

此消息一出粉丝们都表示无比的期待,要知道,身为模特、演员、歌手、作家、商人多重身份的帕丽斯大小姐,是世界名企市值高达30亿英镑(约269.1亿RMB)的希尔顿集团继承人,还是多家慈善机构的创始人。如此优秀多金的希尔顿大小姐,童年还会又怎样的心酸烦恼呢?一起拭目以待吧!





Paris Hilton is known as a business mogul, a reality TV star and has been
dubbed the “original influencer.” But how much of the persona is the “real
Paris?” And where did this filtered, curated and celebutante image come from?
Those are the questions her YouTube Originals documentary “This Is Paris” hopes
to answer, peeling back the layers to reveal how Hilton created the character
the world thinks they know.

“I feel that I’ve grown up so much, especially in the past year,” Hilton
tells Variety in an interview conducted over Zoom. “Doing this film, I just had
so many realizations and realized who I truly am and why I am the way I am.”

In the documentary, which is now streaming on YouTube, Hilton details her
rise to fame and her childhood trauma, alleging that she was physically and
emotionally abused while at attending boarding school. It’s the first time
Hilton has opened up about the experience publicly and, as shown in the movie,
the first time she’s opened up about it privately as well. And Hilton wasn’t
prepared to be so candid. In fact, filming the documentary at all was a
surprising move, especially since she did not serve as a producer on the film.
Hilton admits that it was a big risk, since she’s always had “complete creative
control” of her business ventures, which consists of 19 different product lines,
including a line of 27 fragrances valued at $3 million.

“My first reaction was ‘No’ because I’ve been offered to do this so many
times and I’ve said ‘No,’ ” Hilton explains. “I just didn’t feel like it was the
right time ever.”

After director Alexandra Dean and the production company shared their vision
and concept for the film, the team eventually wore Hilton down. But giving up
control was even tougher than she imagined.

“During the editing process when we were watching the final film, there was
so many things [where] I was like ‘Oh my god, I cannot have the world see this,
like we need to cut that part out,’” Hilton recalls. “But after talking with
[producers] and them explaining to me why it’s important to keep all this in, I
just said, ‘You know what, this is real. This is who I am. And I might as well
show the world that, [rather than] showing the person I invented who really
isn’t me.’”

In the film, Hilton recounts the time she spent in boarding schools for teens
with behavioral problems in the late 1990s. She also details the terrifying
moment two people took her from her bedroom in the middle of the night to go to
one of those schools, Provo Canyon School in Utah, while her parents looked on
in tears. Though her parents, Rick and Kathy Hilton, chose to send her to the
program, Paris explains that until making the documentary they were not privy to
the treatment she endured there.

“It was very emotional,” Hilton says of filming the doc. “I’m kind of nervous
to watch it with them. I know it’s going to be so hard for them to see. … I’m
just really putting it all out there. So, I think it’s definitely be hard for my
mom and dad to watch that.”

But, as painful as it was to relive, Hilton thinks sharing her secret will
have a positive effect.

“I feel by me telling my story and having the courage and being brave is
going to help a lot of other people who want to come out and tell their story,”
she says. “And expose these places for what they’re doing to children. My
ultimate goal is to shut these places down because they shouldn’t exist and no
child should ever have to go through what I went through.”

In a statement to Variety regarding Hilton’s claims of abuse, a
representative for Provo Canyon school writes: “Originally opened in 1971, Provo
Canyon School was sold by its previous ownership in August 2000. We therefore
cannot comment on the operations or patient experience prior to this time.”

“Provo Canyon School today is an intensive, psychiatric residential treatment
center for youth between the ages of 8 and 18 that have special, and often
complex, mental health and emotional needs,” the statement continues. “We offer
innovative, evidence-based therapeutic interventions, academic instruction and
life-skills training tailored to the needs of each of our students. Leadership
and staff are highly committed to providing effective treatment, compassionate
care and a nurturing environment for the students and families we serve. Provo
Canyon School is licensed by the State of Utah, Department of Human Services; it
is accredited by The Joint Commission (national accreditation of hospitals) and
Cognia/AdvancED for academic services.”

It concludes: “We do not condone or promote any form of abuse. Any and all
alleged/suspected abuse is reported to our state regulatory authorities, law
enforcement and Child Protective Services immediately as required. We are
committed to providing high-quality care to youth with special, and often
complex, emotional, behavioral and psychiatric needs.”

Hilton says that since joining the “Breaking Code Silence” movement — an
initiative that encourages survivors to speak out about their experiences in the
troubled teen industry — she has received an incredible response from others
who’ve experienced similar situations.

“I have received tons of letters from other survivors who have thanked me for
being brave and telling my story because they feel like they can open up and
tell theirs as well,” she says. “We are working to reform the troubled teen
industry, by pushing for legislation which will create better rules of
operation, oversight and accountability. People can go sign the petition to call
for reform. I am in contact with Oregon [state] Sen. Sara Gelser to support her
efforts to pass legislation to finally change the industry and save other
children.”

In unpacking her traumas, Hilton tries to show how they directly correlated
with her achievements – saying that she got through prolonged periods of
solitary confinement by imagining a life of success and riches. She also
revealed that her time at the boarding schools led her to affect the
high-pitched voice that she’s known for using when she’s being “Paris
Hilton.”

“I then used it for ‘The Simple Life’ as part of my brand,” she explains.
“Now that I have told people about it, I definitely find myself speaking in my
normal voice.”

And since Hilton started filming the documentary — and the process of finding
herself — she says her priorities have shifted drastically. In 2011, Variety
celebrated Hilton as a “Billion Dollar Entrepreneur,” best known for co-starring
with Nicole Richie on 2003’s “The Simple Life,” being followed incessantly by
paparazzi, and that infamous sex tape leaked in 2003 by a former boyfriend.
Today, Hilton has 30 million followers across YouTube, Twitter and Instagram, as
well as 19 product lines. And in many ways, she sees this documentary as a
chance to “redefine” the Paris Hilton brand by turning her focus to more social
justice causes.

“I think it’s just shows that there’s so much more to me. So many people are
used to seeing the glitter and the unicorns and the sparkles and the Barbie of
it all,” she says. “But when it comes down to it, there’s so much more to that
than the girl you see on the red carpets or behind the DJ booth. There’s
actually a real human.”

Hilton is not alone in making the pivot. Kim Kardashian West (who started her
career in the spotlight as Hilton’s stylist) and Kris Jenner make cameos in the
documentary, crediting Hilton with starting it all. Kardashian West has also
notably transitioned to using her celebrity to promote social causes –
particularly dedicating herself to U.S. prison reform.

“Our families instilled in us the importance of giving back from as young as
I could remember,” Hilton says of Kardashian West’s social work. “I love using
my platform to shine light on causes that are in need and I really admire and
applaud Kim for all the work she is doing.”

Hilton also reacted to the Kardashians’ recent announcement that they’ll end
their reality series after 20 seasons. Predicting the future of the reality
landscape, Hilton says, “I think that we will start seeing a lot more people
from the reality world shifting their focus towards building their brands and
businesses. I am so focused on being an entrepreneur that I don’t have time to
do reality TV, but I am working on other TV projects.”

The coronavirus pandemic has also affected the way Hilton works. She normally
finds herself on a plane 250 days a year for DJ gigs, personal appearances and
business meetings, but since March, she’s been relying on virtual platforms like
Zoom. And she expects to see lasting affects for other influencers who make
travel their work. “There’s going to be more innovation in the next two to three
years, then there would have been in 10 years,” she says.

The prospect of change doesn’t concern the superstar much. Seven years ago,
Hilton came up with the idea for a “Club Paris” virtual reality experience; now
she has begun to see the nightlife industry switch to virtual partying in light
of the pandemic. Most recently, Hilton launched the #ThatsHot challenge via
TikTok on Sept. 8. The post that invoked her 2000s catchphrase broke 1 billion
views in only 24 hours. For the challenge, creators will create videos using the
hashtag and Hilton will pick her top videos to duet with and respond with a
ranking of “That’s Hot” — or not.

“I think it’s amazing what [social media has] morphed into,” Hilton says.
“Obviously there is some negative that comes along with it. But the people who
are using it in the right way, I’m just so impressed. … Because the more people
talk the bigger difference that can make. I think activism and being an activist
is the new influencer.”


END


关注公众号之后

点击右上方“●●●”,选择“设为星标”

英文演讲视频,第一时间观看



One Speech A Day

 Can Change Your Life


把时间交给英文演讲
长按识别二维码关注

言值提升,从点“在看”开始…

 点击阅读原文查看更多精彩英文演讲!

回复

使用道具 举报

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表