Hospital bed gia carangi

Gia Marie Carangi was born January 29, 1960. She lived here on Earth until November 18, 1986.

There are some people who’s lights shine a bit brighter than most, Gia was one of those people. Her light has not faded even after she left this Earth. She left behind so many people who loved her… family, friends and fans.

Gia was an American model during the late 1970s and early 1980s. She was considered by many to be the first “Supermodel”. She left behind a huge portfolio of work for someone who worked for a relative short time in the fashion model business.

Gia was featured on the covers of many fashion magazines, including multiple editions of Vogue and Cosmopolitan. She appeared in top advertising campaigns for such fashion houses as Armani, Christian Dior, Versace, and Yves Saint Laurent.

Gia experimented recreationally with drugs as a youth which was not unusual for the free-range youth of the 60s/70s. She became addicted to heroin at the height of her modeling career then it rapidly declined.

Gia died of AIDS-related complications at the age

Gia Carangi

American supermodel (1960–1986)

Gia Marie Carangi[2] (January 29, 1960 – November 18, 1986) was an American supermodel, considered by some to be the first supermodel.[3][4] In 2023, Harpers Bazaar ranked her 15th among the greatest supermodels in the 1980s.[5] She was featured on the cover of numerous magazines, including multiple editions of Vogue and Cosmopolitan, and appeared in advertising campaigns for fashion houses including Armani, Dior, Versace and Yves Saint Laurent.[6]

After Carangi became addicted to heroin, her career rapidly declined, which ultimately led her to quit modeling in 1983. In 1986, at age 26, she died of AIDS-related complications. Believed to have contracted it from a contaminated needle, she became one of the early notable women to die of the virus.[3] Her life was dramatized in the television film Gia (1998), directed by Michael Cristofer and starring Angelina Jolie as Carangi.

Early life

Carangi was born on January 29, 1960, in Philadelphia,

For a moment, one of the biggest fashion models in America was a hoagie maker’s daughter from Northeast Philly.

But in the mid-80s her life was cut short by a new and horrifying disease.

In 1993, the Philadelphia Daily News highlighted a new book telling her story in an article headlined “The Tragedy of Supermodel Gia.”

Gia Carangi was born in 1960 and grew up in the Torresdale section of Northeast Philly.

Her dad ran a local chain called Hoagie City and she went to Lincoln High School.

At Lincoln she became a “David Bowie” kid, embracing the androgyny and flamboyance of the glam rock era.

Carangi’s transformation from NE Philly “Bowie” kid to model was sudden.

A local fashion photographer named Maurice Tannenbaum recommended Carangi to Wilhelmina Cooper.

Cooper — a model turned agent — was immediately struck by Carangi.

At 17, Carangi moved to NYC.

Gia wasn’t living in New York long before her career blew up. In 1978 — at 18 — she did a provocative shoot for one of the industry’s top photographers. By 1979 she was on the cover of British Vogue.

American and Paris

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