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Elite Model Management
Elite Model Management
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Elite Model Management (MM) is a French modeling agency that originated in Paris in 1972.[1] Elite MM is a subsidiary of Elite World S.A., whose main shareholder Silvio Scaglia controls his stake through Elite World Group (EWG), a management company where Elite MM is one of brands along with The Society Management, Women Management, Supreme Management, Elite Model Look, and Women 360.[2] In 2004, the agencies in New York City, Miami, Los Angeles, and Toronto separated and formed Elite Model Management North America.[3] Although Elite Model Management North America and Elite World Group share the same logo, they have separate ownership and are not part of a business network.[4]

Key Information

History

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Founding

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Elite Model Management was founded in Paris in 1972 by John Casablancas (1942–2013) and Alain Kittler.[5][6] Casablancas was inspired by his then-wife Jeanette Christiansen, former model and Miss Universe from Denmark, to open a model agency. Casablancas founded the model agency with his savings. Elite Model opened with several high-profile models including Ingmari Lamy; Ann Schaufuss, Clive Arrowsmith's girlfriend; Barry Lategan's wife, Lynn Kohlman; Paula Brenken; and Paris Plannings Emanuelle Dano.[7]

At the time, boutique agencies in Paris and Milan fell out of favor with models due to payment issues. Models often found that Parisian and Milanese agencies were withholding their pay to coerce them into returning without work visas and work.[8] British and American-based chains gave models the financial security they needed.

New York expansion and model wars

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In 1977, Casablancas opened up Elite Models in New York. During the 1980s, New York endured the model wars. Despite agencies like Wilhelmina Models taking part in these wars, the primary battle was between Elite Models and Ford Models.[9] Until 1977, Ford was affiliated with Elite until Elite opened up offices in New York and began stealing Ford's models. Models such as Esmé Marshall left Elite for Ford Models. Casablancas alleged that Eileen Ford was out to get him, and Ford responded with a $32.5 million suit. Due to the death of Wilhelmina Cooper, models were in a panic, bouncing from agency to agency. Even the highest-paid Black model at the time, Beverly Johnson, left Elite for Ford, only to return to Elite a week later.[9] Models such as Christie Brinkley and Anna Andersen sued Elite after they exited.

1980s expansion

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In 1981, Elite Models formed a partnership with Models 1, which lasted until 1989. By 1983, Elite established the Elite Model Look, known as The Look of the Year, a competition to rival its competitor Ford's Supermodel of the World contest. The following year, the company expanded its offices in the U.S. with the formation of Elite Models Chicago,[10] Elite Models Atlanta, Elite Models Los Angeles, Elite Models San Francisco, and Elite Models Miami. By 1986, Elite Models had twenty offices worldwide. In 1988, Elite opened offices in Milan.

1990s partnerships and expansion

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Nicholas Farrae later purchased the agency in 1990.[11] Elite World S.A. is the parent company of Elite Model Management (MM). The expansion of Elite Models continued as it formed partnerships with already established agencies. In 1990, Elite Models formed a partnership with Model Management Heidi Gross in Hamburg.[12] In 1992, Munich Models was formed and formed a partnership with Elite MM. In 1994, Elite MM sought to break into the Asian market and awarded its Greater China rights to Michel Lu. In collaboration with him, they established Elite Models Hong Kong and China. In 1996, Lu expanded Elite MM to Singapore, which served as a regional office for South East Asia.[13] Similar to their debut in Paris, Elite swept up top local and regional talents such as Charmaine Harn, Junita Simon, Sonia Couling, and Nadya Hatagalung.[14]

In 1999, a film was broadcast by the BBC showing the President of Elite MM, Gérald Marie, offering an undercover reporter sex for money.[15] It was later proven that some images had been manipulated and the BBC admitted that its portrayal was unfair and had to make a substantial payout to the model agency.[16] In the wake of this controversy, Casablancas left and formed the John Casablancas Modeling and Career Center in New York.[17] Elite World SA was incorporated on 14 December 1999 as an umbrella company and for licensing.[18]

2000s restructuring

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In 2002, Elite MM, along with several other New York City model agencies, was sued for hundreds of millions of dollars in a class action that accused them of fixing fees for the past 30 years. The following year, Elite opened offices in Asia. At the same time, an employee was awarded $5.2 million in a suit concerning passive smoking in the US office of Elite.[19] As a result of the bad publicity, the over expansion of Elite, and the loss of talents, Elite World SA filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2004. Elite Models New York City was put up for auction and bought by Florida businessman Eddie Trump for $4.4 million, who asked Casablancas to come back and advise him. Elite Models NY together with Los Angeles, Miami, and Toronto became Elite MM North America separate from Elite World SA.

In August 2005, Elite World SA reestablished Elite MM in Singapore using it as the satellite office for their new South East Asia operation.[20][21] Elite Models branches in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Philippines were also added in August 2005.[22] In October 2005, the Elite Model Look contest was added in Singapore.[23] By 2006, Casablancas' appointment was short-lived and Elite World SA went public on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.

In 2009, the president of Elite World SA (the parent company of Elite MM), Bertrand Hennet, was arrested on drug charges.[15] At the same time, acquired Elite Models Copenhagen, which was founded in 1966 under the name Copenhagen Models by legendary scout Trice Tomsen and formally a licensee of Elite Models (now Elite Models Management Copenhagen ApS controlled together with its licenses by Elite Licensing Company SA owned by Elite World SA). After Tomsen decided to distance herself from the day-to-day work, she was replaced by Munir Bouylud as the new director there.[24] Also in 2009, Elite Models London opened nearly 20 years after its first attempt to have offices in London. It was also in 2009 that Elite Models Chicago and Atlanta severed ties with Elite World SA and were renamed Factor Women.[25]

2010s and current ownership

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In February 2011, Elite World SA shareholders elected a new Board of Directors. The new board election follows the acquisition of a controlling stake in Elite World SA by Pacific Global Management, SARL (PGM)[26] (now Freedom Holding, Inc.). In 2012, Elite Models Amsterdam acquired Model Masters in Amsterdam.[27] Model Masters is best known for representing models who win Holland's Next Top Model. With that acquisition, Elite fired Ananda Marchildon for being "too fat". The company lost a breach of contract lawsuit by Ananda Marchildon and had to pay her around €65,000 in damages.[28]

In 2013, Elite World SA opened a New York division under the name The Society Management[29][26] (The Society, The Society Model Management, Inc.).[30][31] Elite World Group, LLC (EWG) was created[32] in order to hold PGM's stake in Elite World SA and EWG's branch was incorporated in New York on 28 January 2019.[33] In 2019, Julia Haart was announced chief executive officer and chief creative officer of EWG which oversees Elite MM.[34] In 2022, Paolo Barbieri was announced group chief executive officer of Elite World Group which oversees Elite MM, The Society Management and Women Management.[35]

Sexual misconduct allegations

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Allegations of an "ingrained culture" of sexual assault and rape by Elite's male employees, especially its boss Gérald Marie, have dogged the agency for decades.[citation needed] In 1999, a BBC investigation filmed Marie saying he hoped to seduce the contestants at the annual Elite Model Look show, as well as assaulting an undercover journalist and offering her money for sex. He was temporarily suspended from Elite and, in an interview at the time, said: "I'm destroyed ... I'm finished". But Elite countered with a libel action, which was quietly settled with an apology from the BBC, which also agreed not to rebroadcast their documentary.[36]

Marie was married to Linda Evangelista between 1987 and 1993, at the time of many of the alleged offences; Marie is alleged to have raped several aspiring models in their flat while Evangelista was away on assignment, including a 15-year-old girl. Supermodel and actress Carré Otis claimed in her 2011 memoir, Beauty, Disrupted, that she was raped "countless" times in the flat by Marie starting around 1986, when she was 17. Otis and others have also claimed that rape by ancillary employees, such as hairdressers and photographers, was commonplace.[37] In October 2020, Evangelista said: "During my relationship with Gérald Marie, I knew nothing of these sexual allegations against him, so I was unable to help these women. Hearing them now, and based on my own experiences, I believe that they are telling the truth. It breaks my heart because these are wounds that may never heal, and I admire their courage and strength for speaking up today."[38]

Elite's activities are also alleged to have been regularly used as a "front" for "pimping out" young models to wealthy men unconnected to the modelling industry. Adnan Khashoggi, the Saudi billionaire arms dealer, is said to have admitted to at least one such introduction, to a model who became one of his "harem wives". She said that in the early 1980s he routinely browsed photographic portfolios of young women, with his assistant "asking whom he would like to meet, and discussing meet-up fees of between $35,000 and $50,000."[39]

In the wake of the MeToo movement, the allegations have increased; as of November 2020, at least 15 women have now spoken out against Marie and are cooperating in an investigation launched by French prosecutors.[40][41] Marie has denied all the allegations via his lawyers and said he intends to fight any charges laid against him. Despite this, more publications are claiming his alleged sexual misconduct was an open secret for years in the fashion industry.[42] Gérald Marie's contract with Elite MM ended in December 2010 and the company was sold in 2011 to its current owners Elite World Group, for whom Marie has never worked.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Elite Model Management is a global fashion modeling agency founded in 1977 by in , which pioneered the supermodel era by elevating models to celebrity status and representing elite talent through offices in major markets including , , , , and . The agency gained prominence by launching the contest, an annual international competition that has discovered top models such as , , and , transforming scouting into a structured global pipeline for high-fashion careers. Under Casablancas' leadership until his death in 2013, Elite disrupted traditional agency norms by emphasizing model marketability and negotiating higher fees, which sparked industry-wide competition and elevated modeling as a lucrative . Elite has faced significant controversies, including allegations of systemic misconduct; notably, former European president Gerald Marie has been subject to multiple investigations in since 2020 for claims of and by former models, stemming from reported abuses during the and . The agency has also encountered legal challenges related to financial restructuring, such as a 2004 bankruptcy filing for its New York entity amid competitive pressures and operational debts, though it reemerged under Elite World Group ownership. These issues highlight tensions between the industry's glamour and underlying power dynamics, with Elite implementing codes of conduct in response to broader scrutiny.

History

Founding and Early Years (1970s)

Elite Model Management was established in , France, in 1972 by and Alain Kittler. Casablancas, born in in 1942 to Spanish parents, had entered the modeling industry in the early 1960s by scouting talent in for the Paris-based agency Paris Planning. After opening his own agency, Absolute, in in 1967, he returned to around 1970, where he first launched a modeling to train aspiring models before co-founding Elite as a full agency. In its initial years, Elite operated from Paris and focused on representing high-end models, distinguishing itself from established agencies through aggressive recruitment and a willingness to sign talent poached from competitors like . Casablancas introduced early innovations such as model "books" and composite cards for promotion, which streamlined scouting and bookings, while also promoting models from diverse ethnic backgrounds at a time when the industry favored narrower standards. The agency's approach emphasized personality and star power over rigid conventions, setting the stage for later conflicts known as the "model wars" against dominant players like Eileen Ford's agency. By 1977, Elite expanded to New York City, establishing its U.S. headquarters and marking a pivotal shift toward American market dominance under Casablancas' leadership. This move capitalized on growing demand for fresh talent in the U.S. fashion scene, with Elite quickly building a roster that included emerging names and challenging the longstanding control of New York-based agencies. Kittler's role diminished in prominence during this period, as Casablancas drove the agency's vision and operations.

Expansion and Supermodel Era (1980s-1990s)

During the , Elite Model Management solidified its position as a global leader by establishing key international partnerships and expanding its network beyond and New York. In 1981, Elite formed a collaboration with the British agency Models 1, which facilitated entry into the London market and lasted until 1989, enabling the agency to scout and manage talent across . This period marked intense competition known as the "model wars," where Elite challenged established agencies like by aggressively signing top talent and innovating business practices, leading to annual revenues in the millions by the mid-. By the late and into the , Elite further grew through partnerships such as the 1990 alliance with Model Management Heidi Gross in and the 1992 formation of Munich Models, extending its footprint in and supporting a roster that generated substantial commissions from high-profile bookings. A pivotal development was the launch of the contest, initially called Look of the Year, in 1983, designed to identify fresh faces and rival Ford's competition. The event offered winners contracts worth up to $150,000, attracting thousands of applicants worldwide and becoming a primary pipeline for new talent; for instance, won the 1983 edition, launching her career with Elite. This initiative not only fueled Elite's expansion by populating its agencies with diverse, marketable models but also contributed to the agency's reputation for discovering commercially viable stars amid the era's booming fashion industry. The 1980s and 1990s saw Elite pioneer the phenomenon under John Casablancas's direction, representing models who transcended runway work to achieve celebrity status and command unprecedented fees. Key signings included in 1986, in 1984, in 1987, and around 1990, whose bookings in Vogue covers, Pepsi endorsements, and campaigns generated millions in agency commissions while elevating models' bargaining power industry-wide. Elite's strategy of promoting ethnic diversity and personality-driven marketing—such as Campbell's breakthrough as one of the first prominent Black s—differentiated it from competitors, though this era also intensified scrutiny over management practices amid rapid growth. By the mid-1990s, Elite's roster had reshaped economics, with top earners like Crawford securing deals exceeding traditional agency norms.

Restructuring and Challenges (2000s)

In the early 2000s, Elite Model Management faced mounting legal challenges that strained its finances, including a 2002 class-action lawsuit filed by models against Elite and other New York agencies alleging antitrust violations such as commission price-fixing and restrictive covenants on model employment. These suits, seeking hundreds of millions in damages, contributed to escalating legal fees that overwhelmed the agency's operations. Additional litigation, such as individual claims of employment discrimination and exploitation, further eroded Elite's stability amid broader industry scrutiny over opaque financial practices and model treatment. By February 2004, 's New York division filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, listing liabilities exceeding $40 million against assets of about $10 million, primarily to reorganize amid creditor pressures and ongoing court battles. The filing stemmed from years of over-expansion, talent attrition to competitors, and reputational damage from scandals, including executive misconduct allegations that predated but intensified in this period. In June 2004, Elite was partially severed from the class-action case due to its bankruptcy status, while other agencies settled for over $5 million; a broader $22 million industry settlement was approved in 2005, highlighting systemic commission-fixing issues. Restructuring efforts post-filing involved operational separation, with North American offices in New York, , , and forming an independent entity, Elite Model Management North America, to streamline management and distance from European parent liabilities. In August 2004, the bankrupt assets were acquired by Florida-based developer Eddie Trump and associates for approximately $8 million, injecting new capital but marking a shift from founder John Casablancas's control. This acquisition, coupled with Chapter 11 reorganization, allowed Elite to emerge leaner, though it grappled with lingering trust issues in an industry increasingly favoring boutique agencies amid digital disruptions to traditional modeling.

Recent Developments (2010s-2020s)

, the founder of Elite Model Management, died on July 20, 2013, at age 70 from cancer in Rio de Janeiro, , marking the end of an era for the agency he had led since its inception. His death prompted reflections on his transformative yet controversial influence, including his role in popularizing supermodels while facing prior accusations of personal misconduct with models. By the late 2010s, Elite's North American operations, under owner Eddie Trump, pursued aggressive expansion through talent poaching, leading to legal disputes with competitors. In 2019, rival agency Women Management filed suit alleging Elite had orchestrated a "raid" that lured away 55 models—including Behati Prinsloo Levine—and 16 managers since March, resulting in over $22 million in lost revenue for Women due to disrupted bookings and client relationships. Elite countered that the departures stemmed from dissatisfaction with Women's leadership, highlighting competitive tensions in an industry consolidating amid digital shifts and influencer competition. The #MeToo movement amplified scrutiny of Elite's historical practices, surfacing allegations against former executives. In Europe, Gerald Marie, Elite's longtime president until his 1999 ouster, faced formal investigations starting in 2020 after four women accused him of rape and sexual misconduct dating to the 1980s and 1990s, with additional claims from over a dozen others emerging. Separately, scout Jean-Luc Brunel, affiliated with Elite until the early 1990s, was charged with rape of minors in 2020 and died by suicide in 2022 while awaiting trial, amid links to Jeffrey Epstein's network. In the U.S., former model Carré Otis sued Elite executives in 2021, alleging rape by one when she was 17 in the late 1980s and enabling by another; the claims underscore persistent vulnerabilities in modeling but remain unadjudicated. These cases, while tied to pre-2010 conduct, reflect ongoing reputational challenges for Elite amid industry-wide reforms on consent and oversight.

Business Operations

Global Structure and Model Scouting

Elite Model Management operates as part of the Elite World Group, with a decentralized structure featuring autonomous offices in major capitals that handle local talent representation, bookings, and scouting while coordinating through centralized leadership in New York. The New York office functions as the North American headquarters and flagship, supported by satellite locations in , , and to cover regional markets. European operations center on , the original founding location from 1972, alongside offices in , , , , , , , and , facilitating access to runway seasons and European clientele. This network, which historically expanded to approximately 20 offices by the mid-1980s and maintained a similar scale into the , allows for localized adaptation amid global standardization of model development and placement. Model scouting emphasizes discovery of diverse, commercially viable talent through multiple channels, prioritizing natural features over professional experience. Primary methods include online submissions via the agency's website, where applicants provide unretouched headshots, full-length photos, and profiles without makeup, limited to individuals aged 15 and older (with required for minors under 18). Agents review these for potential, followed by virtual or in-person evaluations, while supplementary occurs via analysis, street observations in urban centers, and attendance at events by field scouts verified through professional credentials like profiles. The process explicitly prohibits requests for fees or compromising imagery from legitimate representatives, with warnings issued against impostors exploiting the brand. A cornerstone of scouting is the annual competition, an international search launched in that draws applicants globally aged 14 to 25, requiring parental permission for those under 18 and focusing on raw potential through initial photo submissions and national/international casting rounds. Winners secure contracts and training, contributing to the agency's roster of over 800 models managed across continents from hubs like . This structured approach integrates discovery with competitive selection, ensuring a pipeline of fresh faces aligned with market demands in high and commercial sectors.

Elite Model Look Competition

The Elite Model Look Competition, founded in 1983 by as "The Look of the Year," is an annual international modeling contest operated by Elite Model Management to scout and launch new fashion talent. Designed as a high-volume scouting mechanism, it draws thousands of applicants worldwide, providing winners with professional contracts and entry into Elite's global network. Applicants, who must be at least 14 years old (with required for minors under 18) and with no international height requirements enforced (no minimum or maximum height restrictions), submit online applications including a full-body , a , and a waist-up shot for evaluation. National competitions select representatives from participating countries, who then advance to the world final held in major fashion hubs like , where finalists are judged on photogenic qualities, personality, and market potential. The contest has propelled numerous prominent models to stardom, including and among its early discoveries. In more recent editions, winners such as Valeria Chenskaya from and Antonio Freitas from in 2017, as well as Wen Di from and Maxim from in the 35th world final, have secured campaigns with brands like Balmain and features in Vogue. By prioritizing raw potential over established experience, the Elite Model Look has maintained its status as a key pipeline for the industry, with victors often transitioning directly into high-profile bookings and influencing global beauty standards through Elite's partnerships.

Revenue Model and Industry Partnerships

Elite Model Management operates on a commission-based , earning a percentage of its models' gross earnings from bookings in fashion shows, advertising campaigns, editorial features, and commercial endorsements. Models' earnings vary widely based on individual bookings, experience, and market conditions, with many earning modest amounts and top models earning significantly higher; there is no publicly disclosed or reliable average salary for models at Elite Model Management. Industry standards for top-tier agencies dictate commission rates of 10-20 percent, with Elite adhering to this range for legitimate representation. As part of Elite World Group, the agency supplements traditional commissions through diversified streams, including licensing deals for branded apparel, , beauty products, and devices, which leverage its talent roster for commercial extensions. Key industry partnerships underpin these revenue channels, with Elite placing models in collaborations alongside luxury brands such as Balmain, , and , facilitating high-value contracts and long-term brand ambassadorships. The agency maintains an interconnected network of affiliated entities under Elite World Group, including , , and Supreme Management, which expands scouting, booking, and cross-promotional opportunities across global markets. Operational enhancements from strategic alliances further support revenue growth, exemplified by the September 2025 with Mediaslide to implement advanced software for , bookings, and client interactions, streamlining processes amid digital industry shifts. In March 2024, Elite World Group appointed Flavio Facincani as director of brand licensing and to formalize and scale these commercial ties, emphasizing monetization beyond core modeling services. This evolution reflects a broader pivot toward media and content production, initiated under former CEO in 2019, integrating in-house development to capture value from models' digital and multimedia engagements.

Industry Impact

Revolutionizing Talent Management

Elite Model Management pioneered the elevation of models to celebrity status, fundamentally altering talent management by creating the "supermodel" archetype in the late 1970s and 1980s, which shifted models from interchangeable commodities to high-profile endorsers capable of commanding multimillion-dollar contracts. This approach, led by founder John Casablancas, emphasized personality, marketability, and long-term branding over mere physical attributes, influencing industry standards for representation and negotiation. A cornerstone of Elite's innovation was the launch of the contest in 1983—initially called Look of the Year—which established a systematic, global mechanism drawing from thousands of applicants annually across dozens of countries to identify and fast-track emerging talent. The competition has propelled careers of figures such as , , and , with winners receiving comprehensive development contracts, thereby democratizing access to bookings while institutionalizing merit-based discovery over nepotistic or localized networks. This model contrasted with prior ad-hoc , fostering a pipeline that integrated international expansion with rigorous selection. Elite further revolutionized development through structured training regimens, including intensive boot camps focused on catwalk technique, posing for photo shoots, and media interview preparation, treating models akin to athletes in need of skill-building to sustain peak performance. By the 2010s, the agency evolved into a broader talent media network, incorporating in-house digital content creation and business development divisions to manage models' multifaceted careers across fashion, endorsements, and social media influence. These practices prioritized sustained career longevity and diversified revenue streams, setting precedents for agencies to invest in holistic management rather than short-term placements.

Notable Models and Cultural Influence

Elite Model Management has launched numerous supermodels who became defining figures in fashion during the 1980s and 1990s. Cindy Crawford, discovered via the Elite Model Look contest in 1983, fronted campaigns for Pepsi, Gap, and Revlon, hosted MTV's House of Style, and ranked among the era's highest-paid models with earnings exceeding those of many celebrities. Gisele Bündchen, the 1994 Elite Model Look winner from Brazil, served as a Victoria's Secret Angel and achieved Forbes-estimated annual earnings of $44 million, establishing her as a pivotal figure in the industry's shift toward global, high-earning talent. Naomi Campbell, represented by Elite from 1987, emerged as one of the first prominent Black supermodels, walking for and while advocating for diversity in fashion; her tenure with the agency underscored Elite's role in promoting international faces amid the supermodel boom. , signed to Elite post-high school, became synonymous with 1990s glamour, appearing on over 700 magazine covers and collaborating with houses like and , which amplified the visibility of European models in American markets. Other key talents include (Elite Model Look 1983), featured on the iconic 1990 British Vogue cover with Campbell and others, and (1996 winner), a long-term staple who worked with designers like . The agency's cultural influence stems from founder John Casablancas's innovations, which transformed models into autonomous celebrities and business entities rather than interchangeable assets, igniting the 1980s "model wars" against rivals like and elevating industry compensation structures. By instituting the in 1983, Elite globalized scouting, unearthing diverse talent from remote areas and contributing to fashion's shift toward multiculturalism and youth empowerment, as seen in winners like (1999), named Vogue Model of the Year in 2010. This approach not only popularized the archetype—blending runway prestige with media ubiquity—but also influenced pop culture by spawning model-led ventures in , endorsements, and , with alumni like founding media empires. Elite's model of long-term management has set benchmarks for sustaining careers beyond transient trends, embedding agency-discovered icons into enduring cultural narratives.

Controversies

Executive Misconduct Allegations

Gérald Marie, who served as president of Elite Model Management's European operations from 1985 until his dismissal in 2019, has faced numerous allegations of and rape from former models represented by the agency. At least 16 women have publicly accused him of abuses occurring primarily between the 1980s and 2000s, including claims of coerced sexual acts, assaults on minors, and exploitation of power imbalances in scouting and management roles. French authorities opened a in September 2020 following initial reports from four women, with Marie questioned by prosecutors in February 2021; he has denied all accusations, asserting they are fabricated or consensual encounters. In August 2021, former model Carré Otis (née Sutton) filed a federal lawsuit in New York against Marie and other unnamed former Elite executives, alleging that Marie raped her in 1986 when she was 17 and under the agency's representation in Paris. The suit claimed Elite's leadership enabled such abuses through negligent oversight and a culture that prioritized bookings over model safety, invoking New York's Adult Survivors Act for claims otherwise barred by statutes of limitations. A lower court initially dismissed the case in 2022, but the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the decision on November 4, 2024, ruling that Otis plausibly alleged New York residency at the time of the abuse and sufficient ties to the jurisdiction, allowing the suit to proceed. Additional accusers, including models from , the U.S., and elsewhere, have described patterns of Marie allegedly rating young models on their sexual appeal, pressuring them for intercourse as a condition for career advancement, and hosting events where assaults reportedly occurred. Elite Model Management responded to the broader #MeToo-era scrutiny by conducting an internal roundtable with models in to discuss misconduct protocols, though critics argued such measures came after decades of reported issues. No criminal convictions have resulted from these allegations as of late 2024, with Marie maintaining his innocence and attributing claims to industry rivals or financial motives.

Business and Labor Disputes

In 2013, former intern Dajia Davenport filed a proposed lawsuit against Elite Model Management in federal court in New York, alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act and New York labor laws by failing to pay minimum wages and overtime to interns who performed substantive work during and other operations. The suit sought up to $50 million in damages for hundreds of interns from 2009 to 2013, claiming their roles displaced paid employees and provided little educational benefit. In January 2014, Elite agreed to a $450,000 settlement, preliminarily approved by the court, to compensate eligible class members without admitting liability; the fund covered wages, damages, and fees after administrative costs. Models filed a in in 2013 against Elite and five other agencies, asserting violations of New York Labor Law including non-payment of overtime, minimum wages, usage fees for reused images in commercials, unauthorized deductions, and delayed wages for mandatory meetings. In June 2017, the court dismissed claims against Elite, ruling they fell outside the six-year and did not qualify as compensable wages under state law, allowing the case to proceed only against the remaining defendants. A 2002 federal , Shelton v. Elite Model Management, accused and other major agencies of antitrust violations under the Sherman Act by conspiring to fix model commissions at 20%—double the industry norm for some bookings—and imposing unlawful expenses, memos from executives urged agencies to "stick together" against model demands. The U.S. Department of Justice investigated related complaints in 2003 but closed its probe without charges. In 2005, a federal judge approved a nearly $22 million settlement for the plaintiff class, resolving claims without admission of wrongdoing by and co-defendants. Elite has been embroiled in business disputes with competitors over talent poaching and contract breaches. In 2019, Men Women NY Model Management sued , alleging a to raid 16 managers and 55 models—including —since March of that year, violating non-solicitation agreements and causing $22 million in losses from disrupted bookings. countered that rivals had unclean hands and denied breaches, with courts later lifting a temporary non-solicitation amid the "model wars." Similar suits recurred, as in 2017 when claimed two top New York executives violated noncompetes by luring models to rivals. These conflicts highlight ongoing tensions in the industry over exclusive representation and client relationships, often settled out of court or dismissed on procedural grounds.

Defenses, Investigations, and Outcomes

In response to allegations of by former European head , French prosecutors initiated a on September 28, 2020, focusing on claims of and involving multiple models, some of whom were minors at the time. The probe expanded in 2021 after additional testimonies from women accusing Marie of abuse during his tenure from the 1980s to 2010s, with investigators collecting statements from at least several accusers. Marie has denied the allegations, asserting through legal representatives that encounters were consensual and that claims emerged decades later amid broader industry reckonings. A related civil lawsuit filed by former model Carré Sutton in August 2021 against Marie and other ex-Elite executives alleged rape and sexual abuse when she was 17 in 1986; an initial dismissal was overturned on November 9, 2024, by a U.S. court, allowing the case to proceed under revived statutes for childhood sexual abuse claims. No criminal convictions have resulted from the French investigation as of late 2024, though it remains active with ongoing evidence collection. Earlier suits against founder John Casablancas, including a 2002 claim of sexual abuse by a former model, did not yield public convictions before his death in 2013, with limited disclosed outcomes suggesting private resolutions or dismissals. Elite Model Management, under its current ownership by Elite World Group, has defended its post-2010s practices by emphasizing internal policies encouraging models to report , as stated in a discussion where executives highlighted and support for victims without specifying past case handling. The agency has distanced itself from Marie and Casablancas, noting their departures predated modern leadership, and has not publicly commented on specific investigations beyond general commitments to ethical standards. In business disputes, Women Model Management filed suit against in August 2019, alleging a conspiracy to poach 55 models—including —and 16 employees since March 2019, seeking over $22 million in damages for breach of agreements. A New York court temporarily enforced a injunction but lifted it in May 2020, citing competitive industry norms and lack of enforceable restrictions, effectively allowing the talent moves to stand without further public remedies or settlements disclosed. Older class-action litigation from involving and other agencies over contract practices reached but resulted in fragmented outcomes, with some claims settled confidentially and others dismissed for insufficient of systemic wrongdoing.

References

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