The founder of the Elite Model Management agency, the man credited with creating the era of the supermodel by launching the careers of Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell and Linda Evangelista - has died, aged 70.
John Casablancas - the father of The Strokes' singer Julian Casablancas - was as famous for his playboy lifestyle and good looks as for the panache which revolutionised the comparatively staid world of international glamour in the 1970s.
Although he revelled in the company of beautiful women, he was later to publicly turn on some of his most successful protégés, on whose behalf he had helped negotiate stratospheric fees, and to rue his invention of the entire supermodel phenomenon.
Although he was not implicated in allegations of wrongdoing, in 2000 he stood down as chairman of the world's biggest model agency following a controversial undercover BBC documentary into Elite, which showed the company's European agents boasting of their drug use and sexual conquests of young models. Casablancas quit the industry and went on to denounce the women and their handlers who had come to dominate the catwalk and lucrative photo shoots as "spoilt pains" surrounded by "idiots and leeches". He described Heidi Klum as a "talentless German sausage" and Naomi Campbell as "odious". He said: "Apart from Linda Evangelista, no supermodel has ever thanked me when she got to the top."
But he remained popular with some of the women he worked with. The Brazilian supermodel Ana Beatriz Barros paid tribute on Sunday to the man she described as "my mentor... a true friend and inspiration". The Polish-American model Joanna Krupa said he was "one of the most amazing people I have ever met in my life".