Born Mary Cathleen Collins in Long Beach, California, Bo Derek never planned on becoming a global sex symbol. A horse-obsessed teenager from a working-class family, she stumbled into fame through a controversial relationship with director John Derek, who transformed her into “Bo” and cast her in the 1979 film *10*. The beach-running scene in cornrow braids made her an instant icon—and a target. Critics dismissed her as a fantasy, not a serious actress, and the pressure of being reduced to one image slowly wore her down.
Instead of chasing roles that kept her trapped in that stereotype, she chose a quieter path. After John Derek’s death in 1998, she stepped away from Hollywood’s glare, turning back to her first loves: horses, animals, and privacy. Today, she lives mostly out of the spotlight, devoted to animal welfare, her ranch, and a long-term partnership with actor John Corbett—proof that the woman the world once saw as a poster has finally reclaimed her own story.