She walked into London’s House of Leonard hoping for a simple shampoo and set, and walked out as the accidental architect of a revolution. Too intimidated to refuse the legendary Leonard of Mayfair, young Lesley “Twiggy” Hornby submitted to seven hours of cutting and coloring that would etch her image into history. The pixie crop she never actually wanted framed those enormous blue eyes, which she dramatized with rag-doll lashes and hand-drawn lower spikes, turning teenage experimentation into a global beauty blueprint.
Within weeks, “Twiggy – The Face of ’66” exploded across newspapers, Vogue came calling, and her life became a blur of planes, flashbulbs, and fittings. Yet behind the mod miniskirts, films, albums, and fashion lines, she quietly guarded one role above all: mother. She measured success not in magazine covers, but in the fact her daughter can’t remember a moment she wasn’t there. Today, as a podcast host and grandmother, Twiggy’s greatest legacy isn’t a haircut – it’s the life she built after it.