Iman Mohamed Abdulmajid is a famous Somali supermodel, actress, and entrepreneur
@Fashion Model, Birthday and Life
Iman Mohamed Abdulmajid is a famous Somali supermodel, actress, and entrepreneur
Iman born at
Iman has been married three times in her life. The first time was with a Somali man who was an executive with the Hilton group. They got married in 1973 but the marriage ended in a couple of years, when she moved to America.
In America, she dated the famous actor Warren Beatty for a while before getting engaged with and marrying Spencer Haywood, a basketball star, in 1977. This marriage ended in 1987. Iman has a daughter with Spencer, namely, Zulekha Haywood.
Her third and most famous marriage was with the legendary English rock musician, David Bowie. The two got married on 24 April, 1992, in Lausanne, Switzerland and had a daughter, whom they named Alexandria Zahra Jones, in 2000. Iman and David were married till the latter’s death in 2016.
Iman Mohamed Abdulmajid was born on July 25, 1955, to Marian and Mohamed Abdulmajid, in Mogadishu, Somalia. Her father, Mohamed Abdulmajid, is a former diplomat who served as the ambassador of Somalia to Saudi Arabia, while her mother was a gynecologist.
Iman is the third of the five children of her parents. She, along with her elder brothers, Elias and Feisal, and her younger sisters, Idil and Nadia, had a relatively better upbringing than the average Somalis, owing to the affluence of their family.
Somalia was going through a political unrest at the time, because of which Iman was sent to a boarding school in Egypt at the tender age of four years. After the unrest was subdued, she was brought back to the country.
Her parents were quite progressive in their social outlook and decided that she should receive education from the relatively liberal private Catholic girl’s schools rather than the more conservative Islamic institutions.
Her family later settled in Kenya for some years, where she attended the University of Nairobi as a student of Political Science.
Iman’s break into modeling came quite unexpectedly. She was still a student at the university when she was spotted by the American fashion photographer, Peter Beard, who approached her with a modeling assignment in the United States. Although she was reluctant initially, Iman finally accepted the offer and moved to America in 1975.
Her first modeling assignment was with the prestigious Vogue magazine in the following year. She became an overnight sensation after that and there was no looking back. With the help of her modeling agency, Wilhelmina, she soon landed on the covers of other major fashion magazines of the time.
Her tall and slender stature, copper skin stone and sharp features made her a favorite among multiple fashion designers and photographers. During her prime in the 70s and the 80s, she worked with world-renowned designers like Calvin Klein, Gianni Versace, Issey Miyake and Halston among many others. The famous French designer Yves Saint Laurent described Iman as the ‘dream woman’ and dedicated one of his collections named ‘The African Queen’ to her.
After 14 years at the peak of success and popularity, Iman said good-bye to her modeling career in 1989. She later said in an interview that she found modeling quite unfulfilling.
In 1992, BBC produced a documentary which showcased Iman’s homecoming to Somalia after two decades. The country had been ravaged by war, famine, diseases and drought and Iman hoped that her international fame and status would help in raising international awareness and aid for her motherland.
During her modeling career Iman had worked with most famous photographers of the time including, but not limited to, Helmut Newton, Richard Avedon, Irving Penn and Annie Leibovitz. Perhaps the most famous photograph of her career was shot in Paris in a Thierry Mugler outfit with a leashed cheetah by her side.
Her autobiography, ‘I am Iman’, came out in 2001 and was very well received by the critics and readers alike. She has also authored another book, ‘The Beauty of Color’, which came out in 2005.