I was a show-off as a kid. I was wearing bow ties and matching coloured trousers.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
On a show like 'Oz,' I was wearing Dickies and a cut-off shirt and a gold cross.
When I was 15, I was wearing sandals and corduroys, Guernsey, striped pullover, a beard that was hardly there, shades and a beret, and the goal was hanging out.
I wore a lot of vintage clothing. I dressed like a reporter, with a little card in my hat. I had these fantasies of who I wanted to be, so I'd dress like an explorer, a cowboy. I dressed up like Elton John a lot too. That was another period.
When I was younger and women first started to get in public positions, in my case the law, we went through a period where we wore those little ribbon ties, little bows. We tried to figure out what was our appropriate dress.
I was a tough kid with the jeans, the concert shirt with the flannel over it, the comb in the back pocket and the feathered hair.
When I was 15, I wore combat boots with a fluorescent Columbia ski jacket. I was trying to find myself.
I got into my very theatrical phase. I wore only black: a big black hat and wild hair and wild black clothes, and I carried a sword stick. I went there still looking like Miss Florida, and I came back looking very different.
I was a bit of a show-off in school and loved playing dress-up, and my passion for it just grew as I got older.
When I was fourteen, I was one of those kids who wore all black because it matched everything. Seriously.
I got to host a radio show. I got a clothing range. I was the face of fashion week. I got to do a whole television show with kids.