Category Archives: Achievers {Exclusive Interviews}

Achievers: Meet Kithe Brewster, Stylist & Fashion Editor

“God gives that insight and desire to get to a better place and not be complacent and live a life of ‘going to work everyday.’   That was never my course….it just never would never be me.  I knew that as a child, I must do the things in my heart and my dreams.” — Kithe Brewster

The picture above features one of the most recognizable faces on Earth.  She has her head comfortably resting on a man who has fashioned the mega-watt star- and many like her- such as Gwyneth Paltrow, Halle Berry, Iman, Celine Dion, Julianne Moore, Usher, Outkast, Eva Mendes, Drew Barrymore, and Heidi Klum.

 Stylist and fashion editor Kithe Brewster’s career is as prominent as they come.  He has done editorials for magazines such as Vanity Fair and has styled red-carpet affairs for Hollywood’s elite- and the occasional chart-topping chanteuse.  During his reign he’s helped a few achieve “fashion icon” status along the way; Camilla Morton of British Vogue famously wrote, “Kithe Brewster is to the best dressed list, what Henry Ford was to the automobile.”

With a versatile resume too extensive to include in an already robust interview, one would expect a trembling experience if one would ever meet him.  One would be surprised that he is exceptionally warm…truly an anomaly in the fashion industry.  I had the privilege to meet Kithe and discuss his incredible story, his highly publicized weight-loss journey, and his mission to connect with people’s hearts and aspirations through his career.

MisterLevius.com: When did it all start?  When did your passion for fashion begin?

Kithe Brewster: I was obsessed with vintage clothing; as a little kid I liked going “thrifting” and finding old things. I’d buy stuff for a dollar and I was changing it and cutting it all off.  Mom would be shopping at a department store or mall and you can’t really go chop up the clothes.  But when you go to vintage stores and you buy something for $2 you can whack off the sleeves, so I was doing kooky, deconstructing things as a kid.

ML: You had other interests as a child before jumping into your fashion career, correct?

KB: I had a career as a child actor- and dancer…I studied under Katherine Dunham directly in East St. Louis.  I moved to New York when I was 16 to pursue my career as an actor, dancer, singer, “Broadway”…  I auditioned a lot but I also had a part-time job working in my uncle’s fashion showroom.  After a year I decided I wanted to be in the fashion industry- specifically a fashion editor.  I had met all of the top ones who worked at Vogue, [Harper’s] Bazaar and all because they frequented my uncle’s showroom.  I’d put clothes together for them in the showrooms- I’d be like “Oh, these shoes would look great with this” and then I’d see it come out in Vogue or [Harper’s] Bazaar.  They would listen and place exactly how I recommended.

ML: How old were you at the time?

KB: I was 17.

(famous Annie Leibovitz photograph for Vanity Fair with iconic black supermodels)

ML: What was your initial reaction from your family about your direction to styling?

KB: My entire family was opposed to it.  My father and uncle cut me off when I moved to Paris, but I learned everything I needed to know.

ML: That had to have been hard.  When did you move to Paris?

KB: I moved to Paris at 19 with $500 in my pocket.  I’d stayed with a girl model friend I knew who just got a model permit to live in Paris.  She was not supposed to have guests but she said I can stay for a week- but would have to find my own place.  I didn’t toot French, I had very little money, I didn’t have an agent.  I didn’t have anything set-up because I had dropped out of school and quit my uncle’s company, so he wouldn’t help me…so I had to do it all on my own.

It wasn’t easy getting an agent since I didn’t have published work, only tests, but I finally found an incredible agent who fast-tracked me to success.  Also, the agent’s husband was an entertainment lawyer with many top fashion designers as his clients, so the couple basically introduced me to society.  I was able to connect and meet with powerful people, which was a great way to move upward.  I got the opportunities through the social connections I’d made and I had learned that that is a really great way to get around any city.

READ THE REST OF KITHE’S AMAZING STORY AFTER THE JUMP!

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Achievers: Meet Amy Flurry & Nikki Salk, Creators of “Paper Cut Project”

Images by Caroline Petters, Mali Azima, and the Paper Cut Creators

Never compromise.  The things that we turned down, I think others would have jumped at because they were truly awesome opportunities, but it required some type of compromise on what it is that we’re wanting.  I think when you start compromising it’s not your dream anymore- it’s someone else’s vision. –Nikki Salk

Any emerging entrepreneur will admit the difficulty of saying “no” to offered opportunities- more difficult for others positioned in a minute niche.  Visionaries like Paper Cut Project founders Amy Flurry and Nikki Salk prove that staying true (and therefore holding out at times) can result in larger ventures without the back-bending.

The Georgia-based duo, both known for successful careers unrelated to paper art, have enjoyed a meteoric rise in the high fashion/luxury circle.  These “paper couturiers” build intricate creations, usually wearable on the face or sur la têtê, inspired by the innovation of fashion and the malleability of paper.  What was borne from a simple idea over casual conversation less than two years ago has brought demand from luxury staples around the globe- from exclusive Cartier and Hermes commissions to an upcoming spread in Italian Vogue.

Read the inspiring interview I had with lovely, humble ladies below and witness the powerful cycle of idea-making…to action…to breakthrough.

ML: Your first big break with Paper Cut involved fashion house juggernaut Hermes last year- how did the opportunity come about?

Amy Flurry: Hermes was specifically looking for “paper cut” when they found us, and they found us on a blog.  Yeah, very fortuitous (giggles).  The Hermes representative said she was looking in all of France to try and find paper cut artists, and nothing was really her vision of what she wanted.  When she saw our work, it did.  She saw the masks that we did for Jeffrey, and she really latched on to this idea.  The Paper Cut Project headpieces are now being worn by models and greeters at the Hermes stores that are opening in Asia, Munich-

ML: So this is already happening?

AF: It’s already happening, as soon as they got them they were sending stuff out! When I met them over in Paris we learned they in fact already opened three stores in China, one in Munich and one in Antwerp, so they had been travelling and they were holding up well.

ML: Why do you suppose your work stands out amongst other paper/fashion artists?

Nikki Salk: We want them to always exist.  Rather than being a store display that dies after a month when it’s taken down, we want what we created to always be something, and they would always exist…

AF: On their own!

NS: Exactly.

AF: They’re not just quickly pulled together for effect.  A recent Nylon Magazine issue called in a piece and it was for a beauty spread, and what we thought Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet Steve Harvey, Comedian, TV/Radio Personality, Author {Exclusive Interview}

I had the opportunity to meet  and interview top national comedian (and recent best-selling author of “Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man”) Steve Harvey this year.  I wanted him to share his perspective on “making it” for my MisterLevius.com readers and he definitely delivered.  Instead of the traditional “Q & A” format of my other celeb interviews, here are some brief highlights of Harvey’s take on pursuing your dreams that, I believe, will help many (like myself) put things into perspective.

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1.  STOP FIGURING OUT “HOW”

“You don’t have to know how it happens: that ain’t your job, nor your business.  If you could figure out the ‘how-to-do’ everything, everybody would be successful.  All you have to have is the belief that it’s going to happen…God gives you the how-to.”

 

2.  INCH-BY-INCH…

“When you set a goal, don’t look at it from a stand-point of ‘I don’t see how I’m going to make a million dollars.’  No you can’t see it, but can you figure out how to make $5?  Ok, then make the $5.  Then go make $5 more, then make $10, then make $15- inch-by-inch, anything’s a cinch.  What stops people in their dreams and their goals are that they see the big picture…and because they can’t figure out how to Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet Bill & Joan Martin, Founders of Brahmin, Luxury Handbags {Exclusive Interview}

All images by Travis Levius. All Rights Reserved.

“I don’t think anybody realizes how hard you have to work- we all hear about it, we all see the books about it- and no one knows what you really go through until you live it yourself.  So you have to have ENDLESS stamina, ENDLESS energy, and ENDLESS creativity.” -Bill Martin

Through text, I could not accurately depict the impassioned tone of Bill Martin’s above statement.  His delivery was so heavy that it could have only come from a place of personal experience.  Though no major success story is the same, a frequent theme involves people who work towards something great in lieu of very trying times.  When you’ve lost your job in a bad economy, need to make a living immediately for your family, and your passion [and prior experience] lies in the fashion business, what do you do? Brahmin handbag founders Bill and Joan Martin will tell you that when you’re in a position where you have NO CHOICE but to make it, you’ll be surprised how strong and able you really are.

Much to their relief, the husband and wife team will most likely never have a problem with “making a living” again.  They now face a different challenge that some would perhaps love to experience: having a product become so popular, so esteemed and so heavily demanded that it’s difficult to keep up with the exponential growth. For starters, Brahmins’s leather handbags has become the oft-seen darlings of Vogue magazine, appearing in numerous ads and editorial spreads in their monthly issues (they will also be Vogue’s official handbag for September’s global super-fête “Fashion Night Out”).  Other major fashion titles such as Elle and InStyle have also taken notice of Brahmin’s quality and ageless appeal, and now the rest of the world is quickly catching up. I had the pleasure of meeting the founding couple, along with PR figure Shawna Hassett and Brahmin’s CMO James Bunn, and discuss their ascent from discouraging lack to inspirational greatness.

Proud Brahmin founders Bill and Joan Martin at the Grand Opening

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ML.com: How did your husband-and-wife business turn Brahmin from an idea into the phenomenon it is now?

Bill Martin: I had experience working in the handbag and shoe industry.

“In 1980 I worked for a handbag manufacturer, and America was in really tough times [during the Carter era] and I lost my job.  I had to come home and tell Joan and I said ‘Oh my goodness, what are gonna do now?!’” Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet Rachel Roy, Fashion Designer/Humanitarian {Exclusive Interview}

Images by Travis Levius.  All Rights Reserved.
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“What would truly make me think ‘Wow, perhaps I’m starting to accomplish what God has intended for me to accomplish’ is when I truly give back to others and help others have freedom…that’s when I’ll start to think that maybe I’ve started to accomplish something truly great.” -Rachel Roy

My personal experience with lightning-speed success doesn’t hold a candle to the accomplishments of fashion designer Rachel Roy who- in just 5 years- has become a definitive figure in the critical, competitive fashion world.  Enamored with vintage film belles as a youth, she carried her passion into several divisions of Rocawear as an intern, and soon became creative director of its women’s and children’s divisions.  Her decision to launch her own line in 2005, however, was when she struck goldmine.

Ever since, fashion’s “it” girl has seen her vintage-inspired garments adorned on the likes of Oprah, Gwyneth Paltrow, Michelle Obama, Tyra Banks, Jennifer Gardner, and Ivanka Trump and can be seen in every major fashion magazine over the globe.  Her greatness, however, is not only found in her fashion career but in her valiant efforts to change the world through humanitarian work (this year she’s partnered with Fairwinds Trading Co. to actively create craft-based jobs for women in Rwanda and Tanzania).  I had the honor to sit down with the remarkably humble and stunning Rachel Roy before her RRNY Spring 2010 runway show in Atlanta to discuss her journey and wonderful ways that she is inspiring the world.

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ML.com: You went from: impulsively wanting to dress your mom, dad, and brother in your youth (she giggles) to…[Michelle] Obama.

Oh my goodness!  And just last night again, I found out that she wore a piece from my pre-Fall collection for a speech in Mexico.

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ML.com: Wow.

Yeah, it’s probably the best feeling that I could have in the business of dressing women

“…because if you’re not making people feel good about themselves, you’re not doing your job.”

So when someone that I’m inspired by wears it- especially in this point in her career where what she is wearing is so scrutinized that she can’t just throw something on, that means I am starting to do my job in a sense of making women feel good and strong and confident. And I was absolutely over the moon (giggles).

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ML.com: It’s evident that your clothes have elements of vintage Hollywood.  Why does that era inspire you?

Growing up I couldn’t watch TV, but my family had all the channels that you get when you don’t pay for cable (laughs).  So one of those was Turner Classic, and Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet David Cohen of Equation Arts {Exclusive Interview}

(Photos taken by Travis Levius)

“There was a time in my life where I thought all I’d be doing would be teaching, painting, and drawing- life takes you in different turns.  I love what I’m doing now, but if you had asked me ten years ago I would’ve told you that would not be possible.”

In a culture where everyone is expected to have one occupation, exercise one skill, and follow one passion, David Cohen is a beacon of light for those who want to “do it all.” From founding Equation Arts as a “Brand Therapist” for celebs and business execs to being an accomplished fine artist (among other talents), Cohen has been all over the country exerting his varied interests, showing others that you can make all your talents work when you have the courage to think outside the box.

I had the chance to interview Cohen and highlight his story of combining unique passions to help and inspire others:

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There are people in graduate programs that don’t have the passion they thought they had for their field- yet they’re afraid of pursuing anything else.  What gave you the courage after receiving your MFA to get into marketing/web consulting?

Well it wasn’t an overnight decision.  It took about a decade (smiles). In the 90’s I was in Baltimore teaching, painting and drawing at a community college and in my studio. I was also working two other jobs to make ends meet, one of which was for the AV department of the art school where I got my MFA. Thanks to the art school I had 20 slides of my paintings digitized – this was a fairly rare thing back then.  I used them to make my first web site. I learned how to make a web page by basically copying someone else’s and by trial and error changing one thing at a time to see what would break I learned how to make my own.  It was very exciting, fascinating – keep you up late at night stuff.

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And so you’ve found a way to combine your background in creativity with technological skills?

I got an email from someone in Italy who liked my paintings and I was hooked. Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet Michael Gates Gill, National Best-Selling Author (Exclusive Interview)

(photos taken by Travis Levius)

We’ve all heard triumphant “rags-to -riches” success stories in our lifetime- but have we witnessed a riches-to-rags story…and still consider it a triumph?

It may be difficult to believe, but author and Starbucks barista Michael Gates Gill challenges millions of people about what a great, inspiring life looks like.  Best-seller “How Starbucks Saved My Life” is an autobiography by Gill who was raised in the highest social circles on Earth- meeting Jackie Onassis, Queen Elizabeth, and Ernest Hemingway, going to Yale, and landing a six-figure ad agency job immediately after graduation.  He was living the high life in New York City and made no apologies for it…then situations rocked his entire life.

He was fired from his prestigious job because of his older age, went through a divorce due to his adultery, and ran his own consulting company only to see it crash and burn. This “born rich” man became unemployed for 10 years, and during this time discovered he had a brain tumor.

Through desperation he sought out an open position at Starbucks Coffee near Harlem, serving customers, cleaning bathrooms, and handling the register- not exactly the glamorous life he’s experienced since birth.  Continue reading

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Achievers: Meet Bettina Boateng, Anchor for NBC 13 HD News (Exclusive Interview)

“I was supposed to be a doctor… so what am I doing talking into a camera?”

Have you ever had friends or family push you into a certain career, though it wasn’t your own passion?

NBC News Anchor Bettina Boateng knows all about going against others’ opinions and staying true to self.  “Even though I had the passion to help people, I was really pursing the path of M.D. for my mom.  My mother raised me to be a doctor, despite the fact that I came out of the womb running my mouth.  In grade school I’d get in trouble for talking too much in class. So, it was not a big surprise when my mother learned that I switched my major from pre-med to journalism.”

Soon after she switched to journalism her junior year, she landed highly coveted and competitive internships with Fox Atlanta, ABC News Radio, and CNN. Continue reading

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