Jane Forth

"[8] Forth's unique look—involving shaved eyebrows, Wesson-oiled hair, pale skin, red cheeks, and bold lips—was proclaimed the “New Now Face” in 1970.

[6] Forth posed for Antonio Lopez’s fashion illustrations in the New York Times, Diane von Furstenberg, and was photographed for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar.

[5][9] Forth was 16 years old when Jack Mitchell photographed her for a nude four-page photo spread for the April 1970 cover of After Dark magazine.

[4] The youth and arrogance of then-teenaged Forth shows through her 1970 statement to Life: "When I’m home I’m yelling at my mother to iron my clothes, and when I’m out, I’m standing around yawning at all these fancy people.

"[4] She declared in the same interview that she bought dime-store make up and each of her “dress-up" faces only cost twenty-five cents, with her thrifted vintage dresses averaging a price of $12.50.

[1] She was hired to do the make-up of people photographed by Warhol for their silkscreen portrait at the Factory, including singer Neil Sedaka and fashion designer Gianni Versace.

After becoming pregnant again in her thirties, she relocated to Los Angeles and made the decision to give up her work in beauty and become a stay-at-home mother.