Long
before she was an adviser to the President of the United States, Ivanka
Trump was just your average teenage daughter of a billionaire,
attending an elite East Coast boarding school. Although the Trumps are not necessarily known for their modest taste, a teenaged Ivanka actually seemed pretty normal, as depicted in a feature in Seventeen magazine from more than 20 years ago.
In
the late nineties, conspicuous consumption wasn’t really a thing for
the teenagers in the largely white suburban enclaves of New England. We
walked on the backs of our oversized corduroy pants, chewing up the hems
and if you were lucky enough to have a Patagonia fleece vest, it wasn’t
unusual for it to be puckered here and there with cigarette burns. We
probably thought we didn’t “care” about the way things looked, but
really we didn’t understand the value of our clothing. Most had never
gone without — without food, without security, without a steady supply
of mail order fashion from J Crew, and LL Bean and everywhere else I was
sure “rich kids” got regular delivery from.
And
at Choate, I’m told, Ivanka was not much different. Boarding school in a
small Connecticut town meant a carefully cultivated uniform of low-key
but high end sweatpants, wool cardigans, and hiking boots. To be flashy
would have been to expose yourself as different, and different was the
very last thing any of the Choate students wanted to be. This was a
place Ivanka could fit in. There were scholarship students for sure, but
most everyone was wealthy and a lot of kids were VERY wealthy (Carl
Icahn’s daughter was there the same time as Ivanka) and flaunting that
would be tacky. Better to dress like at any moment you might be spending
a few hours in the parking lot of a Dave Matthews concert or as if you
were on your way from Spanish class to lacrosse practice (which you
were).
The January 1998 piece, first reposted by the Instagram account @thankyouatoosa,
run by Casey Lewis, profiles a 16-year-old Ivanka in her dorm room at
Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut, which she shared with two other
girls. "Some people might be surprised I'm a normal teenager," Ivanka,
who is pictured striking a very '90s cool-girl pose on a small wooden
chair, told the magazine. The 15-by-11 feet room is normal: Her wall is adorned with string lights, photographs of friends and family, and a poster of Marilyn Monroe's iconic skirt-flying-up
photo. "There's a lot of random themes from movies," she said. There's a
black-and-white Robert Doisneau poster, which she purchased on the
street in France, above her bed.
Still,
according to a classmate, while Ivanka’s clothes were mostly fleece and
flannel, there were things about her that stood out. Ivanka had one of
the original black, box-shaped Prada bags that would serve as an
inspiration for Kate Spade and become so ubiquitous. Ivanka was nice.
She had plenty of friends. She was a regular teenager, but still it
seemed she believed she was exceptional. As in, an exception to the
rules. She had a cell phone at a time when only movie stars had cell
phones. And she had a car on campus, something literally no other
student had. She and her parents had apparently argued that it was
necessary for her to have the car because in addition to being a student
at Choate, Ivanka also had a modeling career.
Sometimes
she would argue with her dad on the cell phone. He wanted her to go to
Wharton, as he did. She wanted to go to Georgetown to be with her
boyfriend. In the end, Ivanka would spend a year at Georgetown before
transferring to her father’s alma mater. Also — in what was surely a
source of soul crushing embarrassment to teenage Ivanka — her father
showed up to graduation in limo, greeting other students and parents as
if any of them actually cared that he was Donald Trump, which meant
something very different than what it does now.
It’s
an interesting note that one of the most prominent photos adorning the
walls is one of an 11-year-old Ivanka and her dad, President Donald
Trump. He has his arms protectively on her shoulders as they both look
off in the same direction. "That was the first night I met my agent,"
Ivanka, who at the time was a part-time model, said of the photo. "She
asked me to stop by the agency in a few years." There's a mirror hanging
on the wall, which Ivanka noted she has to "crouch" to see her face in
since she's so tall.
And
she made other concessions to her modeling career and her
exceptionalism. Once after a holiday break, she returned to campus with a
bruised and swollen face. For a week she wore her hair covering her
face and told everyone she'd had her wisdom teeth removed. Whether this
is a clue that Ivanka got cosmetic surgery in high school or she just
had some severely impacted wisdom teeth is anyone’s guess, but the
former would not be unusual for a rich prep school teen in the 90s —
especially an exceptional one with a modeling career.
Although
the room seems no different than that of any American teenage girl at
the time, one can glean some insights into future Ivanka. Ivanka's
image, much like a magazine spread, is perfectly curated. She grew up
with unimaginable wealth, but her public persona (like her dorm) is that
of a person who is almost implausibly down-to-earth. She wears immaculate designer clothes, but is never gaudy. She speaks with authority, but maintains a soft tone. She's an adviser to one of the most powerful — and divisive — men in the world, but still wants to be seen as relatable.
Ivanka, who grew up shuttling between multiple luxury residences, told Seventeen
her unassuming dorm, with its austere furniture and plain, white walls,
"probably expresses me best." It was a blank canvas, away from a
demanding Dad, but in it she created a place where she blended
seamlessly with the rest of the student body.
She added: "It's an atmosphere I created." But, it's more of a vacuum.
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