Celebrity News

Janice Dickinson slams Gigi Hadid, Bella Hadid … and Julie Andrews?

Runway veteran Janice Dickinson didn’t hold her tongue on a recent podcast where she took it to today’s hottest models and even the legendary Julie Andrews.

Dickinson, 66, claims the “Sound of Music” star was rude to her years back when she only wanted an autograph.

“I once met Julie Andrews at UCLA and she was in this back room and I was politely waiting my turn in line to get a selfie and at least, you know, get an autograph,” she explained on the “Behind the Velvet Rope” podcast. “And she — she stopped in front of me and she says, ‘I’ve had enough. Thank you.'”

“And I was like, ‘Enough of what?’ she continued. “‘I stood in this line to get your autograph politely.’ She was like, ‘Well, I’m done. I’m tired.'”

“I was like, ‘F— you, man. How dare you!’ She’s a bitch. She hurt my feelings. You can go sound and music elsewhere.”

PageSix has reached out to Andrews for comment.

During the lively interview, Dickinson also shared her thoughts on today’s biggest names in modeling, saying they simply “do not compare” to her ’70s and ’80s peers.

"I mean, they are very pretty women, but they're not supermodels," Dickinson said of the Hadid sisters.
“I mean, they are very pretty women, but they’re not supermodels,” Dickinson said of the Hadid sisters. Getty Images

“The Instagram models get famous and get put into ‘Vogue,’ the Kylie Jenners and the Gigi Hadids and the Bella Hadids. I mean, they are very pretty women, but they’re not supermodels,” she asserted.

“You see them in advertising and Vogue uses them because they have millions and millions and millions of followers,” she added. “Vogue has the subscription of what — 800,000 and Kylie Jenner has got like twenty-five million people following her, something like that.”

“Never on the level of the girls from the seventies and eighties and the nineties, we were fabulous.”

When asked what the new girls lack, the former “America’s Next Top Model” judge said, “I’m just thinking they’re not, they’re just — they have one look, they don’t really diversify their movements. They just stand there. And get paid millions of dollars.”

“They are not fierce walkers,” she added.