At age seventeen, Gia Carangi was working the counter at her father's
Philadelphia luncheonette, Hoagie City. Within a year, Gia was one of
the top models of the late 1970's, gracing the covers of Cosmopolitan
and Vogue, partying at New York's Studio 54 and the Mudd Club, and
redefining the industry's standard of beauty. She was the darling of
moguls and movie stars, royalty and rockers. Gia was also a girl in
pain, desperate for her mother's approval-- and a drug addict on a
tragic slide toward oblivion, who started going directly from
$10,000-a-day fashion shoots to the heroin shooting galleries on New
York's Lower East Side. Finally blackballed from modeling, Gia entered a
vastly different world on the streets of New york and Atlantic City, and
later in a rehab clinic. At twenty-six, she became on of the first women
in America to die of AIDS, a hospital welfare case visited only by rehab
friends and what remained of her family.
Drawing on hundreds of interviews with Gia's gamily, lovers, friends,
and colleagues, "Thing of Beauty" creates a poignant portrait of an
unforgettable character-- and a powerful narrative about beauty and
sexuality, fame and objectification, mothers and daughters, love and
death.