We
all knew that UPN’s America’s
Next Top Model was one of the gayest shows on TV,
but this season upped the queer ante even more when 22-year-old
out lesbian Kim Stolz sauntered into Tyra Banks’s catfighting,
back-stabbing and totally addictive reality series. Over
the course of ten episodes, Stolz braved a series of photo
shoots that tested her abilities to femme it up, gave the
straight girls a taste of dyke drama, and landed a cameo
spot on the UPN drama Veronica
Mars. But
after failing to win the judges over with her impression
of a modern-day Venus, Stolz was sent back to her native
New York,
coming in fourth place in the competition.
We
caught up with her during her post-show media blitz, when
she gave us the dish on what really happened in that limo,
who she liked and who she didn’t, and why everyone seemed
to be sleeping in adjoining beds.
AfterEllen:
Let’s go back a bit. So you went to college at Wesleyan,
you majored in international relations, is that right?
Kim
Stolz: Yeah, government and international politics.
AE:
So those aren’t exactly experiences we would normally associate
with the desire to be a model. What initially drew you to
modeling?
KS:
Well, my mom [Carol Brandt] was a model, a very successful
model, in the 1960s and 70s. And I think I had watched videos
of her when I was younger, on a runway, and I was always
sort of drawn to it, but it seemed that everything in my
life had prepared me for an academic realm, so I was planning
on going toward that. But I was finishing up my senior year,
and my friends and I were talking about what we were going
to do, and I thought that it would be a really exciting
risk to take. It was something that I had thought about,
but not something that my interest was really strong in
yet. But it turned out on the show that my interest became
much stronger than I ever expected it to, and now it is
something I want to pursue.
AE:
It seems like everyone who auditioned for the show really,
really wanted to be a model. How did you convince them
to cast you when you didn’t have such a strong interest?
KS:
I think that it’s not necessarily the person who most
wants to be a model who is the person who should. I think
sometimes people want things so badly that they sort of
jinx themselves, psych themselves out. I think that I wanted
to be cast not because of desire, but because of my potential
as a model, and I think that’s exactly why I was cast.
AE:
So it seems like when you auditioned you also came out right
away. Is that true?
KS:
I came out in terms of sexuality?
AE:
Yeah.
KS:
Yeah. They ask you at auditions about your life, and
I am not someone who, when asked about my life, is going
to hide a huge part of it. So of course I came out—I think
in my first audition.
AE:
So for you, there just wasn’t really any choice to make?
KS:
I think they maybe asked me about a girlfriend or a
boyfriend, and that kind of sparked it right there.
AE:
Yeah, I’ve seen that in their audition application.
KS:
Right. Before I even got to the audition when I filled
out the application, the answer was already there right
in front of them.
AE:
Were you out to your family before you auditioned?
KS:
Yes, I came out to my family—or my immediate family,
my parents, when I was 16.
AE:
That’s young.
KS:
Well, it wasn’t really accepted right away, but now
about eight years later, it’s going much—or what is it,
six? No, how many years is it? Oh, it’s
six years later, and it’s going much better.
AE:
[Laughs.] So you’re 22 now?
KS:
I’m 22. It seems like it’s been eight years, believe
me.
AE:
Has your extended family seen the show? They all know?
KS:
Everybody knows.
AE:
How has that been?
KS:
It’s been good for the most part. I think there was
a bit of surprise on certain people’s ends, but everyone
is very supportive of me, and it’s my belief that if you
come out to someone and you’re proud of it and you’re excited
about it, they really have no choice but to be accepting.
There’s obviously the exception, but this is my belief and
my experience. Whereas if you come out
and you’re very afraid and hesitant and insecure about it,
people are much more likely to be critical. So me
being so proud of it, I think, helped their acceptance of
it.
AE:
All right, so let’s just talk a little bit about Sarah.
KS:
Oh God. Obviously. [Laughs.]