Lindsay Lohan wants you to know that she’s all right. Reminiscing about the series of scandals that have sullied her name and nearly deep-sixed her career, she is all contrition. “When I look back on this last year, it’s like what was I thinking?” she confided in the March issue of Harper’s Bazaar. “I’ve learned so much, though, like learning to live my life a different way.”
No need to take her word for it. Images speak persuasively, and in the case of Lohan, who appears this month inside Bazaar and on its cover, they do what they can to counter the perception that she is a train wreck, yesterday’s news.
The cover, shot by Peter Lindbergh soon after Lohan’s third round in rehab for alcohol abuse, makes her look as if she had spent the last 12 months thriving on yoga and a diet of sprouts.
It is the most sophisticated of a trifecta of March magazine covers to feature the troubled star — including a near-nude shot by Bert Stern for New York magazine’s spring fashion issue and a provocative pose for Paper, the alternative style monthly. Together the covers represent a full-court press by Lohan and her handlers to reposition her as fresh-faced and comeback-ready.
She is the latest Hollywood celebrity to seek to overcome scandal through the redemptive power of glossy fashion imagery. Last June, six months after her arrest for drunken driving, Nicole Richie modeled on the cover of Bazaar with Paris Hilton.
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