|
Home > People Index Page > Daisy Fuentes
Published November/December 1997
Thriving Miss Daisy
From MTV Veejay to Model to Actress to Talk Show Host, Daisy Fuentes Is Always Seeking New Worlds to Conquer
by Shandana Durrani
I would be either a rocket scientist or brain
surgeon," Daisy Fuentes says with a laugh, tossing back her glossy
brown mane. The MTV host, Revlon supermodel and former cable talk show
host is mentally thumbing through some of the careers she hasn't
tackled at the age of 31. Sitting in the back seat of a Lincoln Town
Car as the driver traverses Manhattan, the 5-foot 10-inch Fuentes is
rushing to an appearance on "The Rupaul Show" on VH-1, where she will
be picked at and prodded before her on-air interview with the famous
drag queen. She has just spent more than six hours with a TV Guide
photo crew, being picked at and prodded for a handbag spread in the
magazine. In addition, cameramen from E! Entertainment Television have
shadowed Fuentes all day as part of its popular "MODEL" series, in
which they capture the day-to-day life of supermodels. For most, this
pace would be stressful, but Fuentes carries it off with casual
aplomb.
"It can get hectic," she says, with a sigh. "When I am in New York or
Miami or L.A. for work, I am usually there for a week and we try to
really pack up that week. We try to get as much done at each place as
possible."
Dressed in a short white miniskirt, black tank top and sandals,
Fuentes leans her long frame back against the leather seats of the
town car and relaxes. Though extremely busy, she has time to chat. She
greets you in a warm, Latin manner, as if you are a long lost friend,
and it becomes immediately apparent that she is genuinely as nice as
she appears on television.
Fuentes begins to talk at length about her great loves: television and
music. Then there is her other great love, Latin crooner Luis Miguel,
her boyfriend of three years. Although she is mum about the details of
their relationship, she does say that she is extremely happy and in
love.
Fuentes is also quite willing to talk about her newfound appreciation
for cigars. From an early age, she was surrounded by the cigars her
father and grandfather smoked. She would steal puffs and ask them for
details about the smokes. But it wasn't until recently, with the cigar
boom, that she developed her own affinity for cigars. She now enjoys
smoking premium cigars and drinking fine Cognac in laid-back moments
with her close friends.
"I always thought it was so interesting," she says. "It is such an art
and there is so much history to it. And once you learn about it, you
have a respect for it."
Fuentes' palate is attuned to such mild brands as Macanudo and
Dominican Romeo y Julieta, but give the girl a Cuban Cohiba and she is
in heaven. "I just smoked a Cohiba the other day. It was great,"
Fuentes enthuses. "You have to appreciate everything that cigar is."
Hectic and fast-paced days are nothing new for Fuentes, whose life has
been bustling since 1988, when, as a fledgling television personality
(she was a weather girl for a Univision affiliate), she sent a Spanish
audition tape to MTV. The music channel was at its peak in popularity,
and Fuentes hoped to combine her love of television with her love of
music. When MTV didn't respond immediately, Fuentes gave up
hope. Then, six months later, MTV called and asked the Cuban-born
beauty if she would audition for a south-of-the-border version of
MTV. Fuentes auditioned and earned a job on the weekly syndicated "MTV
Internacional," the success of which led to the creation of a separate
channel devoted to the Latin music scene, MTV Latino, for which
Fuentes was a major player as a host and a veejay. With her beauty,
poise and natural rapport with the camera, MTV U.S. soon called her to
audition; she eventually landed the plum job of MTV veejay.
"I thought that I had died and gone to heaven," she recalls. "I
thought that I was going to have to pay them to do what I wanted to
do, that was how much fun I was having. I mean, you're 20 years old
and you're hanging out with rock stars and going to fabulous parties,
and then you talk about it!"
While many of her peers were studying for exams, Fuentes became an
overnight sensation. She hosted the MTV "Top 20 Video Countdown,"
"Mt. MTV," "Beach MTV" and MTV "Rock and Jock Softball" and "Rock and
Jock Basketball." She became a household name among the under-25 set
and a role model for many young Latinas.
Fuentes received a phone call in 1993 from the office of Ron Perelman,
the chief executive officer and chairman of Revlon. The same Ron
Perelman who is chairman of Consolidated Cigar Corp. Fuentes thought
the call was a joke and didn't respond. Perelman persisted. Fuentes,
realizing the interest was genuine, met with him and other Revlon
officials. After several meetings, the cosmetics giant signed her to a
multiyear contract to represent a line of grooming products and to be
a Revlon spokeswoman at events across the United States. Fuentes
refuses to comment on the amount or specific details of the deal, but
it changed her life as much as MTV did, making her an even bigger
star.
Besides Revlon, Fuentes has had a string of other endorsement deals,
including M&M Mars and American Express. She has also appeared in
long-running Pantene shampoo and conditioner commercials, which were
created for both the English and Spanish markets. Fuentes is also
considering other endorsements, which she will not discuss before the
deals are made final.
In 1994, cable channel CNBC asked Fuentes to host a talk show. Fuentes
accepted the job because she wanted to show people that she was more
than a pretty face, that she could do something other than just
present a video. She signed a one-year contract with CNBC, which gave
her the freedom to choose many of the guests on the show. Fuentes
interviewed such legends as Patti Labelle and Aretha Franklin. It was
a dream come true for her.
"I love sitting down and talking to people," enthuses Fuentes. "CNBC
gave me a chance to do it in a way that I liked. They gave me a chance
to also develop the skills to learn from my mistakes and also to have
a lot of people that I genuinely loved and that I was really
interested in," she says. "It really helped me learn how to do a
really good interview. You have to be truly interested in the
person. And being able to do it with people that you really admire and
like, that helped me learn and understand what I have to do for a
television show."
Fuentes left CBNC in 1995, after a year on the air. She has no
regrets, noting that CNBC was really good to her but that there wasn't
much room there for her to develop her career.
After her departure from CNBC, Fuentes landed guest spots on such hit
shows as HBO's "The Larry Sanders Show" and "Dream On," and CBS'
"Cybill," mostly playing Daisy Fuentes. In 1996 she landed a small but
featured role in the Quentin Tarantino-produced dark comedy, Curdled,
co-starring as Clara, a service worker who cleans up crime scenes. The
film also starred William Baldwin and Angela Jones, and although
Curdled didn't break box-office records, Fuentes feels that it was a
positive learning experience.
"I auditioned for it because I thought it was an interesting and good
way to start [my film career]. I was able to feel the atmosphere
around me and see if I was comfortable," she says. "If I had had more
responsibilities, then I think I would have been so much in awe of the
movie set, the people and what everybody's job was, that I don't know
if I would be able to concentrate on how to do the character."
Fuentes has no plans to parlay her success on television to the
big screen. She is quite content with television, which has
brought her international celebrity, and she continues to expand
her roles. Although she is still a fixture at MTV, she no longer
hosts the "Top 20 Video Countdown" or the other shows she did
early in her career. Last year, when her contract with the
station was about to expire, she won the hotly contested
position as the host of MTV's popular monthly fashion show,
"House of Style." Like the first "House of Style" host,
supermodel Cindy Crawford, Fuentes has a natural charisma that
translates on camera. And, unlike her predecessors, models Amber
Valetta and Shalom Harlow, Fuentes' name and face are easily
recognizable to the MTV crowd. While she may have seemed the
natural choice to follow in Crawford's footsteps, it took a lot
of persistence for Fuentes to get the job.
"Even though I knew her [executive producer Alisa Belletini], I still
had to go in there and meet with her because she was auditioning every
model in the universe for it," says Fuentes. "Of course she didn't
say, 'Oh, Daisy can have it because I know her.' Basically she told me
that she was looking to change the show, to give it a little bit of a
revamp. I spoke to her about my interests in the show. She wanted to
really make sure that I was genuinely interested in the show and what
I would do with it, if I had any ideas or comments. I gave her my
input and told her I was really passionate about doing it."
Fuentes has more on her plate than just the "House of Style" gig. In
July, she was named the new host of "America's Funniest Home Videos,"
replacing Bob Saget, who had been the host for more than eight
years. Although the long-running show isn't on ABC's fall lineup, it
is slated as a midseason replacement. Fuentes didn't initially want
the job, but the creators persisted and eventually won her over.
"[At first] I said, 'No, thanks,' because I just thought that it
wouldn't be some-thing that I would be comfortable doing. It
just really didn't fit with my personality and so we [she and
her agents] passed on it. The producers kept trying. They looked
for a replacement but kept coming back to me," Fuentes
says. "They called me and said, 'We want to have a meeting, we
are changing the whole show and we know why you are passing on
it, but just give us a meeting.' Finally, I just went in and
talked to the producers, and they basically gave me an offer
that I couldn't refuse."
The producers are allowing Fuentes to bring as much of her
personality to the show as she wishes, as well as approval to
change the show's format as much as she wants. She hopes to make
it easier to watch, to make it more comfortable.
Fuentes is also working on a syndicated talk show. She won't
disclose the details, other than to say that she has some solid
ideas, is looking for suitable writers and producers, and hopes
to complete a television special by the fall of 1998.
Fuentes was born in Havana, Cuba, on Nov. 17, 1966, to a Cuban father
and a Spanish mother. Her parents, Amado and Mary, fled Cuba in 1969
with three-year-old Daisy. Her family left behind everything they
owned, including a ranch and a supermarket, where her father and
grandfather worked. Choosing Spain because of the ease of immigration,
they settled in Madrid with Daisy's mother's family. While in Spain,
Daisy's father worked two jobs to support the family, and her mother
gave birth to Fuentes' younger sister, Rosana. After five years there,
the Fuentes emigrated to the United States, moving to Newark, New
Jersey, and eventually settling in neighboring Harrison.
She and her sister had a typical Latin-Catholic upbringing, Fuentes
says. Her parents instilled in them very traditional values. The girls
had to show respect for their elders and act with decorum at all
times. Her parents taught her "how to be a good person, not to be
judgmental and not to be mean. Fits did not go over well in my house,"
she says. "There was a lot of discipline and obedience and you had to
be very ladylike. Ladies didn't curse and I still don't curse in front
of my parents."
Her parents also refused to allow Fuentes to date in high
school. "When I was a junior, boys were allowed to come visit me at
the house. We could sit on the porch until about 8 o'clock at night;
that's when it started getting dark. That was it. You are not alone
with a guy until you are a proper age. You don't go to certain levels
with men until you are married or you have a certain relationship."
At 16, Fuentes got her first taste of her future when she fell into
modeling--purely by chance. Her next-door neighbor, a fashion designer
named Dmitiri, was short a model one day and asked the statuesque
teenager to fill in. Fuentes soon became the designer's house model.
Several years later, at a cocktail party, she caught the eye of the
wife of Ivan Egas, the president of Univision, the largest Spanish
language network in the United States. Raquel Egas asked Fuentes if
she had ever considered doing Spanish television. Fuentes hadn't, so
Egas suggested that Fuentes audition for a job as an on-air
personality. Fuentes did and landed a job as a weather girl for
WXTV-Channel 41, Univision's affiliate in New York. At the time, she
was 19 and a communications student at Bergen Community College in New
Jersey.
"[Raquel Egas] took it upon herself to take me under her wing and kind
of guide me and tell me what to do. She was there when I went to the
audition and was very helpful. She calls me every now and then and
tells me how she likes my hair. She has been a total stage mom," says
Fuentes.
Not long afterward, Fuentes landed her MTV Internacional job, on
Telemundo, Univision's chief competitor. She left college behind and
has never looked back.
She credits her success to equal parts luck, coincidence and drive. "I
think that it takes a lot to keep you in there [at the top of your
profession]. It is a tricky business and the whole negotiating aspect
of it can drive someone insane," she says. "It is nasty. You can think
that you know someone in this business and you really don't. You can
be stabbed in the back very easily. You can be praised very easily. It
doesn't matter who you are or what you do. It is like being in
school. You have got to pay attention, you have got to study and you
have to do your homework and, when the time comes, you have to score
higher than everybody else. Otherwise, you are not going to go on to
the next grade and somebody else will. And there is always somebody
there waiting to take your place."
Fuentes has somewhere to go. She bids farewell and with feline grace,
slides back into the Lincoln Town Car. As the sun sets over New Jersey
and the car speeds away, it is the end of another work day for Daisy
Fuentes. But she's already planning her tomorrows. *
Return to the People page
|