NEPO babies are famous for getting a leg up in their chosen career paths thanks to their famous or wealthy families.
However, they still have to have talent and getting signed to the same modelling agency who launched the career of legend Kate Moss is no mean feat.
John Travolta’s daughter, Ella Bleu, has just signed with Storm Models in London, the same agency that famously discovered Kate back in 1988 at the tender age of 14.
Ella’s new agent, Paula Karaiskos, confirmed the exciting news, expressing her enthusiasm about representing the 24-year-old in the UK.
Announcing the signing on social media, Paula wrote, “She has an advertising campaign launching this spring, as well as a new film this summer. Watch this space!”
Ella’s career has been on the rise, and her father couldn’t be prouder. Sharing a photo of her attending New York Fashion Week, John wrote, “So proud of Ella’s debut at fashion week in New York City.”
Speaking about her journey into fashion, Ella explained, “I like it because it is very creative. When I was a child, like many others, I liked to wear makeup, dress up in different clothes… When I grew up, I stopped paying attention to it.”
In an interview with Spanish magazine Mujerhoy, she added, “But then I became interested in it again in a different way, more out of admiration for creativity.”
Scientologist Ella often posts videos and pictures of her Pulp Fiction father, 71, on social media, including on her Instagram page.
The model is extremely close with her dad and younger brother Ben, 14, after a series of heartbreaking loses.
When she was just nine years old, her older brother, Jett, passed away after suffering a seizure.
Then, in 2020, she endured another heartbreaking loss when her mother, actress Kelly Preston, died of breast cancer.
Despite these devastating events, Ella has continued to push forward, building a career across multiple industries. She made her acting debut in 2009, shortly after Jett’s passing, with a role in Old Dogs, a film that also starred her parents.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, she had told her father at age seven that she wanted to be in a movie, and he made it happen by pitching her to various directors.
Content shared from www.the-sun.com.