Date of Birth
28 February 1986,
Greenwich, Connecticut, USA
Mini Biography
Olivia is the daughter of real estate developer, of Italian descent,
Douglas Palermo and interior designer Lynn Hutchings. Palermo grew up
between the Upper East Side, New York and Greenwich, Connecticut where
she attended Nightingale-Bamford School, and then St. Luke's School,
where she was on the field hockey team. She attended the American
University of Paris for a year and studied media at The New School in
New York. Palermo's father filed for bankruptcy in 2007 after failing to
pay $2.75 million to a creditor. However, it was overturned when the
judge discovered he had used multiple fake organizations to obscure his
actual worth to borrow money and join private clubs and send his
children to expensive schools.
She interned at Quest.
Photographer Patrick McMullan spotted her at an auction, then took
pictures of her about town. Palermo began taking part in the charity
event circuit in New York, becoming a member of the Friends Committee of
New Yorkers For Children and joining the committee of Operation Smile.
Palermo found herself at the center of a controversy when she was
reported to have sent out a letter to fellow socialites pleading for
acceptance. This letter was forwarded to the owners of the social
website, Socialite Rank.com who promptly published it. Palermo
immediately denied the authenticity of the letter and filed a lawsuit
against the website. The website was eventually shut down and in May
2007, Palermo appeared on the cover of New York Magazine in a story
about the incident.
Palermo has been dating model Johannes Huebl since 2008.
“I’m so excited to be living in my own home,” says socialite Olivia
Palermo, surrounded by clothes racks, shoes and handbags in her
colorful, 63-square-foot walk-in closet accented with a zebra-print rug.
Olivia is photographing outfits she has selected for a short trip to
Los Angeles so she’ll know exactly what she wants to wear while she’s
there. “This is the space I love the most. You can see it the second you
walk in,” she says. “It represents me.”
Inspired by pictures of
Mariah Carey’s spacious NYC home, Olivia, 22, started searching for an
apartment with enough room to create a large-scale, open-plan closet
when she was ready to leave the nest—her mother’s three-bedroom abode on
the Upper East Side—last summer.
With her heart set on downtown Manhattan, Olivia wanted to find a
recently constructed, modern building with lots of natural light. After
going through numerous brokers and scoping out 17 apartments—“The first
one I saw was a dark studio with a Murphy bed and I had no idea what it
was. My dad thought it was a good reality check for me”—she fell for
this brand-new one-bedroom (with an office) on the 10th floor of a
21-story development on Leonard Street in Tribeca. “It was so new, the
paint had barely dried,” Olivia proudly says of the apartment.
To
furnish the place, Olivia and her mother, Lyn Hutchings, a partner at
interior design firm Hutchings-Lyle, came up with the design plan: a
1960s look with a classic, old Hollywood feel. For the living room, the
duo chose a comfy two-piece sectional sofa bed from Jennifer
Convertibles. Next, Olivia fell for a baby-blue Bing side table from
Gracious Home, which adds to the cheerful tone. “Then my mom slowed me
down,” she says. “She made me realize that buying furniture is not like
shopping for clothes. You need to think of the look of the entire
apartment.” Taking the time to scour design centers and antique shops
paid off: The eye-catcher in the room is an Hermès tray, a vintage find
from the Hamptons, placed on top of a Carlyle Custom Convertible
white-leather coffee table with nailheads.
The bedroom is
personalized with a zebra-print antique lamp with a string shade (“a
gift from my dad”) and framed photographs of loved ones—Olivia’s
boyfriend of eight months, Wilhelmina model Johannes Huebl, dominates
the selection. The most prized piece, however, is a dresser from ABC
Carpet & Home, which is covered in sparkling costume jewelry. “My
aunt [Linda Donahue] is a costume jewelry expert, so I understand it’s
just as valuable as real jewelry,” she says, holding up a vintage brooch
decorated with enamel and rhinestone lovebirds. “And every piece comes
with a rich history. I got this one at the Pier Show in New York, but
found an almost identical pin in Leigh Leshner’s book, Vintage Jewelry, A
Price and Identification Guide, 1920-1940s. So I think it’s
Depression-era.”
With the décor decided on, Olivia concentrated on using the Container
Store’s Elfa system to turn the home office into a dream walk-in closet
for her well-established wardrobe of vintage finds, plus dresses and
separates from Zac Posen, Sass & Bide, Rebecca Taylor, Ports 1961
and Zara, and “a hundred pairs of shoes—from Louboutin and French Sole
to lots of no-name heels.”
Although she has a year of media
studies at the New School to go, Olivia is ready to take on the acting
world. Leaning against the simple, modern white Jonathan Adler desk in
her bedroom, she confides, “I don’t have to work—my parents have always
supported me in everything I’ve wanted to do—but I want to. I want to be
an actress and a brand, and then I want to do some producing.”
To
begin her transformation from socialite to international star, the
5'5", size 0 beauty has signed on with the talent agency Untitled (“one
of the best in the industry”), as well as hired the PR firm Rogers &
Cowan (Elton John’s handler was minding her at this Page Six Magazine
shoot).
As for the rumor that she’ll make her acting debut in
Whitney Port’s The Hills spin-off, she says reality TV isn’t for her. “I
want to be a serious actress,” she says.
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