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Beauty and brains: Areeya 'Pop' Chumsai
Areeya ‘Pop’ Chumsai might be best known as a former Miss-
Thailand-turned-military-officer, but she’s a journalist by
trade and it certainly shows. “I guess you’ll want background
information first,” she says thoughtfully when the interview
starts. “I’m thinking, how many column inches do we have here?
What should be the focal point of the story? I guess we should
do this in chronological order, so it’s easier for you…” This is Pop’s first interview in English for several
years. “I haven’t done any interviews lately because there’s
been no news really, and I’m usually very busy.” But the former has changed very recently, with L’Oreal
announcing last month that Pop is to be their new ‘ambassador’.
Other ambassadors across the globe have included Claudia
Schiffer, Andy McDowell and Gong Li. “I’m still in shock over
it! I grew up with L’Oreal and the slogan ‘Because I’m worth
it!’” she says. Her first commercial for them, advertising their Plenitude
UV Perfect sunblock, will hit televisions this month. The shoot
took place outdoors in Malaysia from noon to 6pm for four days,
so Pop says she needed the sunblock just to avoid getting a tan
during that time: “So I know it’s a high quality product. I wish
I’d had UV protection when I was training in the army.” Such a prestigious appointment has come at the end of a very
long road for the Thai woman who grew up in the US state of
Michigan – she was the only Asian in her graduating high school
class - and was never interested in modelling. Her family had originally planned to stay just for a few
years – they moved there when she was four years old - but ended
up settling. “I would come back every two or three years for a
visit. When I was about twelve, with braces and all, I came and
stayed with my great aunt. She decided that I should start
modelling. I was like, ‘Oh, god!’ I was as ugly duckling as
could be. I had braces, really thick glasses.” It wasn’t until she was 17 that the idea of modelling was
raised again. Pop had come back to Thailand for several months
over summer and Pop’s great aunt arranged for some modelling
jobs. “I was a little kid, you know, and the money for modelling
was good – better than my allowance. So it just sort of
happened.” Agencies approached her, but she returned to the US and
finished high school. “I was always an observer. I spent my time
in the library, I read a lot, I started writing, kept a diary.”
Unsurprisingly, perhaps, she then won a scholarship to study
journalism at the University of Michigan. By the time she completed her degree at age 21, she had
spent several summers completing internships at various
publications such USA Today and the LA Times. “As a journalist,
every day is an adventure. You meet new people, you’re out of
the office, it’s a challenge. You talk to people and you learn
something from them. You have to have discipline to take all
this information and write it down. It’s like meditation in a
way.” She decided to take a six-month vacation, coming to Thailand
and then travelling through Australia, New Zealand, Bali,
Singapore and Hong Kong. She came back to Thailand with three
months to go and little money left. Her lack of experience
prevented her from landing a job in journalism, so she returned
to modelling.
Then her great aunt noticed that the Miss Thailand pageant
was happening. “I don’t like pageants, to tell you the truth.
I’d never entered a pageant in my life. I just don’t like the
idea of coming out, answering questions… Maybe it’s the feminist
side of me that just thinks it’s really silly.” But her aunt asked her to do it for her – she’d harboured
hopes for her own two daughters to at least enter the pageant,
but one was too short and the other refused to wear a dress. “My
aunt said to me, ‘Do this for me, please!’ " She remained reluctant. Then she auditioned for a facial
cream commercial, and it got down to three models, the other two
of whom were luk khreung. “The studio told me that if
you’re ‘pure’ Thai, it’s very difficult to be a model. I was
like, ‘Why? What’s wrong with Thai people?’ ” Pop thought this was even more ridiculous. Her aunt
suggested that she enter the pageant, win, and then snub them if
they asked her to work for them! “What turned me around was my aunt found me a sponsor. They
offered me $16,000 just to enter the pageant. If you won, you
got $20,000. I was almost getting as much as the winner. I was
like, ‘I guess I can do it! I can put away my dislike of
pageants!’ Lo and behold, I won the thing.” After the exhausting one-year reign was over in 1995, she
decided to do something completely different – “something more
productive, more relaxing”. A friend of hers asked her to teach
writing and editing at Bangkok University. Then she taught at
Chulalongkorn University. “I never went to school or university in Thailand, so I
wanted to see what it was like. I’d wondered what my life would
have been like if my parents hadn’t moved,” she says. “It was
fun. In a way, being a teacher is actually a way to be a
student. They kept me on my toes!” Then her life took another unexpected twist. She was invited
to become an officer at Chulachomklao Military Academy. “I’m a
free spirit. I’m not very good with authority,” she admits. “But
I thought to myself, this is a chance for me to understand the
military and what it’s like inside.” She could have simply volunteered as a teacher, but instead
decided to do the six-month basic training and become an
officer. “The cadets were wonderful. I enjoyed the discipline…
I’d never done anything that crazy before. People who are
journalists are very curious by nature.” Now Pop’s a second lieutenant - she’ll become a lieutenant
next February - and teaches English as required. At the moment,
she’s averaging around three days per week. “It’s not too much
of my time. I can do other things.” Such as write. She has three books out – PopSpeak, Bootcamp
and Thinking Out Loud, the latter of which she also designed and
illustrated. She has plans for a fourth, a collection of
columns, and then she’d like to take “a long leave of absence
from writing columns which I've been doing for the last seven
years - and that’s not counting the five years I've been writing
since university study and internships!” Currently she’s writing a column for women’s magazine
Praew. “I’m hoping as a columnist that I’m like a little needle
pricking people to think. I’m questioning authority, questioning
life, but also having fun with it.” And early this month she’ll
be a judge at the Bangkok Film Festival. Essentially, Pop is having a ball. “I still feel like I’m on
vacation. There’s no road map in life. If you’d told me while I
was at university that I was going to become a Miss Thailand I
would have laughed in your face! This was supposed to be a six-
month holiday. It’s turned into a six year holiday!” She’s single and contented with that, too. “I have too many
male friends and not enough female friends - the gossip columns
are having a great time because of this." When I ask if she is interested in a husband and family
eventually, she quotes the answer a woman whom she admires once
gave her when she asked the same question. “ ‘I don’t want to be
a wife, I want to be a lover!’ she told me. I was like, yeah,
that’s it! When I asked her why, she said, ‘Well when you’re a
wife, there’s no passion. But if you’re a lover, there’s that
passion always there.’ “I don't want someone's last name. I'm not being a feminist
for saying this, I'm trying to be a humanist. I would like to
share my life with another person in equal terms of respect and
deep passion. Who knows how long anything is going to last? One
should be in a relationship out of choice and not obligation.
With obligation, passion dies quickly.” What would she like to do next? “I don’t know what life has
in store for me. Whenever you find that your life is mundane or
you’re not being challenged any more, you should move on. I
think I’d like to study for a masters – maybe in literature or
film. “With the money I’m making from commercials I have enough to
pay for my university degree. So I’m fuelled: my tank is full,
I’m ready to have another adventure. I believe that every day
really is a gift. I feel that every day, you wake up in the
morning and it’s like birth…" |
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All material copyright Samantha Brown 1997-2005 | ||||||||||||||
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