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Background:
Amber Valletta grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, spending time on her grandparentsâ farm. Her childhood was defined by open fields, a freshwater creek and a simple rule from her mother: go outside and use your imagination.
At 15, a local modelling class set her on an unexpected path that would take her first to Milan, and then around the world. Within a few years, Amber became one of the defining faces of 1990s fashion â the Tom Ford Gucci era, the great editorials and the campaigns that shaped a generationâs idea of beauty.
But by her mid-20s, success had taken its toll. Amber stepped away from modelling, got sober, became a mother, pursued acting and found purpose in environmental advocacy. Today, as a United Nations Environment Programme goodwill ambassador, sheâs using her influence to push for real change on climate, biodiversity and pollution.
âI donât make my life all about me,â she told me. âI make it about other people too â about connection and love. When you have that, life is so much more enjoyable.â
This week on The BoF Podcast, BoF founder Imran Amed sits down with Amber Valletta to trace her journey from Tulsa to the worldâs fashion capitals, how sobriety transformed her life at 25 and why she believes fashion must finally take responsibility for its impact on the planet.
Key Insights:
- Vallettaâs childhood in nature forged a creative compass and the ability to adapt anywhere.That self-reliance became a career asset when she landed in Europe as a teenager: âI have this strange thing that Iâve always had â itâs like wherever you plant me, I grow. Iâm like a weed or something, like an Oklahoma weed.â Those early years also taught her to observe and self-teach: âNo one taught me. I just started figuring it out ⦠you look, you watch, you listen.â
- Opening Tom Fordâs Gucci Fall/Winter 1995 show gave Valletta a once-in-a-career jolt. âWhen I walked out on the runway, it was probably one of the few times Iâve had that adrenaline rush ⦠that spotlight came on and boom,â Valletta recalls. The moment was so impactful because it diverged from what dominated the time: âNothing looked like that ⦠it was like a shot of adrenaline for everybody,â she says.
- But ultimately, the pace and politics left her feeling disconnected, relying on substances to cope. âI turned to alcohol [and drugs] as a social lubricant,â she recalls. âThat helped me at the time until it stopped helping me.â At 25, she reached a turning point: âIâm either gonna die or Iâve gotta choose to live ⦠I havenât had a drink or a drug since.â
- Valletta was recently named UN Environment Programme goodwill ambassador, where she is focused on climate change, biodiversity loss and on âfashionâs role as one of the biggest polluters.â Her brief is practical: âWe need to invest in innovation and investment in decarbonisation ⦠We need all hands on deck. We need collaboration,â she says, warning, âIf it doesnât change, weâre going to implode on ourselves.â
- Vallettaâs guidance for a fulfilling life is simple: âDo what you love. Serve a higher purpose. Enjoy the moment. Enjoy where youâre at.â She couples that with practical habits for staying power. âI ask questions, I show up with a lot of gratitude ⦠I try not to do too much so that when I show up to work, Iâm fully present for everybody.â