Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.It has helped a group of teenage actors become some of the hottest young stars in Hollywood, made a multi-millionaire of its author, and turned a small town near Seattle into one of America's hottest tourist destinations. Now the Twilight franchise is striking a blow for the fortunes of a cash-strapped New York hand model.
Kimbra Hickey was, if you will pardon the pun, living a hand-to-mouth existence before she realised that she was the owner of the slender set of white fingers which are photographed clutching a red apple on the ubiquitous cover of the first book in Stephenie Meyer's extraordinarily-successful series of vampire novels.
She has duly turned her minor claim to fame into a lucrative career, touring the US to appear at fan conventions where she sells a range of apple scented hand lotion to punters and charges "Twi-hards" – as somewhat obsessive fans of the franchise are known – no less than $30 to be photographed with her, in front of a Twilight poster.
Carrying a Gala apple in her handbag, Ms Hickey also touts for business at New York bookshops and on the local public transport network. "I see people reading it on the subway, and I say, 'Those are my hands! I'm a hand model!'" she revealed at the weekend. "I'm sure they think I'm crazy: a crazy lady on the subway."
In an effort to strike a blow for anonymous catalogue models everywhere, Hickey told the New York Post that she is now hoping to audition for a walk-on role in the forthcoming fourth instalment in the Twilight film series. "If I could get a little background part, it would be fantastic... even if they only wanted my hands in it."
Her success at exploiting such a tenuous connection with Meyer's first novel goes at least some way towards illustrating the huge commercial power of the Twilight franchise. The first three films in the series were made on budgets of $37, $50 and $68 million respectively, but generated a combined $800m at the box office for the previously-small Los Angeles firm behind them, Summit Entertainment.
The vampire-themed romance novels have meanwhile overcome their sniffy critical reception to be translated into 37 languages, selling over 100 million copies, and turning Meyer, a 36-year-old Mormon who lives in a remote corner of Arizona, into a global publishing phenomenon with an annual income which has been estimated by Forbes magazine at over $50m.
Hickey gained a seat on the gravy train when she was hired, in 2004, to pose for the cover of the original novel. The job paid the industry minimum of $300 for two hours work, and required her to file her nails shorter than usual, so that her hands in the picture – which uses plays on Garden of Eden imagery to symbolise pre-adolescent innocence – looked like they belonged to a child.
Her agent, Danielle Korwin, said she also got the job because her fingers are relatively veinless, so would not be considered attractive to a vampire. In the novels, Bella, the human protagonist, is constantly threatened with the prospect of being turned into a meal by various blood-sucking companions.
Previously a full-time massage therapist, who worked a couple of days a week as a "parts model," and was particularly in demand for her size six feet, which once graced a billboard in Times Square, Hickey soon realised that it might be worth exploiting her appearance on the book cover. "It was too big of a deal just to let it be," she said.
OTHER FAMOUS BIT PARTS
Linda Gray: Mrs Robinson's leg
Her stocking-clad leg appeared on posters for The Graduate but belonged to a model who in 2001 played the lead role in a West End adaptation.
Ann Kirsten Kennis: Contra cover girl
For many, the chance to grace an album cover would be a bit of thrill but not for Kennis, who is suing American band Vampire Weekend, their label and the photographer, claiming she did not sign a release form.
Karen England and Paul Page Hanson: The Bill feet.
The plodding police feet seen walking along cobbles during The Bill's closing credits belonged to a pair of extras who went on to have some of the most instantly recognisable legs in showbiz.
Pamela Moses: Megan Fox's thumb
Fox may be one of the last stars you'd think needs a body double but for Motorola mobile phone advert in February a prettier thumb was recruited. A genetic condition means Fox's thumbs are short.
Susannah Lewis: Bridget Jones's Diary
When The Independent started an anonymous column by Helen Fielding in 1995 it recruited a young assistant to pose in a nearby winebar for the silhouette that went on to appear on the first Bridget Jones book's cover.
"The bum": Is This It
The rear on The Strokes' debut album belonged to photographer Colin Lane's girlfriend on a whim as she walked around the house naked. "She was a very rock 'n' roll girl so it's a big feather in her cap to have her ass on The Strokes' cover," he said.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments