Lara Johnson-Wheeler becomes one of the stars of the September issue of ‘Tatler’ magazine
“These clothes are not going to fix what you don’t like about your body. When well designed, they are intended to enhance what you already have, or to emulate today’s preferred body shape. Wearing shapewear does not make me feel different in itself, but it does make me feel more confident in clothes that did not convince me before. And frankly, when shapewear is used as a foundation for comfort and confidence – to amplify the good in it – there is nothing controversial about it.”
“As we come out of confinement, hedonism combines with the desire to look our best, our body more sculpted, tighter,” she concludes.
Lara is the eldest of four siblings, the result of Boris Johnson’s marriage to his second wife Marina Wheeler. She studied at the prestigious Bedales School, and later took a degree in Latin and Literature at the University of St. Andrews, in Scotland, one of the oldest in the United Kingdom.
Although she has grown up far from the media spotlight and has always remained in a discreet background, at 28 the prime minister’s daughter triumphs in the world of communication working as a journalist and broadcaster.