Showbiz

Billy Idol Rocks Paris Fashion Week at 70

A Rebel Yell of surprise rang out across Palais de Tokyo on Saturday evening as legendary rocker Billy Idol made an unexpected catwalk appearance at Paris Fashi...

Billy Idol Rocks Paris Fashion Week at 70
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Bintano News

March 8, 2026

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A Rebel Yell of surprise rang out across Palais de Tokyo on Saturday evening as legendary rocker Billy Idol made an unexpected catwalk appearance at .

The reformed hellraiser claimed the spotlight as Belgian designer Ann Demeulemeester previewed her latest fall-winter collection in the French capital. 

Dressed in a tasselled leather cape, black waistcoat and ruff collared shirt, Idol, 70, real name William Broad, inevitably stole the show after joining the ranks of younger models on the Paris catwalk. 

The rocker's unlikely modelling job comes as he charts his incredible career and chaotic personal life in new documentary, Billy Idol Should Be Dead. 

The film addresses how Idol survived decades of excess, drug addiction and near-fatal accidents.

Idol himself admits he nearly died from a heroin overdose, days before he was .

A Rebel Yell of surprise rang out across Palais de Tokyo on Saturday evening as legendary rocker Billy Idol made an unexpected catwalk appearance at Paris Fashion Week

He told The Mirror: 'I did OD and nearly died. I went to America in March 1981 and came back to the UK in triumph in 1984, after Rebel Yell. I was due on Top Of The Pops. I nearly ruined it and nobody knew.'

'On our return to London we met some pals and they had some of the strongest heroin, Persian Brown, I think. Everybody did a line and they all nodded out except me and a mate and we did a few more lines.'

'I was basically dying. I was turning blue. So they put me in an ice bath and walked me around on the roof of the building.'

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Idol's life as a rocker was marred with addiction to heroin, pot, opium, an alcohol habit and a sex obsession.

His drug dependency began when he moved to New York with nothing but a mattress, some sheets and a guitar, but soon made a name for himself in the music industry.

'The record company gave me money and I would buy some pot and weak smack [heroin]. I would go out to dance clubs,' he said.

It was in the clubs where Idol was introduced to heroin and he became addicted, unaware just how dangerous the drug was.

Despite his father's intervention and a move to Los Angeles, Idol flitted in and out of sobriety over the years.

It wasn't until 1994 when he collapsed outside an LA club due to an overdose that Idol decided to turn his life around for his children's sake.

Idol told DailyMailTV in 2019 that he put his life on the line many times due to his rock and roll excess days, but now admits 'he enjoys it more' and no longer swigs vodka bottles during sets.

The reformed hellraiser claimed the spotlight as Belgian designer Ann Demeulemeester previewed her latest fall-winter collection in the French capital

The rocker's unlikely modelling job comes as he charts his incredible career and chaotic personal life in new documentary, Billy Idol Should Be Dead (pictured onstage in 1984) 

Dressed in a tasselled leather cape, black waistcoat and ruff collared shirt, Idol inevitably stole the show after joining the ranks of younger models on the Paris catwalk 

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'For a singer, you need a ton of breath. You have to be fit to be a singer. You can't just be up there,' he told our outlet.

'You'd have a heart attack and die on stage, which would be interesting, but I much prefer to get through the gig and do another one.'

After debuting at the Tribeca Festival on June 10, Billy Idol Should Be Dead hit wide release on February 26.

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