Celebrity
Model Christine Handy’s Triumph Over Breast Cancer Inspires Award-Winning Film ‘Hello Beautiful’
Christine Handy, a professional model whose career once epitomized the glamour of high fashion, found her life irrevocably changed when she was diagnosed with breast cancer at the height of her success.
Her story of identity, faith, and resilience is now the subject of the critically acclaimed film Hello Beautiful, adapted from her bestselling book Walk Beside Me.
Filmed in Boston and directed by award-winning filmmaker Ziad Hamzeh, Hello Beautiful stars Tricia Helfer (Battlestar Galactica, Lucifer) as Willow, the character based on Handy. The film, which premiered earlier this year at the Beverly Hills Film Festival, won the Golden Palm Award for its moving portrayal of one woman’s transformation from despair to empowerment.
“Hello Beautiful isn’t just a movie; it’s a rebellion against every story that told women with breast cancer their ending was already written,” Handy, 54, said. “I created the film that I wished existed when I was bald, terrified, and scrolling past graveyards. I am living proof that survival can be fierce, inspiring, and gloriously alive.”
Handy began modeling at just 11 years old and went on to appear in campaigns for major global brands. Her diagnosis at age 41 forced her to confront the fragility of a career — and a self-image — built around physical beauty. The loss of her modeling identity became the catalyst for deeper healing.
Her book, Walk Beside Me, tells the story of Willow Adair, a model whose outer perfection conceals private insecurity until a series of medical crises, including a breast cancer diagnosis, bring her to the edge. With the help of a circle of loyal friends she calls her Angels, Willow learns to rebuild her sense of worth beyond appearance and success.
Director Ziad, 66, described the film’s essence simply: “It is not how hard and how many times you get knocked down but the grace with which you keep getting up.”
Today, Handy has transformed her personal ordeal into a platform for hope. As a motivational speaker, she travels the country sharing messages of faith, resilience, and self-acceptance.
“I don’t just lead from a podium; I lead from the scars,” she said. “In a world that often silences women after a diagnosis, I turned that pain into a megaphone, building a movement that reminds millions they’re allowed to hope, fight, and still be beautiful.”