The quick take
Caroline D’Amore (born June 9, 1984) is an American entrepreneur, DJ, former fashion model, and occasional screen actress best known today as the founder and CEO of Pizza Girl, a brand of pasta sauces.
Growing up in the pizza business
D’Amore grew up in Los Angeles in a family tied to the pizza business. She has described being around catering and movie-set food work early, learning the day-to-day rhythm of the industry while she was still a kid.
Modeling and fashion
She began her public career as a fashion model, with runway work and magazine appearances in the early 2000s. She later launched fashion projects of her own, including swimwear, and remained a visible presence in the Los Angeles fashion-and-nightlife circuit for years.
DJ work and entertainment
Alongside modeling, D’Amore built a parallel identity as a DJ, performing at clubs and events and cultivating a music-facing brand. Her acting credits are generally smaller roles across film and television, plus reality-TV appearances that reflected her proximity to the early-2000s “young Hollywood” scene.
Pizza Girl: the main act
Over time, her focus shifted toward food entrepreneurship. She launched Pizza Girl, positioning it as an organic, all-natural pasta sauce brand. This became her most durable public identity—less “celebrity product” and more consumer packaged goods founder, with the unglamorous work of production, distribution, and retail placement.
Gordon Ramsay’s Food Stars
In 2023, she competed on Fox’s business-competition series Gordon Ramsay’s Food Stars and finished as the runner-up, which put her entrepreneurship in front of a much wider mainstream audience.
Why she’s an interesting biography subject
D’Amore’s story is essentially a modern pivot: she learned visibility through modeling and nightlife culture, then tried to convert that attention into something sturdier—a retail brand. Whatever you think of the “it girl to founder” pipeline, her biography is a clean example of how public image, entertainment work, and business ambition can overlap into a single career.

