Having run the gauntlet of press interviews and thrown her arms around multiple fellow actor friends, Elizabeth Debicki slid into her seat at the Screen Actors Guild Awards in late February and kicked her shoes off under the table. She had already bagged a Golden Globe and a Critics’ Choice Award in January for her extraordinary performance as Princess Diana in celebrated Netflix series The Crown, but this was the SAG Awards, where there’s no supporting actress category for a television show, just a single award for a female actor in a drama series. Up against the likes of Sarah Snook (for Succession) and Jennifer Aniston (for Morning Wars), she figured there was no chance she’d win.
When Debicki’s name was called out, not only was she in shock but she had to try to retrieve those pesky shoes. Having kissed her boyfriend, Kristian Rasmussen, she tottered across the ballroom, shoes half on, half off, before abandoning them. “I just kicked them off and dashed up on stage and did a speech that I really did pull from nowhere,” she recalls.
At 190cm tall and standing in front of her peers in an ice-blue Armani Privé gown embroidered with 145,000 rhinestones, she was no less commanding in bare feet. But as a friend later remarked, she’d given herself the ultimate acting challenge by fronting up to Hollywood’s finest actors and directors and improvising.
“It definitely wasn’t intentional and I probably won’t do that again because – while it wasn’t frightening – I was extremely present,” she says, wincing. “You look down and there’s Bradley Cooper and Meryl Streep and you’re like, ‘Whoa, OK.’”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 2024-Ausgabe von Marie Claire Australia.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 2024-Ausgabe von Marie Claire Australia.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Annie LENNOX
She's been called the voice of her generation - not just for her singing career, but also for her staunch activism. In honour of the Eurythmics' frontwoman's 70th birthday in December, we pay tribute to a living legend.
Garden SECRETS
Richard Christiansen's Flamingo Estate has given Los Angeles a new appreciation of farm-inspired bath, body and pantry produce. Now the Australian is giving gardening advice that's actually about harvesting more joy from life.
JASMINE Chilcott
Solution-based supplement brand FixBIOME prides itself having an education-first platform and a natural approach to gut health
BIG LOVE
One photographer seeks to dispel vulva stigma with a book that busts open the very real issue of body shame and turns it into self love.
Time out
Skincare that focuses on inner peace is changing attitudes to ageing
LOVE YOUR LIPS
There's never a wrong time to wear a statement lipstick. marie claire puts the most-wanted lip colours under the spotlight to prove their pulling power, whatever the climate
JULIA
Hollywood's quiet achiever Julia Garner is making a career of defying genre
Club wellness
People are swapping happy hour for hyperbaric chambers and picking up potential partners in the sauna. Private wellness clubs, writes Kathryn Madden, are the new third places- if you're lucky enough to get in the door
LIFE in COLOUR
The world's most successful living artist, Yayoi Kusama, will have eight decades of art on display in a blockbuster Australian exhibition.
So you want to be a stay-at-home mum?
As the fourth wave of feminism rolls over social media’s tradwives’, can you still admit you might want to leave your career to raise a family? Adrienne Tam reports on the latest motherhood taboo