No glitz, no red carpet... but it’s still the biggest night of Emma and Anya’s lives
THEY were style sensations in TV hits The Queen’s Gambit and The Crown, sporting a series of ravishing outfits and winning armies of fashion fans.
But there will be precious little glamour for Anya Taylor-Joy and Emma Corrin tonight as they wait to hear if their performances have earned them a Golden Globe.
The ceremony, normally a glitzy red-carpet event, is being held virtually – and it seems the hopefuls have been happy to dress down for the occasion as they wait at home for the verdicts.
Anya, 24, who played chess prodigy Beth Harmon in The Queen’s Gambit, was spotted strolling in Los Angeles dressed all in black with a pair of chunkysoled burgundy Dr Martens.
Anya, American-born but Argentine-British by birth, also sported a Frozen-inspired plait and puffed on Marlboro Light cigarettes.
The willowy star is nominated for Best Actress in a made-for-TV film for The Queen’s Gambit and for
‘Sitting at home just takes all of the glamour out of it’
best actress in a motion picture for the film Emma. British breakthrough actress Emma Corrin, who produced an uncannily lifelike performance as Diana, Princess of Wales in The Crown, is Anya’s main rival for the Best Actress in a TV movie prize.
She chose to relax before the awards by going for a walk with her dog Spencer.
Emma, 25, wore a cosy hoodie and £216 Ashley Williams trousers with a skeleton print as she took to the streets of Hampstead, NorthWest London with her flatmate, Lara Spirit, who is a political campaigner.
The Golden Globes kicks off Hollywood’s awards season, and the British stars involved will have to wait at home to learn of her fate in the early hours of tomorrow.
Thanks to the eight-hour time difference with Los Angeles, Emma, The Crown co-star Olivia Colman and Killing Eve’s Jodie Comer will only learn whether they’ve won between 1am and 4am tomorrow.
Soon after nominations were announced on February 3, camera kits were sent to nominees all over the world for them to film themselves and their acceptance speeches. Due to C ovid restrictions, gone are thegl am-making squads of hairdressers, make-up artists and fashion designers who would usually be vying to beautify the A-listers. Instead, British stars will be forced to get ready by themselves – or at best with a little help from those in their households. One insider said: ‘Sitting indoors with nowhere to go, even if you are dressed up, kind of takes all of the glamour out of things. It’s usually such a huge, fun event.’ Other hopeful Brits include Josh O’Connor ( Prince Charles in The Crown), and Carey Mulligan (Promising Young Woman).