ELLE (UK)

THE MANY FACES OF CARA DELEVINGNE

ACTOR. MODEL. DIOR BEAUTY AMBASSADOR and INVETERATE PULLER of GOOFBALL FACES... FASHION’S MOST INTRIGUING POLYMATH, CARA DELEVINGNE PEELS OFF THE MASK with LONG-TIME FRIEND DEREK BLASBERG, in BETWEEN A LOT of TEARS, SMILES and LAUGHTER

- PHOTOGRAPH­S by LIZ COLLINS STYLING by SASA THOMANN

Actor. Model. Woman of now. Cara opens up to friend Derek Blasberg about finding true happiness

It’s 9pm on a Thursday night and Cara Delevingne doesn’t want to go out. We’ve booked a fancy dinner in the lobby restaurant of her hotel in Paris, but when I arrive to pick her up, she texts me to come to her room instead. There, I find her in pyjamas (well, a ratty T-shirt and black leggings), snuggled under her covers. Quite a contrast from when I’d seen her half an hour earlier, wearing a pink Chanel dress at the Grand Palais, where she was saying her final farewell to one of the most integral figures in her life: the designer Karl Lagerfeld. At the service, she read from the French writer Colette’s poems about cats – a tribute to Lagerfeld’s beloved companion, Choupette. Cara held it together through the bow, where she was joined by Pharrell Williams, Tilda Swinton and Helen Mirren, but the emotional toil of saying goodbye to one of her earliest champions has finally hit her. ‘What made me really sad was, at the finale, I was looking for Karl to go, “What a great show!” That’s when I realised: Oh no, he’s not here.’

The 27-year-old model, face of Dior Beauty and actress has made a career out of being the goofy, smiling girl next door, but I’ve known Cara long enough (since she was a naughty tweenager) to recognise that beneath her extroverte­d, always-on exterior is a girl who can be brought to her knees by emotion. I take one look at her darkly smudged eyes peering out from under the duvet and I know I’ll be calling the concierge to cancel dinner. I pull the curtains, crawl into bed next to her, and we conduct this interview over some pillow talk.

Derek Blasberg: I first met you when you were 16 or so, and you were much more into pizza than fashion. The idea of you having a life in fashion probably came as a surprise to your family, no?

Cara Delevingne: I’m still not a fashionist­a. I think anyone, in comparison to me, is more ‘fashion’ than I am. I guess my household was more fashion-y than most. My dad [Charles, a property developer] is a fashionabl­e person, though he likes to be naked, and my mother [Pandora] is a fashionabl­e person – she’s kind of a hoarder. My grandmothe­r always had a lot of clothes, too.

DB: Is that the granny who was a lady-in-waiting to Princess Margaret, and is quite a character?

CD: Yes, my mum’s mother. Come to think of it, I’ve always been the least fashion-y person in my family.

DB: I know Dame Joan Collins is your godmother. Did you know that she was such a cultural, fabulous figure when you were a kid?

CD: She met my mother and father separately. They were all great friends back in the day. I didn’t even know what ‘fabulous’ was then! I guess going to the south of France [on family holidays] seemed very glamorous, because, obviously, it is. And Joan was very much a part of that.

DB: What kind of student were you?

CD: I wanted to go to drama school, but I ended up attending art school. I was severely depressed and I knew I wasn’t going to do well at school. I struggled immensely [at that point] with balancing my depression.

DB: So, you thought the fashion world would be a good place to go if you were depressed?

CD: The thing I had on my side was that I didn’t know that much about fashion, so it didn’t seem intimidati­ng. I thought it would be like Zoolander or The Devil Wears Prada. Of course, no one can outrun depression, and those feelings came back eventually. But, at first, fashion seemed like a slightly ridiculous other world.

DB: You made friends early on. Your crew was Georgia [May Jagger], Kendall [Jenner] and Jourdan [Dunn]. I think the trick to surviving in this business is finding real friends, not just ‘fashion’ friends.

CD: I remember Georgia, who was already being shot by the paparazzi, would say to me, ‘Cara, you can’t just walk out of a nightclub with your high heels in your hands. You need to look presentabl­e; people are going to take photos!’ And I thought: No. No one wants to take my photo, don’t be ridiculous. Within a year, I was being papped everywhere, still with my shoes in my hands. Georgia would say, ‘Cara, what did I tell you?’ DB: Was it easy to make friends?

CD: Honestly, I had low expectatio­ns for friends in this industry because: a) I didn’t think people would want to be my friend, and b) I didn’t know if making friends through this process would be fickle or seem not real. So I was pleasantly surprised! Jourdan and Karlie [Kloss] were friends early on. I didn’t meet Kendall until I had been modelling for a bit. We had done a few shows together and didn’t say a word to each other. Eventually, we started talking and I was like, ‘Oh, you’re alright. We should hang out after this.’ She was like, ‘Alright, cool.’ It was very easy. I found that you automatica­lly know if someone is trying to make an effort that isn’t real, and when a friendship seems contrived.

DB: You learned to trust your instincts.

CD: Sort of. My instincts are sometimes spot on, but sometimes terribly wrong. Some people are out to fool your instincts.

DB: You were on the cusp of the social media model phenomenon, when fashion and casting directors succumbed to the power of the internet. Have you ever posted something you regretted?

CD: No.

“I DIDN’T KNOW MUCH about FASHION. I THOUGHT it WOULD BE like ZOOLANDER”

DB: Really?

CD: I have not. Honestly. It’s like when someone asks me, ‘Do you have any regrets?’ I do, but I don’t. What’s the point? I’m here now and that’s what got me here.

DB: Have you changed the way you use social media now? CD: Definitely. Now, people tell me that I should use it more – but I can’t. I find it hard. Sometimes I’ll hear, ‘Oh, I used to love your Instagram. It was funny!’ When I started to feel pressure to do it, it felt like work.

DB: Tell me about your most memorable fashion moments.

CD: One of the best and worst moments was shooting my first Burberry campaign with Kate [Moss]. It was terrifying! How do you get your photo taken next to her? It’s like shooting with a panther. She’s the queen of the set but also she might eat me. I was in awe, but trying to get the shot. Every time I was on set, I’d be staring at her instead of looking at the camera.

DB: Any lessons that you’ve learned in fashion that you’ve applied to acting?

CD: Honestly, fashion really f*cked me when it came to acting. When I did my first film – Anna Karenina, which I didn’t have a speaking part in – every time I was on screen, the director (Joe Wright) would come up to me and say, ‘Cara, you’re modelling again. Stop trying to look pretty.’ I was an extra with 6O other people on screen at the time. I was like, ‘But what do you mean?’ And he’d tell me, ‘You’re not in the moment, you’re just trying to look hot.’ I never thought I did that. Modelling makes you know where the camera is at all times, and you have to forget that when you’re acting.

DB: Agree or disagree: acting and fashion have a reputation for being cut-throat and hard on one’s self-esteem?

CD: Agree. Modelling is more surface, and acting is a bit deeper – either way, you’re getting rejected at some point. Which is something I’ve spent a lot of time working on.

DB: How do you maintain peace of mind while navigating the industries? CD: Every morning and night: yoga and meditation, even for five minutes. DB: C’mon. Do you honestly do that?

CD: Yes! I sleep with my phone on airplane mode and, before I turn it on, I lay and breathe for five minutes.

DB: I always say I should put my phone on airplane mode but I never do it. CD: Honestly, I feel different in the radio-wave space if I don’t. I know if I wake up in the night with messages coming in on my phone, it’ll mess me up. When I turn it off, I can literally sleep through the night.

DB: Do you see a therapist?

CD: I haven’t in a while, but I should. I love to write music and poetry. All of that [creativity] comes from my trauma in some way – all the heartbreak and experience­s that happened to me as a kid. It doesn’t matter what relationsh­ip you have with your parents, you have to try to find something positive in it. My mother gave me the gift of being able to be confused and tortured. I feel grateful when people ask me about my mother being ill. I had to find my own way of expressing that emotion and feeling, so I discovered music and writing. It’s painful, but it’s a way of connecting.

“MY MOTHER GAVE ME the GIFT of BEING ABLE TO BE CONFUSED and TORTURED”

DB: Did you have a fear of changing gears to focus less on modelling and more on acting and music?

CD: I was talking to Helen Mirren about this today. I asked her, ‘When have you ever done something that’s easy?’ She was like, ‘Never.’ Not that modelling was easy at all – it really wasn’t. I didn’t ever think that I would be successful at it in any way, shape, or form. But a few years in, I realised it wasn’t good for me, physically or emotionall­y, and I’d have to try new, different things.

DB: You’ve told me before you didn’t think modelling was always a safe space.

CD: At a certain point, I wasn’t strong enough to say no to things. Modelling fuelled this thing where pictures of me looking pretty were the only things I liked about myself. Take that away, and take the billboards away, and there was nothing left. It’s not that I thought I was pretty — the person on the billboard was pretty. It became a fucked-up way to look at the world. I knew it wasn’t going to contribute to a healthy lifestyle and human interactio­n. DB: Which actors do you admire? CD: Everyone I worked with today: Tilda Swinton, Helen Mirren. Who else? Jennifer Lawrence, Phoebe Waller-Bridge.

DB: Every person you’ve just mentioned is a woman. Is it good to work in Hollywood at a time when it feels like women are gaining more power and control?

CD: Yes. Except sometimes it feels the same. In my opinion, especially in these movements, as soon as we get a hashtag for something, we feel like it’s done. But that’s not the case. It’s the beginning, and I think people need to remember that [gender discrimina­tion is] still happening all the time. Women are getting more opportunit­ies, but there are still people out there who are the same as they were three years ago. You can’t just put a hashtag up on social media and the problem is gone.

DB: You publicly shared your Harvey Weinstein story, where he asked for a threesome with you and another woman. Was that therapeuti­c to get off your chest?

CD: I hadn’t thought about it for five years, not until Rose McGowan came out with hers. So, weirdly, it was therapeuti­c but I also hadn’t dealt with it at all. I didn’t really know what assault was. I hope [Harvey] gets prosecuted and, of course, I want there to be justice. It turns out nearly every single woman I know or have worked with has been harassed or assaulted in some way. I just didn’t know about it.

DB: Your new series, Carnival Row, is a reference to modern crises. What do I need to know about the show?

CD: It is a neo-Victorian-esque fantasy world and I play a bisexual fairy. It’s a discussion about immigratio­n and the refugee crisis set in a fantasy world. It’s a lot of different storylines and a lot of different characters and creatures. It’s made for geeks and fanatics and people who like to go into the depths of another world. To be honest, if I didn’t have the script to read, I’m not sure I would have understood it all from the start. DB: What does Cara Delevingne do to unwind?

CD: I like being spontaneou­s. Every other moment in my life is planned. DB: What was the last spontaneou­s thing that you did?

CD: I drove to Big Sur. Spontaneou­sly. I also like to do movie nights. DB: Wow, going to the movies. Living on the edge, Cara! Really living up to your public profile! I knew you as a wild teenager. Are you still wild?

CD: Ha, you just wait until I get a break! Then I’m going to go crazy. I didn’t go to Glastonbur­y this year. I’m not going to Burning Man, which is sad. When I was younger, I could be wild and work. Now, I can’t do both.

DB: You’re also in a steady relationsh­ip now, which you revealed when you were given the Hero Award by the Trevor Project [a national nonprofit organisati­on dedicated to providing crisis interventi­on and suicidepre­vention services to young people in the LGBTQ community based in New York – Cara was joined by her partner, actor Ashley Benson]. In your speech, you said you’re in love. What does love feel like for Cara?

CD: I’m just better when I’m in love. That doesn’t have to mean with someone. It can also mean with myself. It just feels incredible when you’re not alone, when you’re facing the world with someone else. DB: Why have you been hesitant to talk about your love life in the press? CD: Because it’s sacred. I get why people care so much, and I don’t want to be so secretive that people think I’m ashamed of anything. But I’ve never been in a relationsh­ip where things are so public, or where I posted pictures of someone else. This seemed different. We had gotten to the point where we had kept it a secret, or at least not wanted attention, and now I feel like I’m not going to not be proud. Which isn’t the same thing as wanting to pose on a red carpet together, either. People make their own assumption­s and that’s what worried me. Because if it is something that is so good, you don’t ever want anyone to ever change it, even though people shouldn’t have that power.

DB: You’ve said your life motto is, ‘Embrace your weirdness.’ How have you embraced your weirdness?

CD: When I say ‘embrace your weirdness’, it means embrace the things you don’t like about yourself. For a time, to me, that was almost everything. But I’ve learned to embrace all the things I find about myself, if they’re good and even if they’re bad. After all, I fall in love with someone because of their flaws. And I’ve learned to love myself because of my flaws, too. Cara Delevingne is the face of Dior Beauty and stars in Carnival Row, out now on Amazon Prime

“I asked HELEN MIRREN, ‘HAVE YOU ever DONE SOMETHING THAT’S EASY?’ SHE WAS like,‘NEVER’”

“IT FEELS INCREDIBLE when YOU’RE FACING the WORLD WITH SOMEONE”

“HONESTLY, FASHION really F*CKED ME when IT CAME TO ACTING”

“WHEN I was YOUNGER I COULD BE WILD and STILL WORK. NOW, I can’t DO BOTH”

 ??  ?? Gloves, £20, DENTS. Ring, Cara’s own
Gloves, £20, DENTS. Ring, Cara’s own
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE Dres £3,865, MARC JACOB Boots, £990, ALEXANDER McQUEEN Ring, Cara’s ow
THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE Dres £3,865, MARC JACOB Boots, £990, ALEXANDER McQUEEN Ring, Cara’s ow
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 ??  ?? Dress, £1,595, CHRISTOPHE­R KANE. Ring, Cara’s own
Dress, £1,595, CHRISTOPHE­R KANE. Ring, Cara’s own
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 ??  ?? Hat, price on applicatio­n, HARRIS REED. Ring, Cara’s own
Hat, price on applicatio­n, HARRIS REED. Ring, Cara’s own
 ??  ?? THIS PAGE Jacket, £3,100, DIOR. Necklaces, Cara’s own. OPPOSITE Dress, £6,750, shoes, £810, and belt, £475, all LOUIS VUITTON. Ring, Cara’s own. Cara wears Dior Forever Foundation and Dior Addict Stellar Shine Lipstick
THIS PAGE Jacket, £3,100, DIOR. Necklaces, Cara’s own. OPPOSITE Dress, £6,750, shoes, £810, and belt, £475, all LOUIS VUITTON. Ring, Cara’s own. Cara wears Dior Forever Foundation and Dior Addict Stellar Shine Lipstick
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE Black and white dress, £4,300, DIOR. Silver ring, Cara’s own. OPPOSITE Gloves, £20, DENTS. HAIR: Mara Roszak at Starworks Artists. MAKE-UP: Molly R Stern at Starworks Artists using Dior Forever Foundation and Dior Addict Stellar Shine Lipstick. NAILS: Thuy Nguyen at Starworks Artists using Dior Manicure Collection and Dior Capture Totale Hand Cream. Fashion assistant: Conor Bond. ON-SET PRODUCTION: Samantha Rockman. The team stayed at The NoMad Hotel, Los Angeles (thenomadho­tel.com)
THIS PAGE Black and white dress, £4,300, DIOR. Silver ring, Cara’s own. OPPOSITE Gloves, £20, DENTS. HAIR: Mara Roszak at Starworks Artists. MAKE-UP: Molly R Stern at Starworks Artists using Dior Forever Foundation and Dior Addict Stellar Shine Lipstick. NAILS: Thuy Nguyen at Starworks Artists using Dior Manicure Collection and Dior Capture Totale Hand Cream. Fashion assistant: Conor Bond. ON-SET PRODUCTION: Samantha Rockman. The team stayed at The NoMad Hotel, Los Angeles (thenomadho­tel.com)
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