WWD Digital Daily

Nathalie Emmanuel Dons Chanel Gown For Her First Cannes Red Carpet

The actress attended the world premiere of Francis Ford Coppola's long- awaited "Megalopoli­s."

- BY RHONDA RICHFORD PHOTOGRAPH­S BY MICHAEL BUCKNER

CANNES — It was a mega moment for Nathalie Emmanuel, who hit her first Cannes red carpet for the world premiere of Francis Ford Coppola's long-awaited “Megalopoli­s.”

“It was emotional,” she said, having just come from the film premiere at the Palais des Festivals. “It was quite overwhelmi­ng to sit in a screening with all these people, but I

felt really proud of everyone involved.”

She'd seen the completed film a few weeks before at a private screening in London, where she sorted through her bigscreen jitters, which allowed her to come to Cannes with a clean self-critical slate.

“The first time I watch myself in anything, I'm slightly doing the hypercriti­cal [thing]: ‘Oh, why did you do it like that?' Or, ‘I wish

I'd done it like this,' or whatever that sort of self-scrutiny it is that you do, because we're our worst critics, of course,” she said.

But having been through that personal process, she was allowed to revel in the experience.

“I got to just watch it. I was able to really absorb it, and have this incredibly unique [film] wash over me, and see it in a way that I was unable to do, apparently, the first time,” she said.

Coppola has had this fever dream of a film in mind for four decades — a good handful of years longer than Emmanuel has been on Earth — and its ultimate message is that we have a duty to protect the planet for future generation­s. People should dream, even if problems seem insurmount­able.

“It evolved all the time,” she said, as the script changed from first read and through the filming process. “But I just found those ideas to be so big and bold, and sometimes, above my own intellect or my own knowledge and worldview — all just so big and vast and epic.”

Some of those last-minute script changes combined with the big ideas meant she was learning philosophy on the fly, and memorizing Marcus Aurelius the morning of a shoot.

Emmanuel recalled someone handing her lines in which she quotes the ancient Roman emperor a few hours before camera call.

“They're just beautiful, very profound quotes, but I hadn't had them that long, so I had to just go for it,” she said. “The experience was a huge responsibi­lity, and the stakes are really high. I just feel it's a privilege to help tell this story and this vision that's been in somebody's head for 40 years, and the idea that they would like you [to be the one] to do that is a little surreal,” she said.

“I keep using the word ‘surreal.' I feel like I need to find a new word to say, but it's been my buzzword,” she joked.

The “Game of Thrones” star has halfa-dozen projects in the works, including the latest installmen­t of the “Fast & Furious” series and “The Killer” with Sam Worthingto­n and Cannes juror Omar Sy.

“I feel like my career is something very rare. And I don't take it for granted,” she said. “I'm just from this small town in England.”

For the red carpet, the Chanel atelier sent her several sketches and she collaborat­ed with the design team as well as her stylist Jason Bolden.

The dress was inspired by the shape of a look in the fall 2022 show, rendered in white, and the duo added details including a black satin belt to adjust to Emmanuel's style. The dress also encompasse­d traditiona­l Chanel tweed on the bodice, a heritage touch Emmanuel appreciate­d.

“It felt very classic, with the skirt being so floral and three-dimensiona­l and a bit dainty, and then has a sort of boldness with the belt. This kind of strength felt like a bit of duality, and I have a bit of a duality with a femininity and masculinit­y I like to play with,” she said. She topped off her look with simple, slicked-back hair and bold makeup.

Still, the very slim silhouette meant that maneuverin­g was a bit of a challenge. “It's a bit of a process [to sit down],” she joked. “I had to do a sort of sweep then swivel. I practiced before at the hotel, but I think I did OK.”

been photograph­ed by Craig McDean in a 10- page spread and Ayo Edebiri by Tyler Mitchell.

The couple is targeting the U. S. as its core market, then the U. K., Europe and the rest of the world.

Richardson calls America an optimistic country with untapped potential.

“Women need a voice there and there are great independen­t magazines there, but there's not really a woman's voice in any of them apart from American Vogue, which is for a different type of woman, respectful­ly, it's not the woman I'm relating to or that we're about,” she said.

“Most independen­t women's magazines are very much in an echo chamber of the fashion industry and they're not really for people outside the industry — they are less relatable to the woman on the streets,” Richardson added.

Richardson's frustratio­n stems from what she believes is the lack of depth in print and in

Beyond Noise, she aims to dive into the subjects of fashion, art, culture, fiction, technology, science and environmen­talism.

“It's not that I want to do a completely intellectu­al magazine, I want it to be relatable to multiple women of different demographi­cs,” she clarified.

Bush often sends her articles from more masculine- oriented publicatio­ns that discuss female well- being and opens the conversati­on than just the surface level. Digging deeper into women's issues has helped inform the features in Beyond Magazine.

Richardson is erasing the traditiona­l rule book of women's magazine making by swapping the editor's letter for a manifesto — each issue will invite a changemake­r to write something. The first issue starts with

English primatolog­ist and anthropolo­gist, Jane Goodall.

She has gathered an “Avengers team” of creatives: Juergen Teller, Mario Sorrenti, Malick Bodian, Venetia Scott and Gareth Hague.

Richardson oversees all editorial decisions, while Bush is the numbers guy.

Beyond Noise plans to go beyond print, too. It will launch its interactiv­e website ( thebeyondn­oise. com) on May 27 and has hired an AI director to explore the opportunit­ies of engaging digitally rather than just through articles.

Richardson has aspiration­s for commercial partnershi­ps with tech and car brands.

“Commercial­ity has a bad name in fashion, it's almost something to be looked down upon, whereas I actually think if you make something desirable, it's automatica­lly commercial,” she said.

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 ?? ?? Here and left: Nathalie Emmanuel poses for a portrait before the "Megalopoli­s" premiere during the 77th Cannes Film Festival at the Carlton on May 16.
Here and left: Nathalie Emmanuel poses for a portrait before the "Megalopoli­s" premiere during the 77th Cannes Film Festival at the Carlton on May 16.
 ?? ?? Stylist Sarah Richardson
Stylist Sarah Richardson

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